Tuesday, March 19, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, March 19


This Day in Goodlove History, March 19

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:


Birthday’s: Rene D. M. Arretchall, Perry C. Godlove, Richard A. Graham

Today the 10,000th person to be added to my family tree is…..

Thomas Gilbert Hogeland (b. January 15, 1918 in AL / d. March 19, 1982 in AL).

Thomas Gilbert Hogeland is the 8th cousin 3x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.


March 19, 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. [1]



On March 19, 1497 (the first day of Passover), Jewish parents were ordered to take their children, between the ages of four and fourteen, to Lisbon. Upon arrival, the parents were informed that their children were going to be taken away from them and were to be given to Catholic families to be raised as good Catholics. Children were literally torn from their parents and others were smothered, some parents chose to kill themselves and their kids rather than be separated. After awhile, some parents agreed to be baptized, along with their children, while others succumbed and handed over their babies. [2]

March 19, 1503: In the disturbances in the Isles, which continued during the 16th century, the name of Sir Lauchlan MacKinnon occurs very frequently and he appears, notwithstanding the comparatively small extent of his possessions, to have been a man of consideration in his time. From this time forth the clan took a part in all the political events in which the Highlanders of Scotland were engaged. On March 19,1503-4, (temp. James IV.) MacKinnon is mentioned among other Chiefs in the Acts of Parliament, to be written to, to act against Lachlan MacLean of Dowart and Ewin Allanson of Lochiel forfeited for treason. The Earl of Huntly undertakes to forward MacKinnon's letters.[3]

Lauchlan MacKinnon is the 7th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

March 19, 1773: 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:

10 i. Elizabeth (1796-1852)

ii. Mariah.

Mariah married Thomas CALVERT.

iii. Sally.

Sally married Asher COX.

11 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.[4]



John Stephenson is the half 1st cousin 7x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



March 19, 1776: The Continental Congress authorizes raids on British shipping.[5]



March 19, 1779

The missionaries had not gone back east, of course, but by moving among their many Delaware friends in Goschachgunk—not the least of whom was Killbuck, long a friend of the Americans—they had at least spared their flock being further jeopardized by Chief Brant[6] or other hostile Indians. Here Heckewelder had continued his spying operations, often hiding his messages under the saddle blankets of horses being ridden to the destination he wished, sometimes carried with the knowledge of the rider but frequently without. Two of the principals to whom Heckewelder sent his very secret letter reports were Col. Brodhead, now commanding at Fort McIntosh, and Col. Gibson at Fort Laurens, both of whom had sworn not to divulge the identity of their spy at Goschachgunk. He also wrote letters for them to forward to Gen. Washington, Col. Crawford and others.

Obviously, it was extremely advantageous to the Americans to have such a spy, since he could observe and report so much of what was going on among the enemy. But it was a very dangerous game for John Heckewelder to play.



………….. This is what I am told is the Acts of the Assembly, but I have not seen them as yet. All disputes about improvements are to be settled by auditors for that purpose, appointed by the Assembly, who are to attend on the premises,

Your Round Bottom tract, I suppose, will be settled that way, as a patent has not yet been obtained for it, as I understand, Should I be here at the time it is settled, I will attend, If I do not, you may chance to lose it, as I am better acquainted with the circumstances than any other person, Young Tomhinson, who first improved the land, was with me when I surveyed it, and carried the chain round it, and gave up any title he had to you, upon my informing him that you claimed that hand. There was no improvement on the land when I surveyed it for you but Tomhjnso11’5 as I saw. Your houses down the river are all burnt by the Indians, Kentucky and the Falls are settling very rapidly.

Your present situation will not admit of your obtaining any of those lands without some assistance, Young Harrison is going down immediately, I intend getting him to take a good tract of two or three thousand acres, if it is to be had, for which I will fall on some way of securing it for you and acquaint you by the first opportunity. I mention this, as you may want some near the Falls or some place of convenience, as all these places will in a short time be taken, if not already, I believe I shall go there myself as soon as I can be at liberty from the service of my country. I intend to go to Headquarters as soon as I conveniently can. I wish you success, and remain your most humble and obedient servant,[7]





March 19, 1782:



Military: Post Rev War: Washington County Muster Rolls, Washington Militia.

Sources:

Associators & Militia, Muster Rolls, 1775-1781. A (2) XIV, 729-752; A (6) II,

3-258.

Militia Muster & Pay Rolls, 1790-1800. A (6) V, 563-643.

Militia Officer Returns, 1790-1817. A (6) IV

Militia Rolls, 1783-1790. A (6) III, 1363-1376.



OCR'd for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja .

Proofed by Leana .



Copyright. All rights reserved.

http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm

http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/washington/

_______________________________________________





(171)



COUNTY OF WASHINGTON.



Clk.

James Seaton.



Serjts.

John Gerrard.

Abner Mundle.

Alex'r Finlay.



Privates.



1st Class.

Hugh Stephenson.

Joseph Garrett.

Benj'n Hickson.

Amos. Augustin.

Wm. Smith.

Saml. McKey.

Jeremiah Long.

Geo. Rankins.

Thos. Ackens.



2nd Class.

Zechariah Evans.

John Brown.

John Ivors.

John Blair.

John Armstrong.

Charles Swan.

Wm. Hannah.

Robert Cree.

Geo. Killgees.



3d Class.

Jas. Kazlett.

Charles McDowell.

John Brahin.

John Crawford.

Rlch'd Gregg.

John McKey.

John McClelland.

Joseph Rankins.

Peter Biley.



4th Class.

John Holton.

Robt. Lewis.

John Gregg.

Wm. Gray.

James Blair.

Robt. Kilso.

Jacob Israel.

Alex'r Crawford.

Thos. Frulock.



5th Class.

Jas. McClelland.

Ab'm Armstrong.

John Davis.

