Tuesday, April 30, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, April 30


10,426 names…10,426 stories…10,426 memories

This Day in Goodlove History, April 29

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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 30, 1245: Birthdate King Philip III of France, the son Louis IX (St. Louis). During Phillip’s reign, the Pope turned the attention of the Inquisition from suppressing the heresy of the Albigenses to the Jews of southern France who had converted to Christianity. The popes complained that not only were baptized Jews returning to their former faith, but that Christians also were being converted to Judaism. Pope Gregory X ruled that Jewish converts who had returned to Judaism, as well as Christians who converted to Judaism were to be treated by the Inquisitors as heretics. The instigators of such apostasies, as those who received or defended the guilty ones, were to be punished in the same way as the delinquents. When the Jews of Toulouse buried a Christian convert in their cemetery, they were brought before the Inquisition in for trial, with their rabbi, Isaac Males and having been found guilty were burned at the stake. Needless to say, Phillip did nothing to protect his subjects.[1]



King Philip III of France is the father-in-law of the 21st great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



1246: Llywelyn Yr Ail (the Last) begins rule of Wales, death of Dafydd ap Llywellyn Prince of Snowden, Frederick II seizes the vacant dukedom of Austria and Styria, earlies German peasant romance written, erection of La Sainte-Chapelle in Paris, Wernher der Gertenaere writes first German peasant romance, Llywelyn Yr Ail (the Last) begins rule of Wales. [2]

1247: In 1247 Pope Innocent IV, the Emperor’s enemy, also denounced accusations of the ritual murder of Christian children by Jews.[3] The Hague founded, Robin Hood dies, War in Italy between Frederick and papal allies to 1250. [4]

April 30, 1290: Joan of Acre- Cnts. Gloucester.Princess Joan of Acre[5]- Cnts. Gloucester, born April, 1272 in Acre, Palestine. [6] The name "Acre" derives from her birthplace in the Holy Land while her parents were on a crusade.[7] Joan died April 23, 1307 in Austin Friar's, Clare, Suffolk, England. She was the daughter of 2. King of England Edward I (Longshanks) and 3. Eleanor of Cstille, "Cts de Ponthieu". She married (1) Earl/Gloucester3 Gilbert "The Red" 7th Earl de Clare "6th Earl" April 30, 1290 in Westminster Abby, London, England. He was born September 02, 1243 in Christchurch, Hampshire, England/Christchurch, England, and died December 07, 1295 in Monmouth Castle. He was the son of Earl/Gloucester Richard de Clare and Maud de (LACY) LACIE. She married (2) Baron Ralph de MONTHERMER (Earl Gloucester) January 1296/97. He was born in of Tonebrugge, Castle, Kent, England, and died in (35 yrs old).[8]

Joan's first husband, Gilbert de Clare died on December 7, 1295.[18]

The couple were married on April 30, 1290 at Westminster Abbey, and had four children together.[17][9] They were:
1.Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Hertford
2.Eleanor de Clare
3.Margaret de Clare
4.Elizabeth de Clare [10]

Joan of Acre is the 20th great grandaunt of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

April 30, 1349: The Jewish community at Radolszell, Germany, was exterminated. This appears to have been part of a wave of attacks on Jewish communities that took place during 1348 and 1349. They were in response to fears about the Black Death and a convenient way for non-Jewish nobles and others to avoid having to re-pay their Jewish creditors.[11]

April 30, 1492: Christopher Columbus is appointed Admiral of the Ocean Sea and governor of any land he discovers.[12]

April 30, 1492: The Edict of Expulsion for all the Jews of Spain was passed. Since professing that Jews were not under the jurisdiction of the Inquisition, the Church decided to level a ritual murder accusation against them in Granada and was thus able to call for the expulsion of both Jews and Marranos from Spain. The Marranos themselves were accused of complicity in the case, and both were ordered to leave within four months. Torquemada, the director of the Inquisition (and incidentally of Jewish descent), defended this against Don Isaac Abarbanel. The edict was passed, and over fifteen thousand Jews had to flee, some to the Province of Aragon and others, like Abarbanel, to Naples. Still others found temporary sanctuary in Portugal.[13]



April 30, 1492 - Columbus is given royal commission to equip his fleet



April 30, 1492 - Spain announces it will expels all Jews[14]



April 30th, 1506 - Philip of Bourgondy & England sign trade agreement[15]



April 30, 1556: A community of Marranos at Ancona (Italy) was devastated when Pope Paul IV retracted letters of protection issued by previous Popes' for protection of the Jews, and ordered immediate proceedings to be taken by the Holy Office. The result of the findings came in the spring and early summer, when 24 men and 1 woman were burned alive in successive proceedings. Their deaths are memorialized in that city every Tisha B'av.[16]

April 30, 1562: Port Royal, off the coast of South Carolina, becomes the first French colony in America.[17]

April 30, 1563 The Jews were expelled from France by order of Charles VI.[18]

April 30th, 1598 - 1st theater performance in America (Spanish comedy-Rio Grande) [19]



April 30, 1774: Note: The Massacre of Logan’s family and people at Yellow Creek by Daniel Greathouse, and the party of thirty-two borderers he had collected for the purpose, occurred on April 30, 1774.[20]



The exact date of this exploit of Greathouse and party, usually known as the “Yellow creek massacre,” so long a matter of uncertainty, is fixed by the above, beyond a peradventure—saturday April 30, 1774. The Mingo, Logan’s brother, known as John Petty, his mother and sister—the latter the mother of the child, then only two months old—were all slain. The child-prisoner being Logan’s niece, it follows that his relatives were not all killed.



