Monday, April 29, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, April 28

10,402 names…10,402 stories…10,402 memories

This Day in Goodlove History, April 28

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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.aspxy

April 28, 66 A.D.: In 66 A.D. a Roman Governor planted his pagan sandals on God’s domain, effectively desecrating it. That was not enough, for he grabbed 17 talents, about $1.5 million dollars.[1] After stealing money from the Temple Treasury, the Roman Procurator Gessius Florus allowed his troops to “loot the Upper Market” of Jerusalem. He also unleashed his Cohorts on the crowds of Jews who gathered to protest the theft. This would prove to be the precipitating event that would start the Great Revolt which would end in disaster for the Jewish people.[2] The Jews had had enough. Enough of the crucifixions, enough of the beheadings, enough of the stealing of the money, enough of the taxation, enough of the oppression, and they said “it is revolution time.” [3]

Not an ordinary revolution, this required a messiah to lead them. According to Jewish faith, a messiah was a political figure, sent by God, to lead the faithful to freedom. [4]

The sicari were front row and waiting. The sicari developed a relegion that said you cannot be subservient to Rome. The sicari were daggermen. They are terrorist of sort. They have Gallilean roots. When the Gallilean’s show up they encounter local groups that are also against the Romans. Jesus was from Galilee and so were most of his followers. The sicari were considered zealots or political opponents. The sicari believed they were living the end of days, messianic times. [5]

66 CE: In 66 the Sicari break into Masada, break into the armory, take arms, come to Jerusalem, try to take over the mini rebellion that had already begun in Jerusalem, were unsuccessful and are pushed out, they go back to Masada and they bide their time their from 67 to 73.[6]

In 66 CE, in rebellion against another round of Roman taxes and attacks on the Temple, Jewish priests in Jerusalem stopped offering daily sacrifices on behalf of the emperor. The protest ballooned into a guerrilla revolt and then a full fledged war. Messianic zealots, bandits, and freedom fighters banded together to fight a battle known in Roman history as the Jewish War and remembered by Jews as the Great Revolt.[7]

Ananias, whose conduct in 62-64 had suggested secret sympathy for the extremists, is named among the advocates of peace in the summer of 66. But it was his son Eleazar, captain of the Temple, who brought about the cessation of sacrifices on behalf of the Emperor, the action which Josephus regards as marking the outbreak of the rebellion. The protests and warnings of the High Priests were ignored by the revolutionaries, who grew rapidly in numbers and got possession of much of Jerusalem. Ananias and others of the peace party, together with some of the Roman garrison, were forced to take refuge in Herod’s palace (the procurators’ residence), which was then besieged by the insurgents, and he and his brother were treacherously killed aftger an agreement had been made for the Jews to evacuate the palace under truce.[8]

Summer 66 CE: Ananias, whose conduct in 62-64 had suggested secret sympathy for the extremists, is named among the advocates of peace in the summer of 66. But it was his son Eleazar, captain of the Temple, who brought about the cessation of sacrifices on behalf of the Emperor, the action which Josephus regards as marking the outbreak of the rebellion. The protests and warnings of the High Priests were ignored by the revolutionaries, who grew rapidly in numbers and got possession of much of Jerusalem. Ananias and others of the peace party, together with some of the Roman garrison, were forced to take refuge in Herod’s palace (the procurators’ residence), which was then besieged by the insurgents, and he and his brother were treacherously killed aftger an agreement had been made for the Jews to evacuate the palace under truce.[9]

66 A.D.:A full scale Jewish Revolt had broken out in Palestine in 66 A.D. under the rule of the Roman governor Gessius Florus. Jerusalem fell into the control of several rebel factions. Nero had appointed a Spanish general Vespasian, to crush the revolt and several legions poured into the country. [10]

66 A.D.:Eusebius and Epiphanius preserved a tradition that the Jerusalem followers of Jesus, now led by Simon son of Clophas, fled the city of Jerusalem just before siege in response to an “oracle given by revelation before the war”. They reported that the followers settled in the area of the Decapolis city of Pella, on the other side of the Jordan in the mountains of Gilead. Although some scholars have questioned the historical reliability of this tradition there is strong evidence in its favor. As we have seen, the book of Revelation, dating to the time of Nero and the Jewish Revolt, portrays the church as a “woman” who flees into the wilderness “to her place” where she is nourished for three and a half years (Revelation 12:14). In the book of Revelation Nero is the “Best” with the mysterious number 666 and it was indeed Nero who both persecuted the Christians after the fire in Rome and sent Vespasian to wquell the Jewish Revolt in 66 A.D..[11]

Pella, the region to which they are saed to have fled, is just a few milesw north of the biblical “Wadi Cherith,” the traditional place where Elijah hid from danger and very likely the area where Jesus had spent the last winter of his life hiding from Herod Antipas, the “Jesus hideout” in Jordan. If Simon, leader of the group at this time, was in fact the brother of Jesus as James Tabor has argued, the flight in 66 A.D. would be a return visit for him after forty years.[12]

Judas the Galilean last surviving son, Menahem, captured from the Romans the stronghgold of Masada and attempted in 66 A.D., at the beginning of the first Jewish War, to assert his supreme authority among the rebels by entering the Temple in royal apparel. However, he and most of his followerxsx died in the feud which raged at that time between the various revolutionary factions in Jerusalem. One of those who escapted the massacre was another descendant

66 CE: After a pagan provocation, an all out battle ensued in Caesarea. In one hour the cities gentiles aided by the Roman garrison, slew 20,000 Jews.

April 28, 70 A.D.: Following an early repulse of his forces, the Roman Legions commanded by Titus retake and destroy Jerusalem’s middle wall. The Romans followed this victory by quickly building a wall that will surround the city, cutting off all shipments of food and causing increased starvation among the Jewish defenders.[13]

April 28, 1192: Conrad I, newly crowned King of Jerusalem was assassinated in Tyre only days after ascending the throne. According to one source, the assassins were Moslems who may have been in the pay of Conrad’s Christian enemies. The whole affair of Conrad’s selection during the time of the Third Crusade points to the fact that these were not noble religious adventures at all. This makes the treatment of the Jews during this period all the more despicable.[14]

April 28, 1192Conrad of Montferrat (or Conrad I of Jerusalem) (Italian: Corrado di Monferrato; Piedmontese: Conrà ëd Monfrà) (mid-1140s – April 28, 1192) was a northern Italian nobleman, one of the major participants in the Third Crusade. He was the de facto King of Jerusalem, by marriage, from November 24, 1190, but officially elected only in 1192, days before his death. He was also marquis of Montferrat from 1191.[15]