Jas. Flanagan.

John Province.

Bailey Johnston.

Wm. Hibbs.

Wm. McElroy.

Jacob Blainey.

Alex'r Cowhorn.



(172)



ASSOCIATORS AND MILITIA.



6th Class.

Joseph Gerrard.

John Douglass.

John Huston.

Henry Franks.

Robt. McClelland.

Dav'd Lewis.

Jas. Kimmins.

Hugh Johnston.

David Casto.



7th Class.

Francis Hanah.

Jn'o Hill.

Robt. Ivors.

Jn'o Jones.

Geo. Seaton.

Jonath Mundo.

Jn'o Casto.

Jos's Eastwood.

Wm. Piles.



8th Class.

Thos. Garratt.

Nicho's Shipman.

Geo'e Greeg.

Joseph Gwin.

Jas. Winn.

Philip Nivill.

Saml. Barnhill.

James Jones.

Thos. Bowen.

Clifton Bowen.



4TH CAPT. THOS. PARKISONS RETURN VIZ:



2nd Class Roll.



Capt. Crawford.

Peter Castner.

Nich's Platter.

John Hull.

John Peters.

Emanuel Gonzalis.

Saml. Rowe.

Danl. Strewsbury.

Skinner Hudson.

Phillip Fryman.

Peter Yesseroon.



5TH CAPT. ROBERT RAMSAY'S RETURN VIZ:



2nd Class.



John Huffman, acquitted on acc't of Services in 1781.

William Masterson.

Peter Hickman.



(173)



COUNTY OF WASHINGTON.



James McClean.

James Whury acquitted on acc't of former Services (in 1781.)

Frederick Alt.

John Stephenson.

Henry Dickinson acquitted on acc't of inability of body.

James Gestridge.

John Hill.

John Messmore.



A RETURN 2ND CLASS CAPT'N JAMES CRAVEN'S COM-

PANY IN THE 5TH BATTALION WASHINGTON COUNTY

MILITIA, ORDERED TO RENDEVOUZE THE 19TH

MARCH 1782. (c.)



Daniel Reed.

Wm. Wallace.

Martin Stookey.

Isaac Newkirk.

Petter Drake.

James Young.

Anthoney Spaight.

Joseph Bently.

Benj'n Harris.

George Seypole.

Jesse Buzan.



Given under my hand this March 25, 1782.

JAMES CRAVEN, Capt.



A RETURN 2ND CLASS CAPT. GEORGE MIARS COMPY 5TH

BATTN. WASHINGTON COUNTY MILITIA ORDERED TO

RENDEVOUZE THE 19TH DAY MARCH (March 19)1782. (c.)



Philip Lieuallen, Lieut.

Dennis Smith, Serjt.

David Enoch.

Jacob Sheidler.

Jesse Rees.

John Young.

James Bradin.

John Hardintey.

Jacob Everhart.

Willlam Simms.

David Sook.

Andrew Young.

Paul Everhart.



Given under my hand this 25th day of March (March 25)1782.

PHILIP LEVAN, Leut.



(174)



ASSOCIATORS AND MILITIA.



A RETURN 1ST-AND 2ND CLASSES, CAPT. THOMAS PER-

KISON'S COMPY. 5TH BATTN. WASHINGTON COUNTY

MILITIA ORDERED TO RENDEVOUZE THE 19TH DAY

OF MARCH March 19) 1782. (c.)



1st Class.

Abraham Leforgy, Ensign.

John Jones.

David Ritchie.

Nicholas Crist.

Petter Johnson.

Benjn. Fry.

Vencint Calvin.

Henry Crabbs.

John Ridle.

William Sensor.

Joseph Wood.



2nd Class.

Petter Castner.

Nicholas Platter.

John Hull.

John Petters.

Emanuel Gonsales.

Samuel Rowe.

Daniel Shrursburry.

Skinner Hudson.

Phillip Fryman.

Petter Yesseroon.



Given under my hand this 25th day March (March 25) 1782.

THO. PARKESON;

Capt.



A RETURN 2ND CLASS CAPT. ROBERT RAMSEY'S COMPY.

5TH BATT. WASHINGTON COUNTY MILITIA ORDERED

TO RENDEVOUZE THE 19TH MARCH (March 19)1782. (c.)



John Huffman.

Wllliam Masterson.

Petter Hickman.

James McLeen.

James Wherrey.

Frederick Alt.

John Stevenson.

Henry Dickenson.

James Gutridge.



Given under my hand this 25th day March (March 25)1782.

ROBT. RAMSEY. Capt.



(175)



COUNTY OF WASHINGTON.



(c.) I Do hereby Sertify That Manuel Cogusles (Gonsalus)

has Served as a solger In my company of Melitia from the

Nintenth Day of March Till the twentyeth Day Aprile both

Days Encluded. Guiving Under my hand this twentyeth Day

of Aprile 1782.



ABRAHAM LEFORGE,

of Capt'n Roses Comp'y.



A RETURN 1ST & 2ND CLASSES CAPTN. ROBERT SWEN-

EY'S COMPY. 5TH BATTN. WASHINGTON COUNTY MILI-

TIA, ORDERED TO RENDEVOUZE THE 19TH DAY OF

MARCH, 1782. (c.)



1st Class.

Nicholas Hostidler.

John Jenkinson.

Joseph Woodfield.

John Heartly.

Michael Dowdle.

William Samuels.

David Blair.

John Hormill.

Archibald Carnes.

William Wright.

Thomas Moody.



2nd Class.

Richd. Merry.

Jacob Harrow.

Charles Hutton.

James Wright.

John Cousins.

Charles Whitelatch.

Jacob Rigle.

Cornelius Gillespie.

George Peak.

Isaac Felty.

Henry Cauffman.



Given Under my hand this 25th March (March 25) 1782.

ROBERT SWENY, Capt.