The following brief biography of Logan is abridged from a manuscript life in the Draper MSS., 2D, chap. 12. The father of Logan was a French child who, captured when quite young, had been adopted into the Oneida tribe, and became a chief of much influence among the Indians of the Susquehann. Logan’s mother was a Cayuga, hence this was his tribe. For many years he lived at Shamokin (now Sunbury), in the Susquehanna valley, and was usually known as John Shikellimo, his appellation Logan being in honor of James Logan, secretary of the province; his Indian name was Tachnechdorus (branching oak of the forest). During the French and Indian War he maintained a strict neutrality, even seeking refuge in Philadelphia from the wiles of the savage allies of the French. Obliged to abandon his ancestrial home, he lived in various places in Pennsylvania, for several years in the Kishacoquillas valley, whose pioneers later told tales of his kindness, generosity, and general goodwill except when under the influence of liquor. About 1772, he removed to the Ohio, and it was at his town on Yellow Creek that the affray occurred on April 30, 1774, that has been cited as the occasion for Dunmore’s War. Having glutted his vengeance by four prolonged raids, during the summer after the negotiations with Lord Dunmore for peace had begun. The date of his arrival, as here given by Christian, is proof that he was not in the battle at Point Pleasant. Noticing his absence, Lord Dunmore sent his interpreter, John Gibson, to bring him to the conference. Logan refused to go, and upon that occasion delivered the now famous speech, so generally quoted as an example of Indian eloquence, to which Jefferson paid high tribute in his “Notes on Virginia”. There grew up an animated controversy concerning the genuineness of this speech, and its attribution of the murder to Cresap. It is now admitted that the substance of the speech, as it has come down to us, was actually delivered by Logan, but that he was mistaken in attributing the murder of his family to Cresap. See Jacob, Life of Cresap; Mayer, Logan and Cresap (especially documents in appendix to edition of 1867); Roosevelt, Winning of the West, I, pp. 236-239, 347-352. The rest of Logan’s life is sunk in obscurity. He removed to Pluggy’s Town, on the Scioto, then to the watersof Mad River, in Logan County, and later to the neighborhood of Detroit. He saved Kenton from the stake in 1778, and the next year was recognized in a savage raiding party in southwest Virginia. See Draper MSS., 5QQ11. He was killed by one of his own relatives on his way home from Detroit in 1780. His epitaph may be given in his own statement, that “he knew he had two souls, the one good and the other bad; when the good soul had the ascendant, he was kind and humane, and when the bad soul ruled, he was perfectly savage, and delighted in nothing but blood and carnage.” See Amer. Pioneer, I, p. 350. Dunmore’s War, Thwaites and Kellogg pp. 305-306



April 30, 1774: "I, William Huston, of Washington County, in the State of Pennsylvania, do hereby certify to whom it may concern: That in the year 1774 I resided at Catfish's Camp, on the main path from Wheeling to Redstone; that Michael Cresap, who resided on or near the Potomac River, on his way up from the river Ohio, at the head of a party of armed men, lay some time at my cabin. I had previously heard the report of Mr. Cresap having killed some Indians said to be the relations of Logan, an Indian Chief. In a variety of conversations with several of Cresap's party they boasted of the deed, and that in the presence of their chief. They acknowledged that they had fired first on the Indians. They had with them one man on a litter who was in the skirmish.

"I do further certify that, from what I learned from the party themselves, I then formed the opinion, and have not had any reason to change that opinion since, that the killing, on the part of the whites, was what I deem the grossest murder. I further certify that some of the party who afterwards killed some women and other Indians at Baker's Bottom also lay at my cabin on their march to the interior part of the country; they had with them a little girl, whose life had been spared by the interference of some more humane than the rest. If necessary, I will make affidavit to the above to be true. Certified at Washington, this 18th day of April, A. D. 1798.

(signed) "William Huston."