When Queen Sibylla and their daughters died of disease later that year, Guy, who had only held the crown matrimonial, no longer had a legal claim to the throne — but refused to step aside. The heiress of Jerusalem was Isabella of Jerusalem, Queen Sibylla's half-sister, who was married to Humphrey IV of Toron, of whom she was fond. However, Conrad had the support of her mother Maria Comnena and stepfather Balian of Ibelin, as well as Reginald of Sidon and other major nobles of Outremer. They obtained an annulment on the grounds that Isabella had been under-age at the time of the marriage and had not been able to give consent. Conrad then married Isabella himself, despite rumours of bigamy because of his marriage to Theodora, who was still alive. (However, Choniates, who usually expresses strong disapproval of marital/sexual irregularities, makes no mention of this. This may imply that a divorce had been effected from the Byzantine side before 1190, by which time it was obvious that Conrad would not be returning.) There were also objections on grounds of canonical 'incest', since Conrad's brother had previously been married to Isabella's half-sister, and Church law regarded this kind of "affinity" as equal to a blood-relationship. However, the Papal Legate, Ubaldo Lanfranchi, Archbishop of Pisa, gave his approval. (Opponents claimed he had been bribed.) The marriage, on November 24, 1190, was conducted by Philip of Dreux, Bishop of Beauvais — son of Conrad's cousin Robert I of Dreux. Conrad was now de jure King of Jerusalem. However, he had been wounded in battle only nine days previously, and returned with his bride to Tyre to recover. He came back to the siege in spring, making an unsuccessful sea-attack against the Tower of Flies at the harbour entrance.[16]

A handsome man, with great personal courage and intelligence, he was described in the Brevis Historia Occupationis et Amissionis Terræ Sanctæ ("A Short History of the Occupation and Loss of the Holy Land"):

Conrad was vigorous in arms, extremely clever both in natural mental ability and by learning, amiable in character and deed, endowed with all the human virtues, supreme in every council, the fair hope of his own side and a blazing lightning-bolt to the foe, capable of pretence and dissimulation in politics, educated in every language, in respect of which he was regarded by the less articulate to be extremely fluent. In one thing alone was he regarded as blameworthy: that he had seduced another's wife away from her living husband, and made her separate from him, and married her himself.[1]

(The last sentence alludes to his third marriage to Isabella of Jerusalem in 1190, for which see below.)

He was active in diplomacy from his twenties, and became an effective military commander, campaigning alongside other members of his family in the struggles with the Lombard League. He first married an unidentified lady, possibly a daughter of Count Meinhard I of Görz (It: Gorizia), before 1179, but she was dead by the end of 1186, without leaving any surviving issue. [17]

April 28, 1192: Conrad was never crowned. Around late morning or noon on 28 April, Isabella, who was pregnant, was late in returning from the hammam to dine with him, so he went to eat at the house of his kinsman and friend, Philip, Bishop of Beauvais. The bishop had already eaten, so Conrad returned home. On his way, he was attacked by two Hashshashin, who stabbed him at least twice in the side and back. His guards killed one of his attackers and captured the other. It is not certain how long Conrad survived. Some sources claimed he died at the scene of the attack, or in a nearby church, within a very short time. Richard's chroniclers claimed that he was taken home, received the last rites, and urged Isabella to give the city over only to Richard or his representative: this death-bed scene is open to doubt. He was buried in Tyre, in the Church of the Hospitallers. "[T]he Frankish marquis, the ruler of Tyre, and the greatest devil of all the Franks, Conrad of Montferrat — God damn him! — was killed," wrote Ibn al-Athir. Certainly, the loss of a potentially formidable king was a blow to the kingdom.

The murder remains unsolved. Under torture, the surviving Hashshashin claimed that Richard was behind the killing, though this is impossible to prove. A less likely suspect was Humphrey IV of Toron, Isabella's first husband. Saladin's involvement has also been alleged, but as Conrad was in the middle of negotiations with him, this also seems unlikely; Saladin himself had no love for the Hashshashin. In 1970, Patrick A. Williams argued a plausible case for Henry of Champagne's guilt, but if so, it is difficult to imagine him taking such a bold step without his uncle Richard's approval.

Later, while returning from the crusade in disguise, Richard was recognised by Meinhard II of Görz, who is described as Conrad's nephew (which suggests the identity of his first wife), and then imprisoned by Conrad's cousin, Leopold V of Austria. Conrad's murder was one of the charges against him. Richard requested that the Hashshashin vindicate him, and in a letter allegedly from their leader, Rashid al-Din Sinan, they appeared to do so. The letter claimed that in 1191, Conrad had captured a Hashshashin ship that had sought refuge in Tyre during a storm. He killed the captain, imprisoned the crew, and stripped the ship of its treasure. When Rashid al-Din Sinan requested that the ship's crew and treasure be returned, he was rebuffed, and so a death sentence was issued for Conrad of Montferrat. However, this letter is believed to have been forged: Sinan was already dead, and apart from this letter and the chronicle entries based upon it, there is no other evidence for the Hashashin being involved in shipping. The timing of the murder, and its consequences — the pregnant Isabella was married off to Henry of Champagne only seven days later, much to the disgust of Muslim commentators — suggest that the chief motive may be sought in Frankish politics.[18]

April 28th, 1521 - Treaty of Worms: Emperor Charles names his brother Ferdinand Arch duke of Neth-Austria[19]

April 28, 1718: Will of Andrew Harrison of St. Mary's Parish in the County of Essex, being grown very aged and at this time very sick and weak in body, dated April 28, 1718.

My beloved wife Eleanor my executriz.

My son Andrew and my son in law Gabriel Long as Trustees and overseers to assist her in the performing of this my last will.

I have already setled three of my children, viz. William, Andrew and Elizabeth on lands on which they now live, viz. to my son William 270 acres and to my son Andrew 200 acres and to my daughteer Elizabeth 200 acres, all which my lands they are now possessed with and which I now give to them.

I have put into the hands of Wm. Stannard bills and exchange for L 65.12.6 sterling for him to buy me two Negroes; my loveing wife have the use of these negroes or that money during her natural life or widowhood and after her decease to my daughter Margarett Long's three youngest sons viz. Richd. and Gabril and William, to be equally divided as soon as they shall all come to the age of twenty years if my wife dye before. If my wife should dye before either of them comes to that age, my son in law Gabriel Long have the use of them till they come to that age, to give them schooling, that is to learn them to read and write and cost account.

To my daughter Margaret Long after the decease of my loveing wife one feather bed and bolster and pillows and rugg and blankets.