A RETURN 2ND CLASS CAPTN. EZEKIEL ROSE'S COMPY.

5TH BATTN. WASHINGTON COUNTY MILITIA ORDERED

TO RENDEVOUZE THE 19TH MARCH (March 19)1782. (c.)



John Welsh.

Saml Evans.

Petter Wise.

Fredk. Crow.



(176)



ASSOCIATORS AND MILITIA.



Wm. Paine.

John Andrews.

Henry Cline.

Richd. Welch.

Jacob Hatter.

Israel Carey.



Given Under my hand this 25th day March (March 25) 1782.

EZEKEL ROSE, Cap.



(c.) I certify that Vachel Clary hath served as a soldier in

the Militia of the Commonwealth of pensylvania 33 day be-

twixt the 17th day April & the 21st day of May and that he

has Received no pay for the same.



Given under my hand this 21st day of May 1782.

NATHAN POWELL, Lieut.



A RETURN OF CAPT. EZEKIEL ROSE COMPNY. OF THE

5TH BAT. OF WASHINGTON COUNTY MELLITIA FOR

THE 3D & 4TH CLASS. (c.)



the 3d class.



John Callender.

George Reed.

John Shidlar.

Abslem Hedge.

Danel Hardsaw.

Robrt. Weir.

John Manlng.

Francis Casteel.

Jas. Mitchal.

Adam Hatter.



the 4th Class.



George Pricker.

John Kenney.

Marten Spoon.

Jacob Lasley.

Wm. Stanley.

Jonas Hatferld.

Robrt. Booth Stump.



I do certify that the above class was sumensd agreable to

law as Wittness my hand thus 25th of April 1782.



JOHNATHN HARNED, Leut.



(177)



COUNTY OF WASHINGTON.





RETURN OF THE 3D 4TH & 5TH CLASSES OF CAPT.

JAS. HOPKEN'S COMP. OF THE 5TH BATT'N OF WASH-

INGTON COUNTY MELLITIA. (c.)





3rd CIass.

Isaac Williams.

John Crow.

Jas. Henderson.

Wm. Jeckman.

Ellia Allon.

Hendry Spears.

Robt. Wilks.

Danel Whittacker.



4th Class.

George Mifford.

Gedam Palmer.

Joseph Brown.

Henry Dixon.

Robt. Carr.

John Chaffin.

Ritchard Hopktens.

Joseph Mounts.

Johnathan Glassee.



5th Class.

Hezekiah Ellias.

Nathen Masters.

Wm. Everit.

Able Jonson.

John Powers.

Forgis McCardil.

Ths. Almond.

Jno. Gregg.

Jacob Sisley.

Lewes Sisley.



I do Certyfi that the above Clases Was sumens'd acord'g to

Law as Witness my hand this 25th of April 1782.

ALEXAND HOPKINS, A. S. Gn.



A RETURN OF THE 4TH & 5TH CLASS OF CAPT. GEORG

MIRES COMP. OF THE 5TH BAT. OF WASHINGTON CON.

MELLITIA. (c.)



Samuel Layon.

Jas. Alleson.

Jacob Hook.

Jacob Swinehart.

Hendry Prooner.

Abneazer White.

Samuel Meeks, Jur.

Barlet Grifith.

Ignatias Barnet.



12—Vol. II—6th Ser.



(178)



ASSOCIATORS AND MILITIA.



Danel Grisel.

Phillip Chancier.

Wm. Hill.

Samul Davis.

Jas. Grahams.

Nichlas Mires.

Jas. Croil.

Adam Weire.

Th's Rees.

Doctor Leuallen.

Remembrance Daves.

Petter Shidler.

Gasper Richet.

Michal Dunferld.



I do Certify that the above classes Was sumensed acording

to Law as Wittness my hand this 25th day of April, 1782.



GEORGE MYARS, Capt.



A RETURN OF THE 1ST & 3D CLASS OF CAPT. BENJ'N

WHITE'S COM. OF THE 5TH BATT'N OF WASHINGTON

COUNTY MILITIA. (c.)



Leurance Purrley.

George Rigle.

Joseph Brinton.

John Houghlen.

Allex'r Andrews.

Edward Joy.

Frances Simral.

John Deems.

Zekial Penter.

Charles Wheeler.

Allex'r Moody.

Wm. Peeters.

Ths. Megines.

Robert Fossit.

Hugh Murphey.



I Do Certify that the above Clases Was Sumensed agreable

to Law as Wittness My hand thus 25th of April 1782.



BENJ'N POWEL, Ensign.



A RETURN OF THE 4TH & 5TH CLASSES OF CAPT.

ROBRT. SWENY'S COMP. OF THE 5TH BATTN. OF

WASHINGTON COUNTY MELITIA. (c.)



the 4th Class



Jacob Snuff.

Robert Dimbo.

Christe Hegart.

John Hatfeild.

Wm. Willson.

Barney McNene.

Heugh Heal.

Isaac Harrow.

Jacob Hormal.

Michal Spencer.



(179)



COUNTY OF WASHINGTON.



the 5th Class.



Nethanel Gleas.

John Carr.

John Connaly.

Mathias Hook.

Phillip Grips.

Ths. Cook.

Joseias Dowdel.

Josias Evens.

George Jurden.

Michal Moore.



I do Certify that the above Classes Was sumensed acording

to Law as Wittness my hand thus 25th of Aprile 1782.



ROBERT SWENY. Capt.



A RETURN OF THE 3 CLASS OF CAPT. JAMES CRAVEN

COM. IN THE 5TH BATAT WASHINGTON CO. MILITIA.

(c.)



George Tombough.

Jeremiah Craven.

Jno. Stackpole.

Frederick Wise.

Jno. Martin.

Coonrod Weaver.

Jno. Knox.

Jas. Reed.

Jesse Pewzan.