Immediately after the occurrence of the events narrated as above by Clarke came the killing of the Indians at Captina Creek and the murder of the relatives of the Mingo chief Logan at Baker's Bottom, on the Ohio, the date of the last-named event being April 30th. The so-called speech of Logan fastened the odium of killing his people in cold blood on Capt. Michael Cresap, of Red­stone Old Fort. That the charge was false and wholly unjust is now known by all people well informed on the subject. Cresap did, however, engage in the killing of other Indians, being no doubt incited thereto by the deceitful tenor of Dr. Connolly's letters, which were evidently written for the express purpose of inflaming the minds of the frontiersmen by false information, and so bring about a general Indian war.

The chief Logan, with a hunting party of his Indians, and having with them their women and children, had pitched his hunting-camp at the mouth of Yellow Creek, about thirty miles above Wheeling, on the west side of the Ohio, and opposite Baker's Bottom on the Virginia side, where lived Joshua Baker, whose chief occupation was selling liquor to the Indians. From the time when Logan had first pitched his camp at Yellow Creek it had been the determination of some of the whites to attack it and kill the Indian party, but in their first attempt to do this they had been over­ruled in their purpose, chiefly by the influence of Capt. Cresap, as is shown in Clarke's account before quoted. But after Cresap and Clark had departed with their men for Redstone, and while they were making their way from Catfish Camp to the Monongahela, on the day succeeding the night which they spent at William Huston's cabin, the plan to kill the Indians of Logan's party was put in execution (during the absence of the chief) by enticing a part of them across the river to Baker's cabin, where a party of white men lay concealed. There liquor was given them, and then when they or some of them were in a state of partial intoxication the bloody work was done, all the Indians at the house being killed except an infant child. The party who did the perfidious and cold-blooded deed were under the leadership of Daniel Greathouse,[21] a settler on King's Creek near its mouth. Several accounts of the affair have been given, generally agreeing as to the main facts, but disagreeing to some extent as to the minor details. One account has it that in the evening preceding the tragedy a friendly squaw came across the river from Logan's camp and told Baker's wife with many tears that the lives of herself (Mrs. Baker) and her family were in danger, as the Indians were planning to come across and murder them. She wished well to Mrs. Baker, and thus risked her own life to serve her by bringing the information so as to allow the family time to escape. Upon receipt of this warning Greathouse's party was collected in haste at the cabin. No Indians appeared during the night, and on the following morning Greathouse and two or three others crossed to Logan's camp, and in an apparently friendly manner invited the Indians to come across to Baker's and get some rum. A party of them accepted the invitation and came. Most of Greathouse's men lay concealed in the back part of the cabin. Baker was to deal out rum freely to the Indians, and did so. When they became intoxicated the concealed men rushed out and killed them. In Mayer's "Logan and Cresap" the following account is given of the massacre:

"Early in the morning a party of eight Indians, composed of three squaws, a child, and four unarmed men, one of whom was Logan's brother, crossed the river to Baker's cabin, where all but Logan's brother obtained liquor and became excessively drunk. No whites except Baker and two of his companions appeared in the cabin. After some time Logan's relative took down a coat and hat belonging to Baker's brother-in-law, and putting them on, set his arms akimbo, strutted about the apartment, and at length coming up to one of the men addressed him with the most offensive epithets and attempted to strike him. The white man, Sappington, who was thus assailed by lan­guage and gesture for some time kept out of his way, but becoming irritated, seized his gun and shot the Indian as he was rushing to the door, still clad in the coat and hat. The men, who during the whole of this scene had remained hidden, now poured forth, and without parley slaughtered the whole Indian party except the child. Before this tragic event occurred two canoes, one with two and the other with five Indians, all naked, painted, and completely armed for war, were descried stealing from the opposite shore, where Logan's camp was situated. This was considered as confirmation of what the squaw had said the night before, and was afterwards alleged in justification of the murder of the unarmed party which had first arrived.

"No sooner were the unresisting drunkards dead than the infuriated whites rushed to the river-bank, and ranging themselves along the concealing fringe of underwood prepared to receive the canoes. The first that arrived was the one containing two warriors, who were fired upon and killed The other canoe immediately turned and fled; but after this two others containing eighteen warriors, painted and prepared for conflict as the first had been, started to assail the Americans. Advancing more cautiously than the former party, they endeavored to land below Baker's cabin, but being met by the rapid movements of the rangers before they could effect their purpose they were put to flight, with the loss of one man, although they returned the fire of the pioneers.:

Another account of the Baker's Bottom massacre was given more than half a century afterwards by Judge Jolley, who for many years was a resident of Washington County, Ohio, and who at the time of the occurrence was a youth living on the frontier. His account, as given below, was published in the year 1836 in "Silliman's Journal," viz.:

"I was about sixteen years of age, but I very well recollect what I then saw, and the information that I have since obtained was derived from (I believe) good authority. In the spring of the year 1774 a party of Indians encamped on the northwest of the Ohio, near the mouth of the Yellow Creek. A party of whites, called 'Greathouse's party, lay on the opposite side of the river. The Indians came over to the white party, consisting, I think, of five men and one woman with an infant. The whites gave them rum, which three of them drank, and in a short time became very drunk. The other two men and the woman refused to drink. The sober Indians were challenged to shoot at a mark, to which they agreed; and as soon as they emptied their guns the whites shot them down. The woman attempted to escape by flight, but was also shot down; she lived long enough, however, to beg mercy for her babe, telling them that it was akin to themselves. The whites had a man in the cabin prepared with a tomahawk for the purpose of killing the three drunken Indians, which was immediately done. The party of men then moved off for the interior settlements, and came to Catfish Camp (Washington) on the evening of the next day, where they tarried until the day following. I very well remember my mother feeding and dressing the babe, chirruping to the little innocent, and its smiling. However, they took it away, and talked of sending it to its supposed father, Col. John Gibson, of Carlisle, Pa. who had been for some years a trader among the Indians.

"The remainder of the (Indian) party at the mouth of Yellow Creek, finding that their friends on the opposite side of the river were massacred, attempted to escape by descending the Ohio, and in order to prevent being discovered by the whites passed on the west side of Wheeling Island, and landed at Pipe Creek, a small stream that empties into the Ohio a few miles below Grave Creek, where they were overtaken by Cresap with a party of men from Wheeling. They took one Indian scalp, and had one white man (Big Tarrener) badly wounded. They, I believe, carried him in a litter from Wheeling to Redstone. I saw the party on their return from their victorious campaign. It was well known that Michael Cresap had no hand in the massacre at Yellow Creek."

The concluding sentence in Judge Jolley's statement was written in refutation of the calumny which was circulated and for many years believed by the majority of the people of the country, that the murder of Logan's men and relatives was done by Capt. Michael Cresap or by his orders. Such an inference might be drawn from the first part of the statement of William, already given, viz., where he says, "I had previously heard the report of Mr. Cresap having killed some Indians, said to be the relations of Logan, an Indian chief." But his memory was evidently at fault. He could not have previously hears of the killing at Yellow Creek, as it did not occur until after the time to which he refers in the certificate. And in the latter part of the same document he disproves his previous statement by saying, "I further certify that some of the party who afterwards killed some women and other Indians at Baker's Bottom also lay at my cabin on their march to the interior." Another statement that seems to be conclusive proof of Capt. Cresap's innocence of any participation in the atrocity at Baker's Bottom is found in an affidavit of the man who shot Logan's brother on that occasion, viz.: "I, John Sappington, declare myself to be intimately acquainted with all the circumstances respecting the destruction of Logan's family, and do give the following narrative, a true statement of that affair: Logan's family (if it was his family) was not killed by Cresap, nor with his knowledge, nor by his consent, but by the Greathouses and their associates. They were killed thirty miles above Wheeling, near the mouth of Yellow Creek. Logan's camp was on one side of the river Ohio, and the house where the murder was committed was opposite to it on the other side. They had encamped there only four or five days, and during that time had lived peaceably with the whites on the opposite side until the very day the affair happened."



April 30, 1789: Martha Washington

For the comic book character from Frank Miller's Give Me Liberty, see Martha Washington (comics).


Martha Washington


Martha Washington.png


Tinted engraving by John Chester Buttre (1821–1893), after the portrait by Gilbert Stuart


First Lady of the United States


In office
April 30, 1789 – March 4, 1797


Succeeded by

Abigail Adams


Personal details


Born

(1731-06-02)June 2, 1731
Chestnut Grove, New Kent County, Colony of Virginia


Died

May 22, 1802(1802-05-22) (aged 70)
Mount Vernon, Virginia, U.S.


Spouse(s)

Daniel Parke Custis (1750-1757)George Washington (1759-1799)


Children

Daniel Parke Custis, Jr.,
Frances Custis,
John Parke "Jacky" Custis,
Martha Parke "Patsy" Custis


Occupation

First Lady of the United States


Religion

Episcopalian


Signature

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/41/Martha_Washingtons_Signature.svg/128px-Martha_Washingtons_Signature.svg.png




Martha and George Washington had no children together, but they raised Martha's two surviving children. Her daughter, nicknamed Patsy, died as a teenager during an epileptic seizure, classed as SUDEP. John (Jackie) Custis returned from college to comfort his mother.

Custis later married and had children; he served as an aide to Washington during the siege of Yorktown in 1781 during the American Revolutionary War. He died of "camp fever" (probably epidemic typhus). After his death, the Washingtons raised two of John's four children, Eleanor Parke Custis (March 31, 1779 - July 15, 1852), and George Washington Parke Custis (April 30, 1781 - October 10, 1857). They also provided personal and financial support to nieces, nephews and other family members in both the Dandridge and Washington families.

Content to live a private life at Mount Vernon and her homes from the Custis estate, Martha Washington followed Washington to his winter encampments for each of eight years. She helped keep up morale among the officers.