Unto my son William after the decease of my loveing wife one feather bed and bedstead and all the furniture belonging to it.

Unto my son William a chest and all my wearing cloaths and the cloth which I have to make me cloaths on and my riding sadle after my decease.

Unto my son William after the decease of my loveing wife one ovell table.

Unto my son William after the decease of my loveing wife one large iron pott.

Unto my son Andrew after the decease of my loveing wife one feather bed and bolster and pillows and all manner of furniture belonging to itt, and one large iron pott.

The rest of my personall and moveable estate after the death of my loveing wife to be equally divided among my four children viz. William and Andrew and Elizabeth and Margarett.

Andrew (A H) Harrison

Wit: Jno Ellitts, William (X) Davison, Mary (X) Harrison [20]

April 28, 1718

The Will OF ANDREW HARRISON of St Mary ‘a Parish, Essex County,

Virginia, was dated April 28, 1718; proved in Essex’ County Court,

November 18, 1718, December 16, 1718 and March 17, 1718 (1718-19).



“Being grown very aged. & at this time, sick & weak in body, but in perfect sense and memory—” After the usual expressions of Christian faith in the atonement and resurrection, and the committal of his body to the ground at the discretion of his executors, provision? for the payment of. debts and funeral charges, he disposed of his estate as follows: Wife, Eleanor Harrison is named as executrix; son Andrew Harrison, and son-in-law. Gabriel Long are named as trustees and overseers to assist her in carrying out the provisions of the will; he ratifies former gifts of land to three of his children, viz, son William Harrison, 270. acres; son Andrew Harrison. 200 acres, and daughter Elizabetli, 200 acres, “all of which

lands, they are now possessed, and which I now give to them & theirs forever.’? * lie refers to having put into the hands Of William Stanard, bills of exchange for Sixty five pounds, twelve shillings and Six pence, sterling, with which said Stanard is to buy two negroes for said Harrison; the use of these two negroes,. or that money, to testator’s wife~ during life or widowhood, and after her decease, the negroes or the money to daughter Margaret Long ‘a three youngest sons, viz: Richard; Gabriel, and: William (Long), to be given and equally divided between them and their heirs as soon as they are 21 years old. * If wife dies before either of the three mentioned Long children come of age, then testator’s son in law, Gabriel Long, to have use thereof, until that ~specified time, and for the use’’. thereof, he is to give the said three Long children ‘school­ing, that is to teach them to read & write & cast aecount4’~ daughter

Margaret Long, after the death of testator’s wife, a servant boy named

Richard Bradley, “till he comes of age of one & twenty years”; also to

Margaret, at the time specified, a “featherbed, bolster, pillow, rug and blankets”; son William, after decease of testator’s wife, a “ feather bed, bedstead, and all furniture belonging thereto, my own chest and all my wearing apparel and the cloth which I have to make ~my clothing, and my riding saddle”; “to my son William” after the decease of the testa­tor ‘s wife, an “oval table”, a “large iron pot”; to son Andrew, after the decease of testator’s wife, “a feather bed, bolster, pillows, and furni­ture belonging thereto; a large iron pot;” residue of estate, personal & movable, after wife’s death, to be equally divided among testator ‘s four children, Viz: “William, Andrew, Elizabeth, and Margaret “.

- His

Witnesses: (Signed) Andrew A. II. Harrison

Mark

John Ellitt

William-X-Davison

Mary-X~Davison[21]

April 28, 1752: Wallace states that it would be impossible to scout out and clear a road for only 25 pounds Virginia currency, and therefore the road had to follow an Indian path. In regard to the above quoted passage from the ―Orders and Resolutions of the Ohio Company‖, Wallace states:

Such a contract presupposes the existence of an Indian path. In is hardly possible that a

forty mile road could have been ―cleared‖ through virgin forest over Big Savage

Mountain, Allegheny Mountain, Negro Mountain, and Winding Ridge for ―twenty five

pounds Virginia currency‖ if, that is, it involved the prospecting and hewing out of a

totally new way. All that can have been called for was the clearing of brush and the

removal of dead trees to permit the passage of pack trains and wagons over an Indian

path.

Wallace‘s statement does not stand up well to scrutiny because:

· The passage Wallace quotes from the ―Orders and Resolutions of the Ohio Company‖

does not indicate that the road work actually was performed—only that the road work

was considered necessary and was authorized. The passage gives no indication that any

work of any kind whatsoever actually was performed at a cost of only 25 pounds Virginia

currency.

· Contrary to Wallace‘s statement, the quoted passage does not indicate that a contract for

the work was let.

· In April 28, 1752 instructions (quoted above), the Ohio Company directed Christopher

Gist to employ Indians who were already acquainted with the ―ways‖ to cut the

contemplated Ohio Company road.

· As related above, Jacobs—a man who was in a position to know—clearly states that the

Ohio Company road followed a route that was in some fashion identified by the Indian

Nemacolin.[22]



April 28, 1752: The Ohio Company‘s April 28, 1752 new instructions to

Gist, quoted on page 236 of Darlington‘s book, states: If Col Cresap has not agreed with any person to clear a Road for the Company, you are with the advice and assistance of Col. Cresap to agree with the proper Indians, who are best acquainted with the ways, immediately to cut a road from Wills Creek to the Fork of Mohongaly at the cheapest Rate you can for Goods, and this you may mention publicly to the Indians at the Loggs Town or not as you see occasion.

This appears to be a plan that is based on Gist‘s new input.

The above quote indicates that on April 28, 1752, the Ohio Company knew that the road to the

―Fork of Monongahela‖ had not yet been cut, and did not even know if any arrangements had

been made to cut it. The passage also reveals that the Ohio Company envisioned employing

Indians to cut their road. If interpreted correctly, the above quote indicates that the Ohio Company road was intended to go to the present-day location of Pittsburgh, which was then known as the ―Fork of Monongahela‖.[23]



In 1752, the Ohio Company got the land grant terms altered. The company committed to settling 300 families and building two forts, in exchange for removal of any deadline and granting the entire 500,000 acres. Location of the land grant was specified in 1752 as:5

"on the south side of the river Alleghany between the Kiskiminites Creek and Buffalo Creek, and between Yellow Creek and Cross Creek on the north side" (for the first 200,000 acreas) and between "the Great Conhaway [Kanawha River] on the southwest, and to the west side of the Alleghany Mountains on the east" (for the remaining 300,000 acres) [24]



April 28, 1777: Court met on Monday April 28,1777, according to

adjournment to Court in Course.



Present : Edward Ward, John Cannon, John McDowell,

Richard Yeates, Benjamin Kirkindall, Joshua Wright, Oliver

Miller and Andrew Swearingen, Gentlemen Justices.