Jacob Sootz.



I do certify that the Above Class was Summoned according

to Law as witness my Hand the 8 apl. 1782.



JAMES CRAVEN, Captn.



A RETURN OF THE 3D, 4TH & 5 CLASSES OF MY COM-

PANY ORDER'D ON DUTY FOR THE DEFENCE OF THE

FRONTIERS. (c.)



Captain.

William Crawford.



James Hazelet.

Charles McDowel.

Jno. Breaken.

Jno. Crawford.

Rich'd Grey.

Jno. McKey.

Jno. McClelland.

Joseph Rankin.



(180)



ASSOCIATORS AND MILITIA.



Peter Riley.

Jno. Holton.

Robert Lewis.

Jno. Gregs.

William Gray.

James Blair.

Robert Kelso.

Jacob Israel.

Alexander Crawford.

Tho's Trulock.

James McClelland.

Abram Armstrong.

Jno. Davis. .

'Tames Flanagen.

Jno. Provance.

Baily Johnson.

William Hibbs.

William McIlroy.

Jacob Blaney.

Jno. Ivers.



Given under my hand this 24th Day of April 1782.

WILLIAM CRAWFORD, Capt.



A RETURN OF THE 3D CLASS OF CAPT. GEORGE MIRE'S

COMPY. OF THE 5TH BATT. OF WASHINGTON COUNTY

MILLITIA.



John Raynolds.

Jacob Bradin.

Nehemiah Harper.

Elias Jenkens.

Robt. Stephson.

Joseph Bidle.

Adam hartman.

John Kimble.

Ths. Kelley, Junr.

Henry Fix.

Jas. Henthorn.

David Frasier.

John Howal.



I do certify the above class was sumensed according to law

as wittness my hand this 8th of Aprl. 1782.



GEORGE MYERS, Capt.



(c.) These are to certify that Edward Browner hath Sarved

as Millitia soldier & as substitute in the room of John Riddle

in actual Sarvice under my command from the seventeenth

Day of March till the sixtienth Day of April Both Days In-

cluded Given at Fort Henrey this 17 Day of April 1782.



EZEKIEL ROSE, Capt. Com'dt.[8]





To JOHN HARVIE



Mount Vernon, March 19, 1785.

Sir: If I recollect right, I mentioned when I had the pleasure of seeing you at Mr. Jones’s[9] the first of last October, that I was reduced to the necessity of bringing ejectments against sundry persons who had taken possession of a tract of Land which I hold, not far from Fort Pitt in the State of Pennsylvania, by Patent under this Governmt. for 2813 acres.

I have lately received a letter from my Lawyer, Mr. Thos. Smith, of Carlisle requesting information on several points; the following are his own words,

I am entirely unacquainted with the manner in which titles to Lands are acquired by improvement or occupancy, by the Laws and customs of Virginia. I suppose it must be under certain conditions and restrictions. I should be glad to have the Laws, if any, pointed out. Does the occupier orfeit his right of pre-emption, if he does not apply for an office right in a given time? If so, when? By what Laws? Or is it by the regu­lations established in the Land Office? A certified copy of such regula­tions if any, may be necessary.



At the interview I had with that Gentleman in September, he told me it would be necessary to obtain a certified copy of the Surveyors return to the Land office, and of the date of the Warrt. upon which it was made. The latter I presume is in the hands of the Surveyor, but the date no doubt, is recited in the re­turn. Having (in the life time of Col. Crawford, and by letter from him) received information that at the convention next before the 20th. of Septr. 1776, (the date of his letter) an ordinance passed for the purpose of saving equitable claims to the Western Lands, Mr. Smith requested some precise in­formation respecting this Ordinance, that is, how far it will apply in my case.

After the many obliging acts of kindness I have received from you, and the generous terms upon which they have been rendered, I am really ashamed to give you more trouble; but as the dispute in which I am engaged is of importance, and a very ungenerous advantage has been taken of a situation in which I could not attend to my private concerns, or seek justice in due season, and as I believe no person can solve the queries of Mr. Smith, and give such accurate information on such points as can be made to subserve my cause as you, I am, how­ever reluctantly, compelled to this application.

Mr. Smith’s own words, which I have quoted, and his verbal application to me, wch. I have just now recited, will sufficiently apprize you of what has occurred to him; but I will go fur­ther, and take the liberty my good Sir, of giving you a state of the whole matter; from whence you will discover the points on which my opponents mean to hinge the success of their cause.





Col. Crawford, a liver on Yohioghaney, an old and inti­mate acquaintance of mine, undertook to procure for me a tract of land in that Country; and accordingly made choice of the one, now in dispute, on the waters of Racoon and Millers runs, branches of Shurtees Creek, surveyed the same, amounting to 2813 acres, and purchased in my behalf the claim of some person to a part of the land, who pretended to have a right thereto. After this he built, or intended to build according to his own accot., and to the best of my recollection, (for the papers being in the hands of my Lawyer, I have mem­ory only, and that a bad one, to resort to) three or four cabbins on different parts of the tract, and placed one or more persons thereon to hold possession of it for my benefit. All this pre­ceeded the first view the present occupiers (my opponents) ever had of the Land, as they themselves have acknowledged to me’, and which I believe can be proved. So far as it respects one cabbin there can be no doubt, because it remains to this day; and is acknowledged by them to have been on the land when they first came to it. They built another cabbin so close to the door of it, as to preclude the entrance of it: Crawford in his accot. of it to me, says, with a view to prevent occupation:

they, on the other hand, say there was no inhabitant in the house at the time. Both may be right, for the fact is, as I have been informed, the owner being from home, this transaction took place in his absence.