After the war, she opposed his agreeing to be President of the newly formed United States of America, and refused to attend his inauguration (April 30, 1789). Once he came to office, as the First Lady, Mrs. Washington hosted many affairs of state at New York and Philadelphia during their years as temporary capitals. (The capital was moved to Washington D. C. in 1800 under the Adams administration, following construction of the Capitol and White House).[22]

April 30, 1802

Thomas Meason becomes county commissioner for Fayette County, Pennsylvania[23]

April 30, 1802: Congress passes the Enabling Act, authorizing territories organized under the Northwest Ordinance to prepare for statehood.[24]

* April 30, 180330 April 1803 – The United States of America purchases from Napoleon I of France the Louisiana Territory for the ultimate amount of $23,213,568. Thomas Jefferson's administration concludes the Louisiana Purchase; Jefferson believed that he had secured the United States space for the relocation of Indian tribes.[25] The United States acquires from France 828,000 square miles of land between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains, in the Louisiana Purchase.[26]

1803 - Summer - Litigation at New Madrid: Negro men, Tom and Joe, property of Benjamin Harrison, Sr., were taken in execution under a mortgage from Harrison to Richard Jones Waters. [27]

1804 - April 30 - Litigation at New Madrid: Richard Jones Waters vs. William Hinkson and Benjamin Harrison, Jr. Petition to take negro slave Joe, formerly property of Benjamin Harrison, Sr., into protective custody. Judgment rendered in favor of Waters, May 2, 1804. [28]

* * *

Ste. Genevieve[29] District, Territory of Louisiana

Gen. Harrison moved from New Madrid District to Ste. Genevieve District and had a grant on which is now located the town of Altenberg in southeast Perry County. [30]

April 30, 313: Licinius defeated Maximinus at the Battle of Tzirallum, thus making him the Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire. The Emperor of the Western Roman Empire was his brother-in-law, Constantine. The two in laws would clash repeatedly until Constantine defeated Licinius and eventually killed him despite the pleas of his sister to spare her husband’s life. We know that Constantine made Christianity the state religion of the Roman Empire with all that that would mean for the Jews of Europe. Would it have been any different if Licinius had triumphed? Who knows? Lucinius did subscribe to the policy of tolerance towards Christians but those who were writing history in the fourth and fifth century tended to create an idyll-ic vision of Constantine which meant painting a less than flattering portrait of Licinius. Gibbon follows the same path in his history of the Roman Empire.[31]

AD 314 – 335 Sylvester I is pope - promotes (Sunday) first day observance

"Pope Sylvester instructed the clergy to keep the feriae. And, indeed, from an old custom he called the first day [of the week] the "Lord's [day]," on which the light was made in the beginning and also the resurrection of Christ is celebrated."[380]

But he [Sylvester] ordered [them] to call the Sabbath by the ancient term of the law, [to call] the first feria the "Lord's day," because on it the Lord rose [from the dead], Moreover, the same decreed that the rest of the Sabbath should be transferred rather to the Lord's day [Sunday], on order that on that day we should rest from worldly works for the praise of God.[15] [32]

April 30, 711: Moorish troops led by Tariq ibn-Ziyad land at Gibraltar to begin their invasion of the Iberian Peninsula (Al-Andalus). For the Jews living under the Visigoth rulers of Spain, this is good news. The victory of the Moors will mark the start of what is called the Golden Age. Ironically, the Golden Age will begin to tarnish not because of Christians, but because of an invasion by another, more religiously conservative group of Moslems.[33]

April 30, 1863: During the Civil War, President Lincoln issued a proclamation proclaiming Thursday, April 30, 1863 as a National Day of Fasting.[34]



100_1719

“The U.S. Civil War Out West” The History Channel



Tuesday, June 06, 2006 (2)[35]

Sat. April 30[36][37][38], 1864

In camp hot day went over town saw

Troops daming[39] red river[40] killed a beef

In cane field all quiet on red river



April 30, 1864: Battle of Jenkins Ferry, AR.[41]





April 30, 1881


Maurice Goodlove



Birth:

unknown


Death:

April 30, 1881


http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
Aged 30 years



Burial:
San Joaquin Cemetery
Sacramento
Sacramento County
California, USA



Created by: Kimberley Terrill (Inact...
Record added: Sep 29, 2005
Find A Grave Memorial# 11850812









Maurice Goodlove
Added by: Kimberley Terrill (Inactive)



Maurice Goodlove
Cemetery Photo






[42]



April 30, 1903

(Pleasant Valley) Mrs. Myrtle Goodlove is on the sick list again.[43]



April 30, 1903

(Jordan’s Grove) Ruth Gray, of Anamosa is visitying with her grand parents Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Goodlove.[44] [i]



April 30, 1903

(Pleasant Valley) Willis Goodlove ran a rusty nail in his foot and is laid up as a result. Willis says troubles never come singly.[45]



