Monday, March 18, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, March 18


This Day in Goodlove History, March 18

http://Thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com

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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:

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

Birthday: Robert L. Armstrong

Anniversary: Lydia Dibbern and William H. McKee

March 18, 37: The Roman Senate annuls Tiberius' will and proclaims Caligula emperor. Caligula ruled from 37 until his death in 41. From the Jewish perspective he was not so much an anti-Semite as a lunatic whose crazy behavior affected the Jews. The biggest problems rose from his belief that he was a god and his insistence that the Jews, along with the rest of the Empire worship him. The Jews did not which led to a major confrontation. Additionally, Caligula wanted to place a huge statue of himself in Jerusalem. Fortunately he died before this travesty could take place.[1]

March 18, 1190: Crusaders killed 750 Jews in Bury St Edmonds England. The logic of the Crusaders was why wait to kill infidels in the Holy Land when you can kill them right here at home. Just because these infidels were Jews and the infidels holding the Holy Land were Moslems did not seem to bother these noble Christian knights and their supporters.[2]

March 18, 1227: Death of Pope Honorius III – Pope Gregory IX, end of Anglo-French war, death of Genghis Khan – empire divided among three sons, building of Toledo Cathedral begins, Japanese potter Toshiro returns from China and starts porcelain manufacturing, Death of Pope Honorius III, end of war between France and England, Gregory IX pope to 1231, Henry III begins personal rule in England, Death of Genghis Khan and empire divided among sons, Ghengis Khan dies in a fall from a horse, Halley's Comet, Henry takes full governmental control, Pope Honorius III dies March 18, Pope Gregory IX (Ugolino dei Conti di Segni Anagni) appointed March 19, Teutonic Knights begin crusading against pagan Prussians, Death of Chingis Khan on campaign in Jin empire of China. [3]

March 18, 1229: Frederick II went to the Church of the Holy Sepulcar and had himself crowned. The Templars were not impressed with Fredericks achievement. In one of the clauses of the treaty it prevented the repair of any fortifications in and around the Holy city. [4] His sixth crusade was not a military venture; a fact which drew the ire of the Roman Catholic Church. Instead, after landing in Palestine, he negotiated with the Moslems and gained control of Bethlehem, Nazareth and Jerusalem for a period of ten years. [5]



The Templars refused to accept the treaties. The Templars believed the Egyptian empire was getting week, a situation that was felt that the Templars needed to be exploiting to the full. The Egyptians had far more important things to worry about, particularly, the Mongols. They were believed to possess a critical threat to the Moslem civilization. [6]



March 18, 1314: Grand Master Demolay and Geoffrey, Templar Master of Normandy were cooked slowly over a fire to death. [7]

Legend has it that in 1314 the Templars joined Robert the Bruce in his fight for independence. An important part of that legend is that at the Battle of Bannockburn the charge that saves the day for Robert the Bruce was the charge of Knights Templar. The English army had outnumbered the Scotts by about 3 to 1. No record has ever been found describing the fate of the Scottish Knights Templar.[8]



[9]

Motto; “Audentes fortuna juvat.[10]

(Fortune Favours the Brave)[11]

On the MacKinnon crest lies a mysterious ship, that I thought that the first time I saw it many years ago, that it could not be Scottish. They did not have ships like this. Many years later and only recently did it come to me. The ship was not Scottish, it was Templar. This proves that there was a real connection between the Templars, Robert the Bruce, Bannockburn, the MacKinnons, Rosylin Chapel, and as we will soon see, the new World.