On the Court's meeting and the Sheriff's Commission not

coming to Mr. Joshua Wright, agreable to recommendation of

the Court and notwithstanding Colonel Penticost's letter to

Colonel Cannon, Insuring him he had a Sheriffs Commission

for Mr. Wright, he refused to act Protempory. Therefore the

Court was reduced to the necessity of appointing another, as

there was an Election to be held for a Senitor and Delegates,

and a Criminal to be tried and other Breeches of the Peice.



The question being first put to Mr. Joshua Wright, to be ap-

pointed Protempory, and he refused, notwithstanding his hear-

ing of the Commission as aforesaid ; but said if his commission

had came to this Court he would have sworn into said Office. —

The Question then being put to the rest of the Court, who

would serve as Sheriff, and all refused to, Except Mr. William

Harrison, who agreed to be appointed, and the Court unani-

mously agreed that the said Mr. Harrison be recommended as

a proper Person for Sheriff and Mr. Joshua W right concurd

with the Court.



The Court is of the opinion that William Harrison, Samuel

Newell and Thomas Freeman are proper persons to be recom-

mended for Sheriffs the Insuing year.



William Harrison came into Court and took the oath as

Sheriff.

(6) Court adjourned Tuesday 7 O'Clock. 9



Court met according to adjournment.



Present : Edward Ward, John Cannon, John McDowell,

Richard Yeates, Benjaman Kirkindall, Joshua Wright, Oliver

Miller, Andrew Swearingen, Gentleman Justices.



Zacheriah Connell came into Court and took the oath of

Justice of the Piece.



The Court Still Labouring under great difficulty for the want

of a Clerk, as Colonel Dorsey Penticost our former Clerk lying



8 7 o'clock !







Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 83



in Baltimore in the Small Pox. The Court then applied to

Mr. James Innis, who the said Colonel Penticost had appointed

to serve as Clerk in his absence, and when application was made

to said Mr. Innis, he refused to attend the Court ; his answer

was that he only agread to 'attend the March Court — upon

which the Court Choose Mr. Isaac Cox for their Clerk who

Came into Court and swore into said Office.



Zachariah Connell, William Lee and Andrew Heth came

into Court and took the Oath of Captains of the Militia.



John Cannon Came into Court and took the Oath as Colonel

of the Melitia.



Henry Taylor came into Court and took the oath of Major of

the Melitia.



Joshua Wright was applied to by the Court to Swear into his

Captain's commission, but he refused as he was a Leiutenant of

a former Nominal Company.



John Meligan being charged with Felloniously Murdering

William Guttery and being Convicted for the same, was

brought into Court, and he acknowledged he was guilty of the

Crime he stod charged with, and the Court is of Opinion that

the said Crimminal for said fellony ought to be sent to the

general Court for farther Trial.



John Melony and Samson Beavers, Securities for Joseph

Ross, for his appearance at the Court, as by his recognizance

appears, came into the Court and delivered said Ross to the

Court, and after the Court had heared the Complaint, was fined

twenty five Shellings for swearing four Blasfemous Oaths before

John Cannon, one before John Johnston — and ordered that

( 7 ) the said Ross give Security for his better Behavior For one

year and one day.



John Melony came into Court and agreed to be security for

Joseph Ross's keeping the Piece and better Behavior to the

Subjects of the Common Wealth, and esspecially to Colonel

John Cannon, whome he had threatened to abuse the first opper-

tunity. The said security bound in the sum of one Hundred

pounds.



Upon the Petition of Benjaman Jones ordered that John

Bennitt be summoned to Bring a Boy Claimed by the said

Jones to the Next Court.



Samson Beavers come into Court and entered Security for

the payment of twenty five Shellings at the laying of the Next

Parrish Levey, it being Joseph Ross's fine for swearing.



Court is adjourned untill Wednesday 8 Oclock.



Court met according to adjournment.



Present : Edward Ward, John Cannon, Oliver Miller and

Zacheriah Connell, Gentlemen Justices.



The Sheriff came into Court and gave Bond and Security

for the true performance of the said office.



John Crow being charged with Breach of the piece, ordered

that the said Crow give Security for his Better behavior towards

all the Subjects of the Common Wealth, and Especially to Joseph

Ross for a year and one day. Henry Taylor and James

Austurges enter Security for the same, bound in the sum of one

Hundred pounds.



Ordered that the Clerk furnish the Sheriff with all papers

necessary for the Tryal of John Milligan at the General Court.



Ordered that the Clerk send down the recommendation for

William Harrison to be Sheriff.



Ordered that the Clerk send down by Mr. William Harrison

all proceedings of the Court relative to the appointment of the

Sheriff and Clerk.



Patrick McGey, Thomas Smyth and James Furgurson being

Convicted for Breaches of the piece — Ordered that the said

Patrick McGey, Thomas Smyth and James Furgurson give

Security to each other, for their better Behaviour for the Space

of one year and one day, and also to all the Subjects of the

Common Wealth.



Henry Taylor and John McGey enter Security for Patrick

McGey and Thomas Smyth.



John Crow and David Williams enter Security for James

Furgurson.

(8) Ordered that Patrick McGey and Thomas Smyth be fined



the Sum of two pounds each, and that the Sheriff secure the

same and pay it to James Furgurson.



Charles Harrison and William McKee is appointed Constables

for the Ensuing year, and that they be Summoned before

Zacheriah Connel Gentleman to swear into said office.



The Court adjourned to Court in Course. [25]

Saturday, January 28, 2006 (2)[26]





April 28, 1778

April 28, 1778; Justices John Stephenson and Col. William Crawford absent, but Isaac Cox, John Cannon, Wm. Goe, Andrew Swearingen, John McDowell, George McCormick were present.[27]

“Thomas Gist[28] came into Court and being sworn on the Holy evangelist of Almighty God, sayeth that in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and seventy-two, in the month of April to the best of his recollection, in the presence of Joseph Beelor, John Stephenson and Edward Rice, he solemnized the wrights of matromony between Isaac Meason and Catharine Harrison, according to the rights and ceremonies of the Church of England, he the said deponent then being a Majistrate in the State of Pennsylvania, and that he was under an oath not to devulge said marriage except legally called for that purpose.”

Two of the witnesses, John Stephenson and Joseph Beelor, came likewise into court and made a similar affidavit, and Joseph Beelor added “that there was a preengagement between the said Isaac and Catharine that upon the devulging of the said marriage contrary to the will of the said Isaac then that said parties should be absolved from any obligation to each other as man and wife.”[29]

-. - .