April 30, 1987: Ethel Estelle WINCH was born on July 26, 1903 in Buck Creek, Jones County, Iowa, USA. She died on April 30, 1987 at the age of 83 in Monticello, Jones County, Iowa, USA. She was buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Monticello, Jones County, Iowa, USA. Ethel had Social Security Number 484-24-9168 (Iowa, bef. 1951). Last residence: Monticello, Jones County, Iowa.[46]



April 30, 1914

(South Side News) Mr. and Mrs. Goodlove of Central City were visiting their daughter Mrs. Jessie Bowdish, Monday.[47]



April 30-May 1, 1920: The first institute was to be held in the Buck Creek Church on April 30-May 1. The success of the Buck Creek institute was to be measured by more than just the number of people attending. It was also hoped that the petitions then being reaedied calling for the establishment of the Consolidated Independent District of Buck Creek would be signed in large numbers by those attending the special services on

Sunday, thereby obviating any necessity for doodr to doore canvassing at a time when farmers were beginning their spring field work. Therefore, it was a serious setback when the institute had to be canceled at the last minute because inclement weather rendered local roads impassable. This opportunity by bring in the experst to help generate enthusiasm had been lost. It was unlikely that a new one could or should be scheduled until later in the spring when crops were in the ground. Furthermore, the poor road conditions that had forced the cancellation of the institute also made it difficult to implement a door to door campaign. When the roads finally did improve, farmers would need to be completing their spring plowing. The campaign to form a consolidated school district had to be delayed again.[48]



April 30, 1921: Objectors filed their appeal on April 30, well within the ten day period specified by the law. Ottilie set May 10 as the date for the county board to meet.. Howver, in apparent ignorance of the law, he failed to notify each of the objectors of the time and place for the hearing of the appeal by registered letter. [49]



April 30, 1940: The Lodz ghetto is sealed. [1]



April 30, 1942: The Jews of Pinsk are ordered to establish a ghetto within one day. About 20,000 Jews move into it.[1]



April 30, 1942: Twelve hundred Jews are killed in Diatlovo during and Aktion. The Jews offer armed resistance but to no avail. [1]



April 30, 1945: The Okinawa landings commended the next day and for the next two weeks, Morrison drew a full range of gunfire support and other assignments. On April 14, she received a fighter-director team and, with little time out for logistics, was assigned to Radar Picket Stations #10 to the west, #7 to the south, #2 in the direction of Japan to the northeast to relieve Daly, damaged by a suicide plane on the 28th, and finally adjacent #1 on April 30. [1]



Uncle Howard Snell was on the Morrison this day. He will survive the Morrison’s sinking a few days later by swimming into the oil slick to avoid the sharks.





• 100_1211[1]





• April 30, 1945: “…Above all, I call upon the leaders of the nation and all followers to implacably oppose the universal poisoner of all races, the Jews.”



Adolf Hitler, hours before he committed suicide.



The Goodlove’s while Christian, have recently discovered their Jewish ancestry and the unique Cohen DNA haplotype which they carry.



April 30, 1945

As the Soviet Army advances through the streets of Berlin, Hitler marries his long time mistress, Eva Braun. He waits until the Soviets are only blocks away from his bunker and then shoots himself in the head. [1]

April 30, 1998: 100Mil BC: A report in Nature April 30, 1998, traced mammals back to around 100 million years using a "molecular clock." [see 110 million]





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


[2] mike@abcomputers.com


[3] www.wikipedia.org


[4] mike@abcomputers.com


[5] Notes for -Princess Joan of Acre- Cnts. Gloucester: Countess of Gloucester and Hertford. Her father had arranged for her to be married to Amadeus of Savoy, but she had already secretly married to Ralph, a member of the Kings household.


[6] Family Tree Maker, Jeff Goodlove


[7] Wikipedia


[8] Family Tree Maker, Jeff Goodlove


[9] Wikipedia


[10] Wikipedia


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


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


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


[14] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1492


[15] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1506


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


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


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


[19] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1585


[20] Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers. Published by the Society of the Colonial Daes of America. Edited by Stanislaus murray Haamilton. Vol. 04



[21] Pioneer Greathouses in America





Daniel Greathouse

The History of Hancock County says, “In 1770, Daniel Greathouse built a small fort near Newell in Hancock County. The fort, which promised protection to those who lived near it, attracted several other families to the area.” Jack Murray Greathouse says Daniel settled on 400 acres located in the Mingo Bottom of the Ohio River in 1771 but sold his rights to this land in 1775.[21][19] “Daniel improved land in 1776, in now Preston County, West Virginia beside Richard Morris, whose daughter, Mary, he had married that year. October 7, 1801: Orator, John Beard of Brooke County, “Long before 1778 Daniel Greathouse had made a settlement and improvement there, and by Deed dated 13th July, 1775, sold to William McMahan.”[21][20] Daniel is showing as a sergeant in Captain Michael Cresap’s Company in 1775 [21][21] Daniel was involved in an incident referred to as the "Chief Logan Massacre" that happened across the Ohio River from Yellow Creek in 1774 at the cabin of Joshua Baker. Yellow Creek is located about 40 miles above Wheeling. Several versions of this incident have been recorded. Cresap was originally accused of the attack, but due to intervention by friends of the family, Thomas Jefferson made an investigation into the matter, and there are records of people’s reports of what they believe happened. As a result of the evidence that came forth, Jefferson substituted the following in his original statement about charges against Cresap. "Captain Michael Cresap and a certain Daniel Greathouse, leading on these parties, surprised at different times traveling and hunting parties of the Indians having their women and children with them and murdered many. Among these were unfortunately the family of Logan, a Chief celebrated in peace and war, and long distinguished as a friend of the whites."