In Upernavik, Greenland a rune stone was discovered that detailed a Norse journey to Greenland. The date, 1314. It was double dated using the Easter table like the stones on Gotland and the Kensington stone which has some saying its Templar.[12]

March 18, 1389: A priest living in Prague, Czechoslovakia was hit with a few grains of sand by small Jewish boys playing in the street. He became insulted and insisted that the Jewish community purposely plotted against him. Thousands were slaughtered, the synagogue and the cemetery were destroyed, and homes were pillaged. King Wenceslaus insisted that the responsibility rested with the Jews for venturing outside during Holy Week.[13]

On March 18, 1389, a Jewish boy is accused of plotting against a priest. The mob slaughters approx. 3,000 of Prague Jews, destroys the city’s synagogue and Jewish cemetery. Wenceslaus insists that the responsibility lay with the Jews for going outside during the Holy Week.[14]Death of Leopold III Duke of Austria – killed by Swiss at Sempach, Grand Prince Jagiello of Lithuania marries Jadviga of Poland and becomes Vladislav II King of Poland, work starts on Milan cathedral, Heidelberg U founded, John of Gaunt leads expedition to Castile to overthrow John I (fails), Start of Ming dynasty in China, Battle of Sempach – Swiss defeat and kill Leopold III of Austria, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.[15]



March 18, 1478: In Spain, a group of Jews and conversos gathered for a Seder on the first night of Passover. “A young cavalier” discovered the group and reported the matter to the authorities. Since it was holy week, the Spanish decided that the Jews had gathered to “to blaspheme the Chrisitian religion.” When Alonso de Hojeda, the prior of the Convent of San Pablo in Seville and enemy of the Jews and New Christians heard of the event he took the news to Ferdinand and Isabella. Supposedly this was the “straw that broke the camel’s back” and the two monarchs petitioned the Holy See to issue a Bull authorizing an Inquisition. [16]In 1478, the pope authorized the creation of an Inquisition like that which, in the thirteenth and fourteenth centures, had suppressed a variety of heresies in southern France and which had functioned during the fourteenth century in Spain.[17]

March 18, 1584: Ivan IV, also known as Ivan the Terrible passed away. Ivan was terrible for the Jews as well as for everybody else. He did all that he could to bar them from Russia, spreading the calumnies of the day, and, when he had the chance, giving them the choice between conversion or a cruel death.[18]

March 18, 1591: Children of Thomas Smythe and Sarah Blount:
. i. John Smythe (b. abt. 1580)
+ . ii. Robert Smythe
+ . iii. Christopher Smythe (b. March 18, 1591 / d. April 16, 1648)


More about John Smythe
John married Lady Isabelle Rich, daughter of the 1st Earl of Warwick.[19]



Christopher Smith6 [Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. March 18, 1591 in Burnley, Abington Co., Lancashire, England / d. April 16, 1638 in Mittford Parish, England) married Elizabeth Townley (b. abt. 1600 in Lancashire, England / d. abt. 1679 in Mittford Parish, England), the daughter of Lawrence Townley (b. 1575) and Margaret, on May 3, 1624 in Burnley, Lancashire, England.

A. Children of Christopher Smith and Elizabeth Townley
+ . i. John Smith (b. September 12, 1624 in England)
+ . ii. Lawrence Smith (b. March 29, 1629 in Lancashire, England)
+ . iii. Christopher Smith (b. January 29, 1630/31 in Lancashire, England)
. iv. Richard Smith (b. May 24, 1635)
+ . v. Thomas Smith (December 17, 1637)[20]

.

Christopher Smith is the 10th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 18, 1655: Dutch Minister Johannes Megapolensis wrote a letter to the Amsterdam Classis, a ruling body in the Reform Church attacking the Jews who had recently arrived in New Amsterdam.[21]

March 18, 1669: In Halberstadt which had been annexed Brandenburg as part of the Peace of Westphalia, a mob aided by the military demolished a synagogue in the Joeddenstrasse. The people claimed that the Jews had built the synagogue without permission from the government. For some time after, the hammer that was used to break the door of the synagogue was “preserved in the parish house.”[22]

1670 Jews expelled from Vienna, by Emperor Leopold I.[23]

1670

William Crawford was born about 1640 in Kilbirine, Ayrshire, Scotland. He married Naudaine Valentine in 1670. She was born in Delaware. He came to America from Lenarkshire, Ayshire, Scotland & Donegal, Ireland. [24]



William Crawford came to America with his brother George.[25]

1670 – The German trader James Lederer travelled south from the James River in Virginia to the Catawba territory near the newly established Province of Carolina, and encountered the “Rickahockan”, whom he placed on a map as being in the mountains of the west, later to become North Carolina.[26]

March 18, 1749: 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. [27]