It may be well to observe here that Col. Crawford was only acting the part of a friend to me; for at that time, tho’ he was a Surveyor by regular appointment from the College of Wm, and Mary, it was for the local purpose of surveying the 200,000 acres granted by Dinwiddie’s Proclamation of 1754 to the Troops of the State, who were entitled to it as a bounty: but as I proposed to cover this survey with a military warrant as soon as circumstances would permit, these steps were prelimi­nary to obtain the Land. Accordingly, a Warrant which I obtained in consequence of a purchase from one Captain Posey (who under the British Kings proclamation of 1763 was en­titled to 3000 acres) whose Bond I now have bearing date the 14th. of Octr. (October 14) 1770, assigning to me all his right to land under it, was located thereon; and Col. Crawford, after receiving a commission to act as Deputy to Mr. Thos. Lewis, made a return of this survey to his principal, who returned it to the Secretary’s office, from whence a Patent issued signed by Lord Dunmore in June or July 1774, for 2813 acres, reciting under what right I became entitled to the Land. Hence, and from the repeated warnings, which it is said can be proved were given at the time my opponents were about to take possession of the Land, and afterwards, comes my title.

The title of my opponents I know will be: 1st. That Craw-fords survey was illegal, at least, was unauthorized. 2d. That being a great land-jobber, he held, or endeavored to monop­olise under one pretence or other much land: and tho’ (for they do not deny the fact to me in private discussion, altho’ considering the lapse of time, deaths, and dispersion of people, I may find some difficulty to prove it) they were told this was my land; yet conceiving my name was only made use of as a cover, and in this they say they were confirmed, having (after some of the warnings given them) searched the Land office of this State without discovering any such Grant to me. 3d. That their possession of the Land, preceded my Patent or date of the Surveyors return to the Secretary’s office; or even the date of Crawfords deputation under Lewis, before which, every transaction they will add, was invalid.

But to recapitulate, the Dispute, if my memory for want of papers does not deceive me, may be summed up in these words.



1st. In the year 1771, Crawford at my request looked of this Land for me, and made an actual survey thereof on m account.

2d. Some person (not of the opponents) setting up a clam to part included by the survey, he purchased them out, bu~1 one cabbin, if not more, and placed a man therein to kee1 possession of the Land.

3d. It was called my band, and generally believed to be so

every body, and under that persuasion was left by some, whc uninformed of my right, had begun to build, before the pres­ent occupants took possession to the exclusion as I have related before of the person placed thereon by Crawford.

4th. That sometime in October 1773 according to their own accot., these occupants took possession.

5th. That upon their doing so, and at several times there­after, they were notified of my claim and intention to assert my right.

6th. That no survey was ever made of this Land, but the first one by Crawford.

7th. That it is declared in the Surveyors return, to be con­sequent of a warrant granted by Lord Dunmore to Jno. Posey assigned to me. But whether this warrt. is dated before or after possession was taken by my opponents, I know not, but the Survey will shew this.

8th. That after he received his deputation (which I believe was subsequent to their occupancy) he made a return of the survey to Mr. Lewis, who returned it to the Secretary’s Office in the early part, I believe, of the year 1774, and a Patent issued without any caveat or Opposition from these people.

9th. I believe, because I never heard otherwise, that no office rights either in this State or that of Pennsylvania, were ever obtained by my opponents, resting their title upon possession.



Under this statement of the matter, in which I have con­ceded everything I know, or which I think can be urged against my claim, I would thank you, as the matter will be deter­mined in another State, for such advice and information of Acts of Assembly, Acts of Convention, or rules of office which make to the point, as my long absence renders me quite an ignoramus in these matters, and as unfit for, as I am disinclined to controversies of this kind.

If pre-occupancy will take place of legal right, under the circumstances here mentioned; it remains still a question how far the possession and improvements which were made in my behalf, previous to those of my opponents, will avail me; that is, under what title I should then claim the Land, and under that title how much of it I should hold, supposing one Cabbin only to have been built and occupied, by any rule of Office, or Act of Government.

When I look back at the length of this letter, and consider how much trouble I am giving you, I must thro myself upon your goodness for an apology, whilst I assure you of the esteem and regard with which I am, etc.[10]



March 19, 1823: Mexican emperor Agustin de Iturbide abdicated throne. [11]

March 19, 1845: The story of James Simeon "Sim" Whitsett, Civil War Guerrilla With Quantrell's Raiders. He was born James Simeon Whitsett on March 19, 1845 to John R. and Eliza (Oldham) Whitsett. John was the son of James and grandson of Samuel Whitsett. Samuel and James came to Montgomery County, Kentucky from Pennsylvania about 1790. In John and Eliza's family, James Simeon was tenth of twelve children, with four sisters and one brother who survived childhood. The family lived on land settled by John and Eliza when they came to Missouri from Kentucky in about 1839. They were among some of the earliest settlers of Jackson County. The Whitsett homestead was about a mile north of Hickman's Mill in Jackson County. Today Hickman's Mill is a suburb of Kansas City. A few miles away in Sni-bar township lived John’s cousin Isaac and his wife Cynthia (Noland) Whitsett. Isaac and Cynthia were also the parents of six children, three boys and three girls. Regardless of the fate of his own family, Sim was probably affected by the tragedies that visited his relative's family before and during the war. Those events may help to explain his membership in the guerilla band. This is his story. It is not a history of Quantrill or his Raiders, or the war on the border. Extremely talented authors and highly qualified historians have dealt with those subjects in numerous books. We deal with them here as the frame around the portrait of James Simeon "Sim" Whitsett. Most of this story spans only three years of his life, from the age of seventeen until the age of twenty. Those three years would have, without question, had a major influence on who Sim Whitsett was for the rest of his life. He died on May 22, 1928 at the age of 83.