W Harrison took the oath of Major of the Militia in open Coart.

Ordered that George McCarnieck John Cannon & John Stephenson Gent, be recommended to his Excellency the Governor as proper persons to serve as Sheriff for this County, the Ensuing year.

Ordered that Court be adjourned Until Tomorrow Morning

8 oCbock. JOHN CANON.[30]

April 28, 1778 Pg. 156 Summary: The court ordered that Edmond Lindsey, Ralph Cherry, Edward Cherry, and Doyale Meason appraise the goods, chattles, credits, and Slaves , if any, of James Louden. Yohogania,
VA.[31]

April 28, 1778 Pg. 152 Zacheriah Connell v John Lindsey, Contd, Yohogania, VA.[32]
April 28, 1778:

April 28th Court met according to adjournment.

Present, Isaac Cox, John Cannon, William Goe, Andrew
Swearengen, John McDowell, and George McCarmick, Gentle-
men Justices, Present.

Andrew Swearengen and David Andrew produced Commis-
sions from his Excellency the Governor appointing Them
Captains of the Militia, which being read, the said David and
Andrew came into Coart and Swore into said Commissions.

Nathaniel Blackmore came into Court produced a Commis-
sion appointing him a Lieutenant of the Militia, which was
read and Sworn to accordingly.

[Bill of sale from John Stueart to Jacob Bouseman for Three
Hundred Acres.] 1

Power of Attorney John Stueart to Jacob Bouseman be as
proved by the Oath of John McCollister, one of the Subscrib-
ing Witnesses.

Mortgage John Stueart to Jacob Bouseman for Three Hun-
dred Acres of Land on Yohogania River was proved by the
Oath of Jacob Leoport, one of the Subscribing Witnesses.
(3) Upon the motion of Jacob Bouseman ordered that his Mark
Two Crops and Two Slits be recorded.

Thomas Gist came into Court and being Sworn on the Holy
evangelist of Almighty God, Sayeth that in the year of our
Lord one Thousand Seven Hundred and Seventy two, in the
month of April to the best of his recollection, in the presence
of Joseph Beeler, John Stephenson and Edward Rice, he
Solemnized the wrights of Matromony between Isaac Meason
and Catherine Harrison, according to the rights and cere-
monies of the Church of England, he the s 1 ! Seponent then
being a Majistrate in the State of Pennsylvania, and that he
was under an Oath not to Devulge said marriage Except
Legally called for that purpose.

John Stephenson and Joseph Beeler came into Court and
being Sworn on the Holy Evangelist of Almighty God,
Sayeth that they ware present at the Marriage of Isaac Meason
with Catherine Harrison in the year one Thousand Seven
Hundred and Seventy two in the Month of April to the best
of their recollection, and was under a promise not to devulge
the said Marriage Unless Legally called, or Death of either of
the parties, and the said Joseph farther Sayeth that there was a
preengagement between the said Isaac and Catherine that upon
the devulging the said Marriage contrary to the will of the sd
Isaac then that said parties should be absolved from any obli-
gation to each other as man and wife.

Indenture from Martha Daviss to Isaac Cox acknowledged
by said Martha and ordered to be Recorded.

1 The part in brackets erased in the original.

Bargain and Sale Thomas Bay to James Marshall for four
Hundred Acres of Land acknowledged by said Bay and
Ordered to be Recorded.

Bargain and Sale Thomas Bay to George Marken [or
Marten, Editor] for Two Hundred Acres of Land acknowl-
edged by said Bay and Ordered to be recorded.
(4) Bargain and Sale Ezekiel Johnston to Joseph Beeler JunT

proved by the oath of Dorsey Pentecost and Joseph Beeler
Sen r two of the Subscribing Witnesses.

Joseph Beeler produced to this Court a Commission from his
Excellency the Governour appointing him Colonel of the
Militia was red & Sworn to in open Coart.

Nathan Ellis produced to this Coart a Commission from his
Excellency the Governour appointing him Captain of the
Militia which was red & Sworn to in open Coart.

W™ Harrison took the oath of Major of the Militia in open
Coart.

Richard Crooks took the oath of Lieutenant of the Militia
in open Coart.

Michael Tigert took the oath of Ensign of the Militia in open
Coart.

Ordered that Sarah Shirly be admitted to administer on the
estate of James Shirly Deceased, she Complying with the Law,
Whereupon the sd. Sarah came into Coart with her Securities &
entered into Bond accordingly.

Ordered that Ignatius Lebat Sam'l Sample Sam'l Evalt &
David Dunkin or any three of them Being first sworn do appraise
the s'* Estate & make Report to next Coart.

James Gray Enters himself special Bail in a suit wherein Jno.
Pearce is plaintiff & Jno. Raredon Defendant.

Jno. Raredon Enters himself special Bail in Case wherein
W™ Danningin is plaintiff & and James Gray Defendant.

Ordered that Mary Lindsey the wife of William Lindsey a
poor Soldier in the Continental service be allowed Six pounds
per month for the support of herself and Six children to com-
mence the first day of January Last.

Ordered that Eloner Lindsey the wife of Ezekial Lindsey be
allowed the sum of five pounds pr. month for the support of
herself and five children.

(5) Ordered that Jane Dunn the wife of Thomas Dunn a poor
Soldier in the Continental Service be allowed the sum of
four pounds pr month for the support of herself and four
children.

Ordered that two children of Peter McCorkeys a soldier in
the Continental Service be allowed the sum of two pounds pr
month for their Subsistence.

Ordered that Elizabeth Depugh the wife of John Depugh be
allowed the sum of three pounds pr Month for the support of
herself and Three Children.

Ordered that the wife of Jeremiah McCarty be allowed the
sum of three pounds pr Month for the support of herself and
three children.

Ordered that the wife of William Nau a poor Soldier who
died in the Continental Service be allowed the sum of six
pounds pr month for herself and Six children to commence the
first day of January until his Death.

Ordered that the wife of James Behan be allowed the sum
of three pounds pr month for the support of herself and three
children.

Ordered that the sum of two pounds pr month be allowed
the wife of Richard Wade for the support of herself and two
children to Commence the first day of this month.

Ordered that the wife of David Smith be allowed the Sum
of three pounds for the support of herself and three children.

Ordered that Susannah Decompt and Christopher Hayes be
appointed Administrator and Administratrix of the Estate of
John Decomp Deceased they complying with the Law. Where-
upon the said Susannah and Christopher came into Court and
Entered into Bond oath accordingly.

Ordered that Joseph Beeler, James Blackstone, Edward
Cook, and Benjamin Davis or any three of them they being
first sworn do appraise the Estate of John Decomp Deceased
and make return to next Court.