March 18, 1766: The English Parliament passes the Declaratory Act giving England the power to pass laws binding on the Colonies.[28]



March 18, 1766: The English Parliament repeals the Stamp Act after intense opposition in the Colonies.[29]



March 18, 1776

General Washington entered on the road that for a century and a half was the only road into or out of town in Boston. All commerce had to pass by here, unless it went by boat. General Washinton entered Boston on this street on March 18, 1776, the day after the British troops evacuated the city; his triumphant march into town that day marked his first victory of the war. After a tremendous parade, this “highway to Roxbury” was renamed in Washington’s honor.[30]

March 18, 1776: After four months of widespread protest in America, the British Parliament repeals the Stamp Act, a taxation measure enacted to raise revenues for a standing British army in America.

The Stamp Act was passed on March 22, 1765, leading to an uproar in the colonies over an issue that was to be a major cause of the Revolution: taxation without representation. Enacted in November 1765, the controversial act forced colonists to buy a British stamp for every official document they obtained. The stamp itself displayed an image of a Tudor rose framed by the word "America" and the French phrase Honi soit qui mal y pense--"Shame to him who thinks evil of it."

The colonists, who had convened the Stamp Act Congress in October 1765 to vocalize their opposition to the impending enactment, greeted the arrival of the stamps with outrage and violence. Most Americans called for a boycott of British goods, and some organized attacks on the customhouses and homes of tax collectors. After months of protest, and an appeal by Benjamin Franklin before the British House of Commons, Parliament voted to repeal the Stamp Act in March 1766. However, the same day, Parliament passed the Declaratory Acts, asserting that the British government had free and total legislative power over the colonies.[31]

March 18, 1799: Haifa was captured by Napoleon. This marked “high-water mark” in Napoleon’s conquest of Palestine. The next day French forces reached Acre. It was defended both by British warships and local townspeople including the Jewish inhabitants. By June, Napoleon would give up and return to Egypt.[32]

Joseph Lefevre was said to have been in Napoleon’s Body Guard Unit.



Joseph Lefevre is the 1st cousin 3x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



March 1803: ROBERT "RIPPER" LEE CRAWFORD, b. March 1803, Clark County, Kentucky; d. April 23, 1873, Estell County, Kentucky; m. MATILDA V. WATSON, September 25, 1852. [33]



ROBERT "RIPPER" LEE CRAWFORD is the 3rd cousin 5x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



1809: March Jennings began writing articles for the Vincennes' Western Sun newspaper. The city was the center of the pro-slavery establishment in the territory. Jennings' parents had been raised him to be bitterly opposed to slavery. The issue was attracting widespread attention in the territory because of Harrison's recent attempts to legalize the institution. Many of Jennings' articles attacked Harrison's administration and its pro-slavery sentiments. By March 1809, Jennings came to believe that his future in the Harrison dominated western part of the territory was bleak, so he left Vincennes and moved to Charlestown[34]

In March 1820, Congress had authorized Missouri to form a state government, but a clause in the proposed state constitution prohibiting the entrance of free blacks and julattoes into Missouri rekindled opposition to the territory’s admission. On December 13, 1820, the House of Representatives defeated a resolution admitting Missouri into the Union. The ensuing controversy was finally resolved by a second compromise championed by Henry Clay, and Monroe proclaimed the admission of Missouri as a state on August 10. [35]





Charlestown, Indiana

March 1822: With the idea of division in mind (Bullskin and Connellsville) the court was again petitioned in March, 1822, when an order was issued to Isaac Meason, Moses Vance, and Thomas Boyd to act as commissioners to view the proposed township. On the 4th of June, (June 4) 1822, their report was made and approved by the court, although not fully confirmed until Oct. 31, 1822, when Connellsville township was erected.[36]

Isaac Meason is the 1st cousin 6 times removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

Moses Vance is the 2nd cousin 7 times removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



March 18, 1824: Henrietta Mildred Hodgson (January 6, 1805 – November 19, 1891) was an English lady with both royal and presidential genealogical connections.

Through her Virginia ancestry, Queen Elizabeth II and her descendants are related to George Washington, the common ancestor of both being Augustine Warner, Jr.