High School history taught me that the Civil War began with the shelling of Fort Sumter in April 1861. In fact, the bloodletting started much earlier on the Kansas-Missouri border. The trigger was the Kansas-Nebraska Act passed by Congress in 1854. The question was whether these two territories would be admitted to the Union as free or slave states, affecting the political balance between those two opposing issues. Nebraska was certain to be a free state because it bordered no slave state. Kansas was up for grabs since it shared its eastern border with Missouri, a slave state. Both sides of the slavery issue swarmed into Kansas in hopes of tipping the balance to their favor.

Neither side was above using questionable or even illegal means to affect the outcome. "Free-soilers" stuffed ballot boxes while southerners from Missouri voted in elections in Kansas. Legal voters on both sides of the issue were intimidated or prevented from casting ballots. Dubious politics soon turned into violence and bloodshed.[12]



James Simeon Whitsett is the husband of the 4th cousin, 4x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

On March 19, 1862, the Federal authorities in Kansas City issued an order that all guerrillas were to be treated as common criminals rather than soldiers or prisoners of war, and they were to be shot on sight. This "No Quarter" policy by the Federal authorities was a turning point with Quantrill and his men. Up until this time they regularly paroled their prisoners, a common practice by both sides early in the war. After the authorities issued the "No Quarter" order, Quantrill and his men exercised the same policy of no quarter towards their captives, usually killing them on the spot. However, there were numerous exceptions. In hopes of causing the Union Army to soften this policy towards the guerrillas, the Confederate government passed the Partisan Ranger Act. The act legitimized guerrilla bands as rangers acting under the authority of the Confederate Army. The Union Army command ignored the Partisan Ranger Act, but from this time on the men who rode with Quantrill and bands like his considered themselves soldiers in the Confederate Army and the CSA bore the responsibility for their actions. [13]

Sat. March 19[14], 1864

Crossed carion crow byo. Marched 17 miles

Rebs tried to take our wagon train

Doubled quick 3 miles – camped at belle

Pass by pressed beef [15]and pork[16]



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



[17]



March 19, 1865: Union forces, commanded by General William T. Sherman, defeat the Confederates, under General William Hardee, at the Battle of Bentonville, North Carolina.[18]



March 19-20, 1865: Battle of Bentonville, NC.[19]

March 19, 1866: Correspondence from J.S. Crawford to brother, March 19, 1866 regarding personal matters [F.10] [20]

March 19, 1914: The following men in and around Central City have been drawn as petit jurors for April term of district court: E. L. Goodlove, Earl Henderson, Red Woodbridge and J. A. Whittaker.[21]

Spring 1914: “It is the best revival we ever had,” they said.

It was hardly enough that folks should merely come into Buck Creek Church. That meant little to the future of the church. These people needed to be organized into working units just as the young people had been organized.

It was not long before the Men’s Brotherhood and the Ladies’ Aid were vying with each other in their efforts to make over Buck Creek Church. The men graded and improved the church grounds, put in cement walks and crossings, kept the yard clean and mowed the lawns. They cut down the weeds which had adorned the place when the pastor first saw it, and kept them down. They straightened the posts and cleaned up the land around the church, and looked after all the repairs for the building.

While the men were beautifying the exterior, the women were busy within. They put in a new floor, decorated the walls and woodwork, and thoroughly cleaned the objectionable lamps. They bought a new pulpit and chairs, and laid new carpets throughout the aisles. In all, they spent about $800 in improvements for the church.

The important folks, now, were the children. The pastor turned his attention to them, giving every Sunday for ten months, a ten minute address to the children. Every month a written invitation was sent to each child in the community, and there were personal invitations given constantly. On the special days, such as Rally Day, Decoration Day, and Mother’s Day, the children were used. And on all these occasions the need of religions instruction for children was emphasized. [22]

At the end of 10 months, there was a 50 percent increase in the attendance at Sunday school, which had been completely reorganized to meet it. The school was graded and several of the senior classes were united into well planned units. There was a remarkable change in the appearance of Buck Creek Church now. It was no longer presented a neglected, sleepy appearance, but became in the real sense a church worthy of the name. Many people were attracted to services who had never attended before. Preceding Easter time, the preacher put on a series of Passion Week services, and after fourteen days, on Easter Sunday, Buck Creek Church received twenty four into church membership.

Throughout the new program of the church, evangelism was most constantly emphasized. For, after all, the chief function of the3 church is spiritual and all other activities are but means to a great end, and subordinate to the greater business of wining folks to life dominated by the will of God.[23]



March 1917: Trouble was brewing with Germany’s other main ally, Ottoman Turkey. Germany needed Turkey to hold the line against the British advance in the Middle East. But after 600 years, the Ottoman Empire was crumbling, and the British Empire was licking its lips. In March 1917, the British captured Bagdad. [24]

March 1918: 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.[25]

March 1920: Faysal elected and crowned king of Greater Syria at 2nd General Syrian Congress in Damascus; assembly proclaims independence from France of Greater Syria; rejects Balfour Declaration and Sykes-Picot agreement. Allies occupy Constantinople.[26]



• March 1921: War between Polish units and German Free Corps in Upper Silesia. Plebiscite, March 1921. German public is outraged because the drawing of voting districts by the Allies favors Poland. Left-wing uprisings in Saxony and Thuringia, spring 1921. Repression through the army and Free Corps. [27]

March 1921: Following the death of Amin's half-brother, the mufti Kamil al-Husayni in March 1921, the British High Commissioner Sir Herbert Samuel pardoned al-Husseini. He and another Arab had been excluded from the general amnesty, six weeks earlier, because they had fled before their convictions had been passed down. [28]

March 1931: After circulating as a handbill, the patriotic lyrics were published in a Baltimore newspaper on September 20, 1814. Key's words were later set to the tune of "To Anacreon in Heaven," a popular English song. Throughout the 19th century, "The Star-Spangled Banner" was regarded as the national anthem by most branches of the U.S. armed forces and other groups, but it was not until 1916, and the signing of an executive order by President Woodrow Wilson, that it was formally designated as such. In March 1931, Congress passed an act confirming Wilson's presidential order, and on March 3 President Hoover signed it into law.[29]