(6) Daniel Brooks is appointed Administrator of the Estate of
Nathan Hammond Deceased he complying with the Law,
Whereupon the said Daniel came into court entered into Bond
and oath accordingly. Ordered that Joseph Parkerson, Thomas
Parkerson, James Innis & David Richie any three of them

they being first sworn do appraise the Estate of Nathan Ham-
mon Deceased and make return to next Court.

Ordered that Isaac Cox be appointed Administrator of the
Estate of Samuel Richardson deceased he complying with the
Law, whereupon the said Isaac came into Court and intered
into Bond and oath- accordingly. Ordered that Abraham Van-
natree, Edmund Pollack, Richard Elson and Edward Wiggins
or any three of them they being first sworn do appraise the
Estate of Samuel Richardson, Deceased and make return to-
next Court.

Bargain and Sale John Pearce to James Patterson for three
Hundred and Eighteen Acres of Land Acknowledged by the
said Pearce and Ordered to be Recorded.

Ordered that George McCarmeck John Cannon & John.
Stephenson Gent, be recommended to his Excellency the Gov-
ernor as proper persons to serve as Sheriff for this County, the
Ensuing year.

Ordered that an Attachment Issue against Philip Whitsel and
the papers and records belonging to the District of West
Augusta, which by Act of Assembly are to be Inyrold amongst
the Records of this County, and the said records so attached
have before this Court for farther Proceedings.

Bargain and Sale Matthew Rogers to John White for an Im-
provement of Land on Churteers Creek Acknowledged by said.
Rogers and Ordered to be Recorded.
(8) 1 Ordered that Court be adjourned Until Tomorrow Morning

8 oClock. John Canon. [33]



April 28, 1810: Treaty of Fort Clark



Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/3/3e/Osage-chouteau-treaty.jpg/350px-Osage-chouteau-treaty.jpg

Description: http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png


Mural depicting the treaty from the Missouri State Capitol

Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fa/Fort-osage.jpg/350px-Fort-osage.jpg

Description: http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Fort Osage from the west. The "factory" trading post is on the left.

April 28, 1810: The Treaty of Fort Clark (also known as the Treaty with the Osage or the Osage Treaty) was signed at Fort Osage (then called Fort Clark) on November 10, 1808 (ratified on April 28, 1810) in which the Osage Nation ceded all the land east of the fort in Missouri and Arkansas north of the Arkansas River to the United States. The Fort Clark treaty and the Treaty of St. Louis in which the Sac (tribe) and Fox (tribe) ceded northeastern Missouri along with northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin were the first two major treaties in the newly acquired Louisiana Purchase. The affected tribes, upset with the terms, were to side with the British in the War of 1812. Following the settlement of that war, John C. Sullivan for the United States was to survey the ceded land in 1816 (adjusting it 23 miles westward to the mouth of the Kansas River to create the Indian Boundary Line west of which and south of which virtually all tribes were to be removed in the Indian Removal Act in 1830.


Background

When Lewis and Clark began their explorations of the Missouri River in 1804, Pierre Chouteau of the Chouteau fur trading family in St. Louis, Missouri took Osage chiefs to meet Thomas Jefferson who promised to open a government sanctioned trading post (then called the factory which the Osage could sell their goods at a government set price (ostensibly to keep them from being exploited by individual traders). The trading post would also have a blacksmith to provide utensils for the Native Americans. In early 1808, Meriwether Lewis led a group to the site of Fort Osage near Sibley, Missouri where they built the fort on a bluff above the Missouri River. Pierre Chouteau went about 150 miles south to Neosho, Missouri where the Osage had their principal village on the Osage River and brought the chiefs to Fort Osage. There they were presented with the terms of the treaty.

Terms

Ceded land

The treaty specifically cedes the following land:

And in consideration of the advantages which we derive from the stipulations contained in the foregoing articles, we, the chiefs and warriors of the Great and Little Osage, for ourselves and our nations respectively, covenant and agree with the United States, that the boundary line between our nations and the United States shall be as follows, to wit: beginning at fort Clark, on the Missouri, five miles above Fire Prairie, and running thence a due south course to the river Arkansas, and down the same to the Mississippi; hereby ceding and relinquishing forever to the United States, all the lands which lie east of the said line, and north of the southwardly bank of the said river Arkansas, and all lands situated northwardly of the river Missouri. And we do further cede and relinquish to the United States forever, a tract of two leagues square, to embrace fort Clark, and to be laid off in such manner as the President of the United States shall think proper.

Payment

According to the Article V, the Osage were to receive an annual payment:

Great Osage nation, the sum of eight hundred dollars, and to the Little Osage nation, the sum of four hundred dollars.

Ceded lands

In Article VI the lands ceded:

Beginning at fort Clark, on the Missouri, five miles above Fire Prairie, and running thence a due south course to the river Arkansas, and down the same to the Mississippi; hereby ceding and relinquishing forever to the United States, all the lands which lie east of the said line, and north of the southwardly bank of the said river Arkansas, and all lands situated northwardly of the river Missouri. And we do further cede and relinquish to the United States forever, a tract of two leagues square, to embrace fort Clark, and to be laid off in such manner as the President of the United States shall think proper.

Assignment to other tribes

Article VIII provided that the Osage land could be assigned to other tribes:

And the United States agree that such of the Great and Little Osage Indians, as may think proper to put themselves under the protection of fort Clark, and who observe the stipulations of this treaty with good faith, shall be permitted to live and to hunt, without molestation, on all that tract of country, west of the north and south boundary line, on which they, the said Great and Little Osage, have usually hunted or resided: Provided, The same be not the hunting grounds of any nation or tribe of Indians in amity with the United States; and on any other lands within the territory of Louisiana, without the limits of the white settlements, until the United States may think proper to assign the same as hunting grounds to other friendly Indians.