Daniel died in now Brooke County in the fall of 1777, leaving a son Gabriel. His widow married Andrew McCreary.”[21][22] There is a record in the court minutes of Yohogania County March 25, 1778 of John Greathouse being appointed administrator for the estate of Daniel. Daniel's estate was filed in Ohio and Monongalia counties. The court records show his widow, John, his brother, and Gabriel his son.[21][23] It is believed that he had only one son, Gabriel, because of a court action that was brought at a later date in Kentucky. Chris Bailey cites on page 246 of his book, “Gabriel Greathouse declared under oath in his chancery suite in 1802 that he “is the son and only heir and representative of a certain Daniel Greathouse dec’d . . . “Greathouse vs. McCreery, Paris District Court, Bourbon County, Kentucky, 1802.




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





[22] Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Martha_Washington&oldid=549540533"




[23] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882


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


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


[26] On This Day In America by John Wagman.


[27] (New Madrid Archives #1356) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html


[28] (New Madrid Archives #1356) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html


[29] In St. Genevieve, MO, a little community along the Mississippi River the people are proud of their French heritage. The people in the area keep their old French history alive.


[30] (Douglass, p. 66)


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


[32] De Clericorum Institutione (Concerning the Instruction of the Clergymen), Book II, Chap. XLVI, as translated by the writer from the Latin text in Migne's Patrologia Latina, Vol. CVII, col. 361. http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/


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


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


[35] History of the Nineteenth Army Corps by Richard B. Irwin, 1892




[36] Construction of dam at Alexandria April 30-May 10. UNION IOWA VOLUNTEERS, 24th Regiment, Iowa Infantry: http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/template.cfm?unitname=24th%20Regiment%2C%20Iowa%20Infantry&unitcode=UIA0024RI




[37] Union Forces

30 April - 22 May 1864

DEPARTMENT OF THE GULF

MAJOR GENERAL NATHANIEL PRENTISS BANKS

Escort

Company "C" --- Captain Frank Sayles

Engineer Brigade - Colonel George D. Robinson

97th U.S. Colored Troops --- Lieutenant Colonel George A. Harmount

99th U.S. Colored Troops --- Lieutenant Colonel Uri B. Pearsall

Headquarters

Company "A" --- Captain Richard W. Francis

Company "B" --- Captain Richard W. Francis



XIII CORPS, ARMY OF THE GULF

MAJOR GENERAL JOHN ALEXANDER McLERNAND

1st Division

2nd Brigade - Brigadier General Michael K. Lawler

49th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Colonel James Keigwin

69th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Oran Perry

34th Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Colonel George W. Clark

22nd Kentucky Infantry Regiment --- Colonel George W. Monroe

16th Ohio Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Phillip Kershner

114th Ohio Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel John H. Kelly

3rd Division - Brigadier General Robert Alexander Cameron

1st Brigade - Colonel Thomas H. Bringhurst

46th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Captain Henry Snyder

29th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment --- Colonel William A. Green

2nd Brigade - Colonel James R. Slack

47th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel John A. McLaughlin

24th Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Major Edward Wright

28th Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Bartholomew W. Wilson

56th Ohio Infantry Regiment --- Colonel William H. Raynor

4th Division - Colonel William Jennings Landram

1st Brigade - Colonel Frederick W. Moore

77th Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Major John A. Burdett

19th Kentucky Infantry Regiment --- Captain William T. Cummins

83rd Ohio Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel William H. Baldwin

23rd Wisconsin Infantry Regiment --- Major Joseph E. Green

Artillery - Major Adolph Schwartz

1st Battery, Indiana Light Artillery --- Lieutenant Lawrence Jacoby

Battery "A", 1st Missouri Light Artillery --- Lieutenant Elisha Cole

2nd Battery, Ohio Light Artillery --- Lieutenant William H. Harper

1st Battery, Wisconsin Light Artillery --- Captain Jacob T. Foster

Unattached

Independent Company, Kentucky Infantry --- Captain William F. Patterson



ARMY OF THE GULF

XIX CORPS

MAJOR GENERAL WILLIAM BUELL FRANKLIN

1st Division - Brigadier General William H. Emory

1st Brigade - Colonel George L. Beal

29th Maine Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Charles S. Emerson

114th New York Infantry Regiment --- Major Oscar H. Davis

116th New York Infantry Regiment --- Colonel George N. Love

153rd New York Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Edwin P. Davis

161st New York Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel William B. Kinsey

2nd Brigade - Brigadier General James W. McMillan

13th Maine Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Henry Rust Jr.