March 1938: The process of identification was different in different parts of Europe.
1. Germany and (from March 1938) Austria
From April 1933 onwards Jews were banned from various kinds of work and activities, starting with the dismissal of Jews employed in the public sector. Then, later that month a large number of Jews were expelled from the German universities on 'racial' grounds. Then Jews were forbidden to run theatres or act ... So, how did the authorities actually pick the individuals?
Already before the Nazis came to power people in many parts of Germany were intensely Jew-conscious. 'Is he/she one [a Jew]?' was considered very interesting and very spicy. (The situation was very different from that in modern Britain, for example).
When it came to picking people out, co-workers and bosses in that Jew-conscious society generally had a pretty good idea of who was a Jew or of Jewish origin. In the cases referred to, the authorities dismissed the people they thought were Jews. The victims of these acts of discrimination then had the option of proving they weren't Jews. This involved producing the notorious Ariernachweis ('Aryan certificate') based on certificates of baptism for the parents and grandparents. On the whole, the authorities included people they though might be Jewish, and then let them produce evidence to the contrary.
In Germany, the Nazis were particularly bothered about 'secret Jews'. Nazi propganda worked with conspiracy theories that claimed that there were ethnic Jews lurking, so to speak, in all kinds of unlikely places, with fingers on just about every imaginable lever of power. So the tendency was to require more people than necessary to produce those certificates. The work involved was at times almost crippling for the Protestant and Roman Catholic Churches in Germany, but they collaborated in this shameful exercise.

2. Occupied countries in Western Europe

The Nazis relied heavily on collaborators. In Antwerp, Belgium, for example the Nazis asked the city council for a list of Jews and the council was only too delighted to provide a fairly full list ...
Here too there was an obsession was with 'secret Jews', with atheists, Communists, with perhaps one or two Jewish grandparent.
As mentioned above, roundups took place in stages, often by category (for example, stateless Jews first).
In France the government had already done some of the rounding up as many refugees from Nazi Germany were interned in camps ...
Nevertheless, in France and Belgium the Nazis were not on home ground and the proportion of people who managed to escape deportation to the death camps was higher than in Germany, for example.

3. Occupied Eastern Europe

Here the Nazis had least difficulty. The vast majority of Jews were Orthodox and followed their religion, often meticulously. There had been much less intermarriage with Christians than for example in Germany, and Jews often lived in recognizable communities.
(In most occupied territories, research on grandparents was usually not practical or was considered too cumbersome and time-consuming; and there were also linguistic problems).

There were degrees of being Jewish (half Jew for, obviously, one parent Jewish the other not) and there was also the problem of some one converting to another faith, perhaps generations ago, which the Church might defend. All of this made for some grey areas for the Nazis in deciding who was to be deported. There were sometimes well known figures protected (and sometimes not , Harry Gold a famous Polish composer died in Treblinka, Sigmund Freud's sisters, and so on).

The Nazis also used census returns and there were of course records kept of church and synagogue members, marriages, military and everything else just like today.

The "Jewish councils" (Judenrats) also helped prepare lists for those to be deported to the extermination camps --a certain number, say 5,000, was demanded on a given day and they hoped they could placate Nazi demands or "save some" by working for the German war cause, for instance. None of this helped in the end, since they were dealing with one of the most bloodthirsty group of fanatics ever. [30]
___

In March 1939, 800 Jewish men were arrested, some being sent to Dachau concentration camp. [31]



March 19, 1947: James Milton “Shug” Nix, Sr.13 [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. 10 Nov 1847 in GA / d. 9 Nov 1932 of Food poisoning) married Rena Cummings (b. 27 May 1848 in AL / d. 14 Dec 1922 in Wedowee, Randolph Co. AL), the daughter of John Cummings and Eliza unk. He married Willie Bozeman Manley (b. unk) in 1925.

A. Children of James Nix and Rena Cummings:

. i. John A. Nix (b. 1871)
. ii. Benjamin Franklin Nix (b. December 28, 1872 in AL / d. January 29, 1930 in AL)
. iii. Berry F. Nix (b. 1873)
. iv. Eliza L. Nix (b. 1875)
. v. James Milton Nix, Jr. (b. November 21, 1876 / d. April 2, 1935 in AL)
. vi. Joseph W. Nix (b. July 8, 1880 / d. March 19, 1947)
. vii. William P. Nix (b. February 12, 1881 / d. October 2, 1945 in AL)
. viii. Arrina P. Nix (b. February 1883)
. ix. Charrocottie L. Nix (b. May 1885)
. x. Narcissa W. Nix (b. February 1887)
+ . xi. Harrison Revity Nix (b. April 1889 / d. 1959)[32]



Joseph W. Nix is the 7th cousin 4x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



March 1955: Ewell Alexander Rowell13 [Arminda Smith12, Gabriel D. Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. December 20, 1870 in Carroll Co. GA / d. April 21, 1942) married Ann Bell Shepard (b. March 4, 1869 in AL / d. June 27, 1960) on July 13, 1890 in Edwardsville, AL.

A. Children of Ewell Rowell and Ann Shepard:
. i. Harriet Dorcie Rowell (b. June 1892 in AL)
. ii. Dussie Rowell (b. July 1894 in AL / d. March 1955 in AL)
. iii. Maggie Bell Rowell (b. September 1897)
. iv. Shepard Sanford Rowell (b. October 27, 1900 in AL / d. May 28, 1974 in AL)
. v. Ewell Alexander Rowell (b. October 12, 1905 in AL / d. September 3, 1971 in AL) [33]



Dussie Rowell is the 7th cousin 4x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



March 1981: Brown, Parker B. "'Crawford's Defeat': A Ballad." Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine 64 (March 1981): 311–327.