Aftermath

There were protests immediately from the tribe as there were claims that not all the proper representatives signed the document. The Osage for the most part did not move to Fort Osage staying instead at their home in Neosho. Some tribesmen were to side with the British in the War of 1812. After the war, the Osage were summoned to Portage Des Sioux, Missouri where they affirmed the treaty in the Treaties of Portage des Sioux in 1815.[34]
April 28, 1834: Joseph Godlove, born April 28, 1834. [35]

Joseph (Hooker) GODLOVE

Birth: April 28, 1834

Spouse: Eveline ORNDORFF (1840- )

Marriage: September 16, 1858 [36]

April 28, 1863: We reached a point within four miles of the batteries at Grand Gulf on the morning of the 28th. The gun boats were to engage and silence the batteries on shore, and we were then to land under cover of their fire, and carry the place by assault. It was a clear, bright day, and the enemy's works were clearly visible from where we lay. The gunboats formed in line of battle, and dropped down slowly and cautiously upon the enemy's works. The enemy was the first to open the ball. One, two, three, four wreaths of smoke, and as many bright jets of water sprang into the air. Still the sullen turtles deigned no reply, as the enemy's missiles failed to reach their advance. Another roll of thunder, more bright jets of water start up. This time discloses the approaching foe, yet still they were silent. But now the leading vessel began to leave the west bank of the river, bearing
off to the left of their works, followed by the others. Having formed a line immediately in front and to the right and left of their works, they squared across the mighty current, and then came the loud response to the enemy's taunts. The compliments of the Admiral and his men having thus been presented to the enemy, the vessels separated and each began the battle on its own account. Some running directly under the guns of the fort and delivering their heavy broadsides at pistol range, others with guns of heavy calibre anchored out in the river, as if for target practice, settled themselves quietly to the work.
The air seemed alive with a thousand devils, screeching, howling and hissing, while the roar of discharging cannon and bursting shells was loud and incessant. Through the black clouds of smoke lifting from the scene of the battle could be seen the meteoric pathway of fuse shells, which either bounded harmlessly from the iron mail of the turtles or went skipping over the smooth waters miles away from their intended object. An occasional discharge of grape shot would make the water boil around the approaching vessels.
Meanwhile parties were detailed on board our vessels and sent to the holds with tow and cotton, and carpenter's tools were in readiness to stop any unlucky perforation of the enemy's balls in that region when it should come our turn to meet their fire. Guns were all loaded and officers and men at their posts, in momentary readiness for an order to advance. The steamers stood out in the middle of the river, slowly paddling the water to prevent their floating too near the scene of action for safety before the gunboats had accomplished their mission. We could see there was great danger to be encountered in getting there, but knowing something of the indomitable will and perseverance of our leader, we did not doubt for a moment but that it would be done. It were needless then to be fearful of consequences, and each braced himself with a determination, to do his best, for in speedy victory alone there appeared safety. For four hours the battle had raged and the enemy's position had been raked from every quarter. Still the saucy guns from the fort belched forth their fire and smoke and storms of missiles. They could not be silenced. The brave tars had done all in their power to accomplish the purpose. Meanwhile our interest had become so great as to forget all else around us. The steamers drew up to the landing at Hard Times, which had the appearance of having maintained a very poor family in a very poor way, and much to our surprise we were ordered to disembark. After marching down the levee about three miles we encamped for the night on the river. We were now very unexpectedly several miles below Grand Gulf. So sharp was the bend of the river to the right of Grand Gulf that we could not perceive its direction during the day. We then for the first time comprehended the full strength of the position chosen by the enemy. Soon after darkness set in, the gunboats again opened vigorously upon the enemy. The enemy replied slowly but determinedly. The transports, which had already run the blockade at Vicksburg without serious injury, now under cover of their fire sped rapidly by the rebel fort, followed by the fleet of ironclads. The bold adventure was as speedily and successfully accomplished as it had been planned, without further injury than the killing of a few battery horses on board the transports and cutting the hog chain of one of the rams. [37]

Thurs. April 28, 1864

In camp skirmishing in rear at noon ordered

Out in line of battle then fell back near town

Throwed up breast work at night laid in cane field without blankets[38]



April 28, 1879: Carter Harrison Sr terms as Mayor of Chicago:

*********************************
Carter Henry Harrison, Sr.
24th Mayor of Chicago
Party: Democrat

1st term: April 28, 1879 [39]



April 28, 1897: The Choctaw and Chickasaw Indian Nations agree to give their lands to the Federal Government and dissolve their tribal governments.[40]



USS Scamp (SSN-588) James Kirby, Sonar




USS Scamp (SSN-288)


Career



http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/a/a4/Flag_of_the_United_States.svg/67px-Flag_of_the_United_States.svg.png


Name:

USS Scamp


Ordered:

July 23, 1957


Builder:

Mare Island Naval Shipyard


Laid down:

January 23, 1959


Launched:

October 8, 1960


Commissioned:

June 5, 1961


Decommissioned:

April 28, 1988


Struck:

April 28, 1988


Honors and
awards:

Three campaign stars for Vietnam War service


Fate:

Entered the Submarine Recycling Program in 1990


General characteristics


Class and type:

Skipjack-class submarine


Displacement:

2,830 long tons (2,880 t) surfaced
3,500 long tons (3,600 t) submerged


Length:

232 ft (71 m)


Beam:

32 ft (9.8 m)


Draft:

30 ft 5 in (9.27 m)


Propulsion:

1 × S5W reactor
2 × Westinghouse steam turbines, 15,000 shp (11 MW)
1 shaft


Speed:

More than 20 knots (23 mph; 37 km/h)


Complement:

83 officers & men


Armament:

6 × 21 in (530 mm) torpedo tubes



Service record


Part of:

US Seventh Fleet


Operations:

Vietnam War


Awards:

3 Battle stars



For other ships of the same name, see USS Scamp.

USS Scamp (SSN-588), a Skipjack-class nuclear-powered submarine, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the scamp, a member of the serranidae family of fish.

Her keel was laid down on January 23, 1959 at Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, California. She was launched on October 8, 1960, sponsored by Mrs. John C. Hollingsworth, widow of Commander John C. Hollingsworth, the commanding officer of Scamp (SS-277) at the time of her loss in November 1944. She was commissioned at Mare Island on June 5, 1961 with Commander W. N. Dietzen in command.



Operational history

1960s

Scamp’s first four months in the fleet were taken up by advanced trials and training exercises in the Bremerton, Washington, San Diego, California, and Pearl Harbor, areas. Following these operations, she returned to Vallejo, California, for post-shakedown availability at Mare Island Naval Shipyard. Leaving the shipyard Scamp completed her final acceptance trials and began local operations in the San Diego area. In April 1962 she deployed to the western Pacific, returning to San Diego in July. She operated locally until September, when she departed on another extended training cruise. Scamp returned to San Diego and local operations until February 1963 when she entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard for interim drydocking. She refloated in March and, in April, deployed again to the western Pacific. While in the Far East, she conducted another extended period of advanced training, including operations in the Okinawa area. Scamp reentered San Diego Bay in October 1963. She resumed her West Coast operations out of San Diego until June 1964, then, she headed west again for advanced readiness training. She arrived back in San Diego in September 1964.