Life and family

Born January 6, 1805, Henrietta Mildred was the daughter of the Very Rev. Robert Hodgson (1776–1844), Dean of Carlisle from 1820 until his death; and of Mary Tucker, born in 1778, a daughter of Colonel Martin Tucker. Her parents had married in 1804. Her grandfather was another Robert Hodgson (born 1740), of Congleton in Cheshire.[1][2]

On March 18, 1824 at St George's, Hanover Square, Westminster, she married Oswald Smith ( July 1794 – June 18, 1863) of St Marylebone and Blendon Hall in Kent. The parish register gives one of the few clues to her date of birth, as she is noted as "a minor".[3][4]

The Smiths had the following children: Isabella Mary (born April 24, 1825, d. 1907) m. 1847 Cadogan Hodgson Cadogan (of Brinkburn Priory), Oswald Augustus (b. October 21, 1826, d. 1902) m. 1856 Rose Sophia Vansittart, Eric Carrington (b. May 25, 1828, d. 1906) m. 1849 Mary Maberly, Laura Charlotte (b. August 2, 1829) m. 1848 Col. Evan Maberly, Beilby (b. August 12, 1830, d. 1831), Frances Dora (July 29, 1832, d. 1922) m. 1853 Claude Bowes-Lyon 13th Earl of Strathmore, Marion Henrietta (b. February 25, 1835, d. 1897) m.1854 Lt-Col Henry Dorrien Streatfeild (of Chiddingstone Castle).[5][6]

In 1853 the Smiths' daughter Frances married Claude Bowes-Lyon, later Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne. She thus became the great-grandmother of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, who was later Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, the mother of Queen Elizabeth II.

Henrietta Mildred was the grand-daughter of Mildred Porteus, who married the older Robert Hodgson, who was herself the grand-daughter of Robert and Mildred Porteus, until 1720 of Virginia, who in that year moved to Yorkshire. The earlier Mildred Porteus was the daughter of John and Mary Smith, Mary being a daughter of Augustine Warner, Jr. and a sister of Mildred Warner, who married Lawrence Washington (1659–1698) and was the grandmother of the first US President, George Washington.[7]

Henrietta Mildred Smith died November 19, 1891. At her death, her memorial in All Saints Church, Sanderstead, states:

Sacred
TO THE MEMORY OF
HENRIETTA MILDRED SMITH,
WIDOW OF OSWALD SMITH.
B. JANuary 6, 1805 D. NOVember 19, 1891
LEAVING AT HER DEATH
ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN
DIRECT SURVIVING DESCENDANTS.

'HER CHILDREN ARISE UP AND CALL HER BLESSED"
PROV. XXXV V. 28.'[37]

Henrietta Mildred Hodgson is the 6th cousin 5 times removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 18, 1831: Supreme Court declares that the Cherokee Nation is not a “foreign state” but a “domestic, dependent nation” [38]

March 18, 1839 – John Drew. Detachments arrive With Cherokee refugees at Ft. Gibson, led by named men.

March 18, 1844: LOURANA "LOU"8 CRAWFORD (VALENTINE "VOL"7, JOSEPH "JOSIAH"6, VALENTINE5, VALENTINE4, WILLIAM3, MAJOR GENERAL LAWRENCE2, HUGH1) was born February 08, 1824 in Estell County, Kentucky, and died February 10, 1910 in Crowell Foard County, Texas. She married BSILEY FINNEY March 18, 1844.

Children of LOURANA CRAWFORD and BILEY FINNEY are:
i. LOUIS9 FINNEY.
ii. LOUISA FINNEY, m. MIKE JUDGE. [39]

LOURANA "LOU"8 CRAWFORD is the 3rd cousin 5x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 18, 1845: Appleseed. Johnny Appleseed, the character renowned in folk stories was in reality—John Chapman. Born in Massachusetts on September 26, 1774, he moved to Franklin in what is now Venango County in 1797 and lived there until 1804. He had a nursery on French Creek and another in Warren. He moved to the Pittsburgh area, Grant's Hill, on property owned by James O'Hara before moving to Ohio and later to Indiana where he died on March 18, 1845. He led a nomadic existence mixed with preaching and distributing apple seeds to whomever he met. From a practical point of view, Chapman sold the seeds and plantings he developed from them. Some believe that the apple trees of Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana owe their existence, to a large part, to the efforts of Johnny Appleseed.