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


[1] mike@abcomputers.com


[2] The Virtual Jewish History TourPortugal by Rebecca Weiner, retrieved October 18, 2006 from http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Portugal.html
http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/


[3] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888


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


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


[6] Brant. Joseph Brant. Thayandanega (“He places two bets”). Born in Ohio territory in 1742 and died November 24, 1807 near Wellington Square, Canada. Some historians maintain he was a Seneca (he was born on the banks of the Ohio River while his parents were on a hunting trip). Brant went to school in CT, learned English, became a Christian, and joined the Masons. He was a classmate of Samuel Kirkland. The school he attended was directed by the Reverend Eleazar Wheelock who served as Brant's tutor and worked on several English-to-Mohawk translations with him. Wheelock later moved to New Hampshire and founded Dartmouth College in 1769.

Brant's first wife was a daughter of an important Oneida chief. They were married in a Christian ceremony in 1765 by one of Eleazar Wheelock's missionaries (her Christian name was Margaret). She died in 1771 and Brant remarried in 1773—Susanna,the half-sister of his deceased wife (she died in 1778). A year later, Brant married Catherine Croghan ("Adonwentishon"), a twenty-year-old daughter of George Croghan—the trader and one of Sir William Johnson's representatives. Catherine's mother was Mohawk. Brant himself was the son of a Mohawk chief in the wolf clan.

He is believed to have been present in 1755 at the Battle of Lake George during the French & Indian War and to have accompanied Sir William in 1759 in the campaign against the French at Niagara. Thus, he began action as a warrior while still a teenager.

Brant was a Mohawk war chief during the Revolutionary War. Brant was a favorite of Sir William Johnson. After Sir William's wife Catherine died, Johnson turned permanently to Brant’s older sister, Molly. Molly became Johnson’s new wife—although legal documentation of the marriage appears lacking. Brant led the Iroquois into the British camp—with the exception of the Oneida and part of the Tuscarora. In 1780, Brant led a force in burning Oneida and Tuscarora villages—forcing them to spend the remainder of the Revolution barricaded-up in Schenectady. This action gave birth to the permanent fracturing of the Iroquois Confederation.

The British used Brant’s forces to attempt a split in the colonial army in the Hudson River area. Brant led his warriors in raids into Pennsylvania inflicting considerable damage. Washington sent General John Sullivan with approximately 4,000 troops to destroy the Iroquois will to fight. The colonial troops burned Iroquois villages, destroyed their food storage facilities, their cornfields, cut-down their orchards and whatever other assets might be available. Brant and his people evacuated upper New York State and settled in the Grand River valley in Ontario, Canada.

In contrast to his wartime past, after the Revolutionary War Brant visited England where he raised money for the furtherance of the Episcopal Church in Canada and translated the gospel of St. Mark into Mohawk. With Daniel Claus, he translated the Book of Common Prayer into Mohawk. His association with Anglicans pushed him away from Samuel Kirkland and Eleazar Wheelock. Brant responded to President Washington and parlayed with the Miamis in 1793 to further peace accords between that tribe and the United States.

A large statue of Brant was constructed in Brantford, Ontario where a Six Nations Indian Reservation can be found southeast of the city. Brant was unquestionably the most important Indian of the Revolutionary War period and could conduct himself at the highest level in both the European and Indian cultures. A question is asked as to why Joseph Brant did not attempt to unite the Indian nations into a single force to stand up against the European invaders? In some respects Brant was caught in the middle—the Indians saw him as being too British, while the British and American colonists always suspected his motives as being prejudicial in favor of the Indian viewpoint. Brant stayed within the Iroquois Confederation and is not known to have made overtures to the Delaware, Miami, Shawnee, Ottawa, Ojibwa, and other northeast groups. He had enough problems with his Iroquois allies—expecially, the Seneca leader Sayenqueraghta. A unifying Indian leader would have to wait for Tecumseh.

http://www.thelittlelist.net/boatobye.htm


[7] The Washington-Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield, 1877

That Dark and Bloody River pg 187




[8] http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/washington/military/must171-180.txt


[9] Gabriel Jones, in the Shenandoah Valley.




[10] The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources 1745-1799 John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor, Volume 28.


[11] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824


[12] Civil War Guerrilla, By Ronald N. Wall, November, 2005


[13] Civil War Guerrilla, By Ronald N. Wall, November, 2005


[14] As Taylor retreated up the Red River, Vincent’s 2d La. Cav. Joined Taylor on the 19th and was sent toward Alexandria. (http:www.civilwarhome.com/redrivercampaign.htm)


[15] Salt Horse: army issued beef, whichg was so saturated with salt that troops had to soak it for days before eating it. 2010 Civil War Calendar.


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


[17] “Map of the Rebellion, as it was in 1861 and is in 1864.”

Harpers Weekly, March 19, 1864

http://www.sonofthesouth.net/leefoundation/civil-war/1864/march/map-rebellion.htm


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


[19] (State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.)


[20] West Virginia State Archives Manuscript Collections
Ms79-198 South Branch Valley Collection


[21] Winton Goodlove Papers.


[22] Buck Creek Parish, The Department of Rural Work of The Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1919, pages 7-8.


Buck Creek Parish, The Department of Rural Work of The Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1919, pages 7-8.


[24] The First Word War, Part 9, 11/15/2003Military Channel.


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


[26] http://www.zionism-israel.com/his/Israel_and_Jews_before_the_state_timeline.htm


• [27] http://www.colby.edu/personal/r/rmscheck/GermanyD4.html


[28] Wikipedia


[29] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/the-star-spangled-banner-becomes-official


[30] http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_did_the_Nazis_know_if_you_were_Jewish


[31] [22] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maly_Trostenets_extermination_camp


[32] Proposed Descendants of William Smith


[33] Proposed Descendants of William Smith

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