Scamp entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard again in January 1965 for extensive modification. In June 1966 after the installation of the SUBSAFE package and overhaul, she left Mare Island and returned to training cruises in the San Diego operating area. In November she ventured north to Puget Sound for a month of operations and returned to San Diego in December. The nuclear submarine operated out of San Diego for the first six months of 1967. On June 28, she departed San Diego to join the Seventh Fleet in the western Pacific. She remained in the Far East, participating in fleet operations along the Vietnamese coast, until returning to San Diego on December 28, 1967.

Scamp operated out of San Diego in the local operating area from January to May 1968. On May 11, she arrived at Pearl Harbor to conclude an extended training cruise. She returned to San Diego on May 19 and remained there until June 15, when the submarine shifted to San Francisco to enter Mare Island Naval Shipyard for a three-week restricted availability. She returned to San Diego on July 16 and finished out the year sailing from that port on various exercises and training cruises.

Scamp continued stateside duty throughout 1969. She alternated in-port periods with training cruises until early March when she began pre-overhaul tests in the San Diego operating area. She continued preparing for overhaul and participating in exercises until November 1 when she entered Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for regular overhaul. While at Bremerton, Scamp was assigned that port as her new home port. The overhaul continued through 1970 and ended in January 1971.

1970s

Following post-overhaul sea trials in Puget Sound, Scamp was reassigned back to San Diego, as home port on February 12, 1971, but did not enter that port until April 15after a voyage to Pearl Harbor. On July 27, she deployed to the western Pacific. Scamp stopped at Pearl Harbor from 2 August to 13 August, then headed on to Subic Bay, R.P., arriving on August 30. For the bulk of 1971, she operated with the Seventh Fleet in Far Eastern waters other than off the coast of Vietnam, except for one short two-day period, October 8 and October 9.

She returned to San Diego on February 2, 1972, but due to increasing tension in Southeast Asia, redeployed to the Seventh Fleet in May. She operated in the South China Sea for most of the summer, returning to San Diego on August 1. Upon arrival, she went into a two-month standdown period, followed by more than a month of restricted availability at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. She departed Puget Sound on November 28, conducted weapons system accuracy tests, and returned, on December 11, to San Diego, where she remained for the remainder of the year.

Scamp operated locally around San Diego until March 29, 1973. At that time, she departed the West Coast for deployment to the Far East. She stayed at Pearl Harbor between April 5 and 10, then headed for Yokosuka, Japan. She arrived in Japan on April 23 and operated with the Seventh Fleet until September 1, when she departed Guam for Pearl Harbor. Scamp stopped at Pearl Harbor during the period September 10 to 15, then set sail for San Diego. Arriving on September 21 the nuclear submarine immediately entered a period of standdown and upkeep until November 1, when she resumed operations in the vicinity of San Diego.

History for 1973-1988 needed.

Decommissioning

Scamp was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on April 28, 1988. ex-Scamp entered the Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program in Bremerton, Washington, in 1990 and on September 9, 1994 became the first hulk to complete the program and ceased to exist.

Honors and awards

Scamp earned three campaign stars for service in the Vietnam War.[41]

USS SCAMP was the second SKIPJACK - class nuclear-powered attack submarine and the second ship in the Navy to be named after the fish. Both decommissioned and stricken from the Navy list on April 28, 1988, the SCAMP later entered the Navy’s Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Wash., and finished it on September 30, 1991.



General Characteristics: Awarded: July 23, 1957

Keel laid: January 23, 1959

Launched: October 8, 1960

Commissioned: June 5, 1961

Decommissioned: April 28, 1988

Builder: Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, Calif.

Propulsion system: one S5W nuclear reactor

Propellers: one

Length: 251.64 feet (76.7 meters)

Beam: 31.5 feet (9.6 meters)

Draft: 27.9 feet (8.5 meters)

Displacement: Surfaced: approx. 2,880 tons Submerged: approx. 3,500 tons

Speed: Surfaced: approx. 15 knots Submerged: approx. 30 knots

Armament: six 533 mm torpedo tubes

Crew: 8 Officers, 85 Enlisted [42]



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


[1] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


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


[3] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[4] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[5] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[6] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[7] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine. Page 118.


[8] Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 29.


[9] Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 29.


[10] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor. Page 294.


[11] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor, page 299.


[12] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor, page 300.


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


[14]


[15] Wikipedia


[16] Wikipedia


[17] Wikipedia


[18] "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conrad_of_Montferrat"


[19] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1521


[20] © 1995-2001. Becky Bonner and Josephine Lindsay Bass. All rights reserved.




[21] Essex County Records, Will Book 3, page 84, 1717-1722. Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pgs. 312-313


[22] April 28, 1752 instructions (quoted above), the Ohio Company directed Christopher

Gist to employ Indians who were already acquainted with the ―ways‖ to cut the

contemplated Ohio Company road.

· As related above, Jacobs—a man who was in a position to know—clearly states that the

Ohio Company road followed a route that was in some fashion identified by the Indian

Nemacolin.


[23] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 65., 66.


[24] http://www.virginiaplaces.org/boundaries/paboundary.html


[25] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt


[26] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania, by lewis Clark Walkinshaw, A. M. Vol. II, 1939. pg 60


[27] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, page 133.


[28] Much after the manner of young people today, marriages were at times kept secret in that day, too. Justice Thomas Gist and the famed iron master, Isaac Meason, must have had a difference, which prompted the revelation of the marriage of the former, as shown by the minutes of April 28, 1778


[29] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania, by Lewis Sclark Walkinshaw, A. M. Vol. II pg. 78.


[30] MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY, FIRST AT AUGUSTA TOWN NOW WASHINGTON, PA.), AND AFTER­ WARDS ON THE ANDREW HEATH FARM NEAR WEST ELIZABETH; 1776-1780.’ EDITED BY BOYD CRUMRINE, OF WASHINGTON, PA. pg. 214-216.


[31] http://doclindsay.com/spread_sheets/2_davids_spreadsheet.html


[32] http://doclindsay.com/spread_sheets/2_davids_spreadsheet.html


[33] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt


[34] Treaty of Fort Clark From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation,


[35]http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/i/d/Jan-C-Didawick-Berkeley-Springs/GENE2-0004.html


[36] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/i/d/Jan-C-Didawick-Berkeley-Springs/PDFGENE3.pdf


[37] http://www.mobile96.com/cw1/Vicksburg/TFA/24Iowa-1.html


[38] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[39] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/harrbios/carterharr3IL.htm


[40] On This Day in America,




[41] This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.Skipjack-class submarine:


•Skipjack
•Scamp
•Scorpion
•Sculpin
•Shark
•Snook












[42] http://navysite.de/ssn/ssn588.htm

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