Johnny Appleseed. Franklin Avenue and 13th. Franklin, Venango County. Photo by compiler with Joyce Chandler. [40]

March 1862: By the time the ordinance of secession had passed in May 1861, Zebulon Baird Vance was a captain stationed in Raleigh, commanding a company known as the "Rough and Ready Guards," part of the Fourteenth North Carolina Regiment. That August, Vance was elected Colonel of the Twenty-sixth North Carolina. The Twenty-sixth engaged in battle in New Bern in March 1862, where Vance conducted an orderly retreat. Vance also led the Twenty-sixth at Richmond. The Twenty-sixth was ultimately destroyed at the Battle of Gettysburg, losing more than 700 of its original 800 members, though Vance at that time was no longer in military service. [41]

Zebulon Baird Vance is the 3rd cousin 4x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 1863: To boost enlistment in Federal armed forces, a system of bounties was developed very early. Men who volunteered to serve for ninety days in 1862 received $25 from Uncle Sam, while those who signed up for a year got twice as much. Rising throughout the conflict, the bounty paid to a five year volunteer after March 1863 was $400. It is not known what bounty William Harrison Goodlove received. [42]



William Harrison Goodlove is the 2nd great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



March 18, 1863: Salisbury, N.C., March 18th [1863]
". . . Salisbury has witnessed to-day one of the gayest and liveliest scenes of the age. About 12 o'clock, a rumor was afloat, that the wives of several soldiers now in the war, intended to make a dash on some flour and other necessities of life, belonging to certain gentlemen, who the ladies termed "speculators." They alleged that they were entirely out of provisions, and unable to give the enormous prices now asked, but were willing to give Government prices. Accordingly, about 2 O'clock they met, some 50 or 75 in number, with axes and hatchets, and proceeded to the depot of the North Carolina Central Road, to impress some there, but were very politely met by the agent, Mr. ---: "What on earth is the matter?" The excited women said they were in search of "flour" which they had learned had been stored there by a certain speculator. . . .Finally . . . they returned to the depot . . . and again demanded the agent that they be allowed to go in. He still refused, but finally agreed to let two go in and examine the flour, and see if his statement was not correct. A restlessness pervaded the whole body, and but a few moments elapsed before a female voice was heard saying: "Let's go in." The agent remarked:-"Ladies . . . it is useless to attempt it, unless you go in over my dead body." A rush was made, and they went in, and the last I saw of the agent, he was sitting on a log blowing like a March wind. They took ten barrels, and rolled them out and were setting on them, when I left, waiting for a wagon to haul them away. . . ." -- Salisbury Daily Carolina Watchman, 23 March, 1863[43]

Fri. March 18[44], 1864

Marched to vermion byo – butcherd more cattle. Crossed some nice rolling prairie

Byo small.[45]

March 18, 1869: Samuel Preston Adams, b March 18, 1869, Delhi, Hamilton County, Ohio. m Dec 17, 1891, Portsmouth, Ohio Bessie Cecelia Varner b Oct 4, 1867, Portsmouth, Ohio dau. Of Sampson E and Maria Huston Varner. [46]

Samuel Preston is the half 4th cousin 3 times removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 1870 and March 1882: John Kilpatrick Nix13 [John A. Nix12, Grace Louisa Francis Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. February 16, 1845 in Randolph Co. AL / d. April 20, 1926 in Cullman Co. AL) married Louisa Bankhead (b. May 3, 1847 / d. October 24, 1911 in Cullman Co. AL).

A. Children of John Nix and Louisa Bankhead:
. i. Thomas F. Nix (b. May 15, 1867 / d. July 26, 1908 in Cullman Co. AL)
+ . ii. Mary Jane Nix (b. October 23, 1868 in AL / d. June 21, 1935 in TX)
. iii. Sallie Louisa Nix (b. March 1870 / d. 1952 in Cullman Co. AL)
+ . iv. James William Nix (b. November 4, 1871 / d. July 16, 1911 in AL)
. v. E. J. H. Nix (b. 1873)
. vi. Charles Nix (b. July 22, 1874 / d. September 28, 1908 in AL)
. vii. A. Jackson Nix (b. April 5, 1876 in AL / d. August 18, 1908)
. viii. Arizona D. Nix (b. 1878)
. ix. Austin Nix (b. 1880)
. x. Joseph W. Nix (b. March 1882 in AL)
. xi. John Louis Nix (b. January 27, 1884 / d. December 30, 1952 in AL)[47]



Sallie Louisa Nix and Joseph W. Nix are the 6th cousins 5 times removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 18, 1871: Senator John Sherman of Ohio, on the floor of the Senate Chamber, March 18, 1871, made use of the following langurage:” If any senator now, in looking over the record of crime of all ages, can tell me of an association, a conspiracy, or a band of men who combined in their acts and in their purposes more that is diabolical than this Ku Klux Klan I should like to know where it is. They are secret, oath-bound; they murder, rob, plunder, whip, and scourge; and they commit these crimes, not upon the high and lofty, but upon the lowly, upon the poor, upon feeble men and women who are utterly defenseless.”[48]



March 18, 1883: William Cephous Nix14 [Marion F. Nix13, John A. Nix12, Grace Louisa Francis Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. May 20, 1885 in AL / d. November 20, 1963 in AL) married Mollie Belle Stephenson (b. March 18, 1883 in GA / d. April 4, 1964 in AL). [49]



March 19, 1911: Lucie Gottlieb, born Linick, March 18, 1911 in Gelnhausen, Tempelhof, Boelchetr. 109; 32. Resided Berlin. Deportation: from Berlin, March 2,1943, Auschwitz

Place of death: Auschwitz, declared legally dead. [50]



March 18, 1913: The program was a good one; but how to meet the necessary expenses and to carry the plans out successfully was a problem, for there was upon which to rely. The little energetic group was not to be discouraged, however. They worked hard and well together, and tackled obstacles with a persistence and determination hardly equaled by a first rate book agent.



A TRIP TO ITALY

Glimses of Peasant Life and Famous Scenery in Holland, Germay and Switzerland.

MARCH 18, 1913[51]



March 18, 1940: Adolph Hitler meets Italian dictator Benito Mussolini at the Brenner Pass. [52]



March 18, 1941: This week, 200 Jews would die from hunger in Warsaw ghetto. The prior week, 400 died of hunger.[53]



March 18, 1944: Hitler summons the Hungarian Regent, Admiral Horthy for talks. Horthy guaranteed the delivery of 100,000 Jewish workers for the German war effort. Yet he was still hesitant about a general deportation of the rest of the country's 750,000 Jews. At 9:30 that evening, German troops begin to enter Hungary.[54]

March 18, 2010

I Get Email!

Greetings Jeffery,

I wanted to thank you for taking the time to send along the additional picture and information regarding Captain Moore and your father. Please extend to your father and mother my regards and do not hesitate to forward any other information you may have; specifically you mentioned additional cemetery information in the “woods” letter.

Since our last correspondence, I wanted to let you know I have sent in my SAR application along with the required fees and signatures. My sponsor indicated that my bona fides would be reviewed for authenticity at the State and National levels prior to admittance; however he did say my documentation was in good order. I hope you have success with your application as well. Please let me know if you need any information that I might have and I’ll continue to send what I find.

I did want to share with you the attached document and e-mail message regarding Capt. Moore’s service at Valley Forge, 1778. I don’t believe I previously sent theses to you? I apologize for the duplication if I did. Additionally, I have been in contact with a man from the Cynthiana-Harrison County Historical Museum. He is locating the name of the current owner of the property so I may gain prior permission to access the land. I would like to take a trip in early April. My SAR sponsor is in agreement that the headstone/gravesite needs restoration. I also would like to restore the three other soldiers’ graves while I am at it. He said each State SAR has a “grave” officer who helps facilitate the restoration process of any Revolutionary War soldier. I am planning to contact them soon. Additionally, he indicated if the headstone is missing or beyond repair the National Veterans Administration will send a new one. Once the gravesite has been restored, it is rededicated with a color guard. Surprisingly to me when my SAR sponsor was conducting his background research he found a document indicating that Marry Harrison Moore is buried on the same site with her husband Capt. Moore. I will look for that evidence when I visit the site. Keep in touch.

Sincerely, John Moreland



Oaths of Allegiance

Valley Forge, 1778 - Page7

On February 3, 1778, Congress, having taken into consideration the report of the special committee appointed to devise effectual means to prevent persons disaffected to the interest of the United States from being employed in any of the important offices thereof, resolved, That every officer who held or should thereafter hold a commission or office from Congress, should subscribe the oath or affirmation of allegiance. These oaths or affirmations the commander-in-chief or any major or brigadier-general was authorized and directed to administer to all officers of the army or of any of the departments thereof. Those mentioned in the following list (with a few exceptions) took the oath at Valley Forge in the spring of '78 before that encampment was broke, and who undoubtedly were members of the army actually in camp at Valley Forge the ever memorable winter of '77-'78. The names are given in the order in which they appear in the volumes of original manuscripts from which they are taken.

Samuel Cobb, lieutenant 2d Va. regiment.

James Moody, lieutenant 2d Va. regiment.

Christian Febiger, colonel 2d Va. regiment.

Ralph Falkner, major 2d Va, regt.

Robert Beall, captain 13th Va. regiment.

Thomas Moore, Lieutenant. 13th Va. Regiment.

Lewis Thomas, Lieutenant 13th Va. regiment

Andrew Lewis, ensign 13th Va. regiment

Daniel De Benneville, surgeon 13th Va. regiment

Richard Campbell, major 13th Va. regiment.

Nathan Lamb, lieutenant 10th Va. regt.

John Green, colonel 10th Va. regiment.

Thomas Hord, lieutenant 10th Va. regiment.



Sent: Monday, March 08, 2010 11:56 AM

To: John Moreland

Subject: Re: New Entry

Dear Mr. Moreland,

Thank you for writing to us in regards to Lieutenant Thomas Moore. Upon further investigation, it seems his name was indeed omitted from our muster roll list. I have added him as PID# VA33719. It may take a few weeks for this to be updated on the website. If you have any additional information regarding Lieutenant Moore, I could add it to his entry.

Sincerely,





Peter Maugle

Park Ranger, Interpretation

Valley Forge National Historical Park



John,

Always a pleasure to correspond with you regarding Thomas Moore, Revolutionary War soldier. I have more information and I will pass it along as we go. I will pass on your regards to my mother and father, Gary and Mary "Winch" Goodlove. Due to time constrictions I will need to get the information from the Woods letter concerning the visitation and comments of January 15, 1967.

Congratulations on the completion and submittal of your SAR application. I sent some preliminary information into the Illinois representative and I will let you know how things go.

Thank you for the information regarding Capt. Thomas Moores activity at Valley Forge. Could you send me the name of the document that the information came from and where I might find it. I am looking for other ancestors that I believe were also there.

Mary Harrison Moore is the daughter of Lawrence Harrison and Catherine Marmaduke. Lawrence Harrison was an associate of George Washington. More on that later.

Here is a photo of my mother, Mary “Winch” Goodlove visiting the grave of Mary “Harrison” Moore. As you can see it is also in very poor condition.



Gary and Mary “Winch” Goodlove visit Elenor “Dawson” Moore. She is the wife of William Moore

Caroline H. Moore daughter of William and Elenor “Dawson” Moore. William Moore is the son of Thomas L. Moore and Mary “Harrison” Moore.





March 18, 2012, 85 Degrees!

Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove Village is a municipality located in northeastern Illinois adjacent to O'Hare International Airport and the City of Chicago. Elk Grove Village encompasses 10.9 square miles (28 km2) in land area with 10.5 square miles (27 km2) located in Cook County and 0.4 square miles (1.0 km2) located in DuPage County, Illinois. The population was 32,745 at the 2010 census. As the name suggests, Elk Grove Village is home to a small herd of elk kept in a grove at the eastern edge of the Busse Woods forest preserve. However, elk are not native to the area, and the name "Elk Grove" actually comes from a mispronunciation of the Native American name for the place. Furthermore, the original elk herd was brought from Montana by an early resident, Busse, in the 1920s.[55]

Busse Forest Nature Preserve is a 437 acre woodland within the 3,700 acre Ned Brown Preserve. This area is also classified as a Registered National Landmark by the U.S. Department of Interior. This area is an unusually rich forest of oak, sugar maple and basswood on the upland sites and swamp white oak and ash on the flat and poorly drained areas. Marshes occupy the larger depressions. There is an abundance of wildflowers and shrubs - exceptionally rich and colorful are the spring wildflowers which include the large flowered trillium.
Bird Watching is especially good during the spring and fall migrations for waterfowl and shorebirds. The Shallow Water Areas have the potential to support large numbers of a wide variety of wildlife. These areas will produce dense aquatic vegetation for food and homes for ducks, goose, shorebirds, muskrat, mink and other animals. In addition these areas will provide excellent spawning areas for fishes - especially northern pike. The "@' of these wood beds afford excellent fishing areas.
There is a sizable herd of white tailed deer that thrive in this area due to ample food and good cover.
The Elk Herd is a popular exhibit for observation of these once native animals. The herd is located in a fourteen acre enclosure at Arlington Heights and Higgins Roads.[56]



[57]


[58]


[59]


[60]


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[62]



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[64]





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


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


[3] mike@abcomputers.com


[4] The Knights Templar, American Home Treasures CD, 2001


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


[6] The Knights Templar, American Home Treasures CD, 2001


[7] The Knights Templar, HISTI


[8] The Templar Code, HISTI, 5/16/2006


[9] Burke’s General Armory.


[10] Burke’s General Armory.


[11] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_MacKinnon


[12] Holy Grail in America, HISTI, 9/20/2009


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


[14] www.wikipedia.org


[15] mike@abcomputers.com


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


[17] A time for Planting, The First Migration 1654-1823 by Eli Faber 1992 pg. 6.


[18] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/2011


[19] Proposed descendants of William Smith


[20] Proposed descendants of William Smith.


[21]


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


[23] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm


[24] http://www.homestead.com/AlanCole/CrawfordRootsII.html


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


[26] Timeline of Cherokee Removal


[27] In Search For Turkey Foot Road, Page 6.


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


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


[30] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail, Third edition by Charles Bahne, page 22.


[31] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/parliament-repeals-the-stamp-act


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


[33] http://penningtons.tripod.com/jepthagenealogy.htm


[34] http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Jonathan_Jennings


[35] (Annals of Congress)


[36] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882 pg. 492.


[37] Wikipedia


[38] http://www.milestonedocuments.com/document_detail.php?id=49&more=timeline


[39] http://penningtons.tripod.com/jepthagenealogy.htm


[40] http://www.thelittlelist.net/abetoawl.htm#abenaki


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


[42] Civil War 2010 Calendar


[43] http://thomaslegion.net/zebulon_baird_vance.html


[44] On March 18 A. J. Smith entered Alexandria (population; 600) without opposition, as Taylor retreated up the Red River. (http:www.civilwarhome.com/redrivercampaign.htm)


[45] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[46] http://www.brookecountywvgenealogy.org/CONNELL.html


[47] Proposed Descendants of William Smith


[48] The Ku Klux Klan, A Study of the American Mind, by John Moffatt Mecklin, Ph. D, 1924, page 54-55.


[49] Proposed descendants of William Smith


[50] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

{2}Der judishchen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus

“Ihre Namen mogen nie vergessen werden!”


[51] Buck Creek Parish, The Department of Rural Work of The Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1919, page 3.


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


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


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


[55] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elk_Grove_Village,_Illinois


[56] http://www.trailmonkey.com/USpages/ilhike1.htm


[57] Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012


[58] Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012


[59] Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012


[60] Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012


[61]Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012


[62] Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012


[63] Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012


[64] Busse Forest Preserve, Elk Grove, IL March 18, 2012

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