15th Maine Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Isaac Dyer

160th New York Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel John B. Van Petten

47th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Thigman H. Good

3rd Brigade - Lieutenant Colonel Justus W. Blanchard

30th Maine Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Thomas H. Hubbard

162nd New York Infantry Regiment --- Captain Samuel Cowdrey

165th New York Infantry Regiment --- Captain Henry C. Inwood

173rd New York Infantry Regiment --- Captain Howard C. Conrady

Artillery - Captain Benjamin F. Neilds

1st Battery, Delaware Light Artillery --- Lieutenant Thomas A. Porter

25th Battery, New York Light Artillery --- Lieutenant Irving D. Southworth

Battery "L", 1st U.S. Light Artillery --- Lieutenant Franck E. Taylor

2nd Division - Brigadier General Cuvier Grover

1st Brigade - Brigadier General Frank S. Nickerson

133rd New York Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Leonard D. H. Currie

176th New York Infantry Regiment --- Major Charles Lewis

2nd Brigade - Colonel Jacob Sharpe

38th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel James P. Richardson

128th New York Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel James P. Foster

156th New York Infantry Regiment --- Captain James J. Hoyt

3 Companies, 175th New York Infantry --- Captain Charles McCarthy

Artillery - Captain George W. Fox

Battery "G", 7th Massachusetts Light Artillery --- Captain Newman W. Storer

26th Battery, New York Light Artillery --- Captain George W. Fox

Battery "C", 2nd U.S. Artillery --- Lieutenant John I. Rogers

Artillery Reserve - Captain Henry W. Closson

2 Companies, 1st Indiana Heavy Artillery --- Captain William S. Hinkle

1st Battery, Vermont Light Artillery --- Lieutenant Edward Rice



CORPS D'AFRIQUE, ARMY OF THE GULF

COLONEL WILLIAM H. DICKEY

1st Brigade, 1st Division - Colonel William H. Dickey

1st Infantry (73rd U.S. Colored Troops) --- Major Hiram E. Perkins

3rd Infantry (75th U.S. Colored Troops) --- Colonel Henry W. Fuller

12th Infantry (84th U.S. Colored Troops) --- Captain James H. Corrin

22nd Infantry (92ne U.S. Colored Troops) --- Colonel Henry N. Frisbie



CAVALRY DIVISION, ARMY OF THE GULF

BRIGADIER GENERAL RICHARD ARNOLD

(As of April 18, 1864)

1st Brigade - Colonel Thomas J. Lucas

12th Illinois Cavalry Regiment --- Colonel Hasbouck Davis

16th Indiana Mounted Infantry Regiment --- Captain James M. Hildreth

2nd Louisiana (U.S.) Mounted Infantry --- Colonel Charles Everett

6th Missouri Cavalry Regiment --- Major Bacon Montgomery

3rd Brigade - Lieutenant Colonel John M. Crebs

1st Louisiana (U.S.) Cavalry Regiment --- Major Algernon S. Badger

87th Illinois Mounted Infantry Regiment --- Major George W. Land

4th Brigade - Colonel Edmund J. Davis

2nd Illinois Cavalry Regiment --- Major Benjamin F. Marsh

3rd Massachusetts Cavalry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Lorenzo D. Sargent

31st Massachusetts Mounted Infantry --- Captain Elbert H. Fordham

2nd New Hampshire Cavalry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel George A. Flanders

5th Brigade - Colonel Oliver P. Gooding

2nd New York Veteran Cavalry Regiment --- Colonel Morgan H. Crysler

18th New York Cavalry Regiment --- Colonel James J. Byrne

3rd Rhode Island Cavalry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Charles H. Parkhurst

Artillery

Battery "B", 2nd Massachusetts Light Artillery --- Captain Ormand F. Nims

Battery "F", 1st U.S. Light Artillery --- Lieutenant William L. Haskins

Battery "G", 5th U.S. Light Artillery --- Lieutenant Jacob B. Rawles

Unattached

Company "C", 49th Indiana Cavalry Regiment --- Captain Andrew P. Gallagher

3rd Maryland Cavalry Regiment --- Colonel Byron Kirby



DETACHMENTS XVI & XVII CORPS, ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE

BRIGADIER GENERAL ANDREW JACKSON SMITH

1st Division, XVI Corps - Brigadier General Joseph Anthony Mower

2nd Brigade - Colonel Lucius F. Hubbard

47th Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Colonel John D. McClure

5th Minnesota Infantry Regiment --- Major John C. Becht

8th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel John W. Jefferson

3rd Brigade - Colonel Sylvester G. Hill

35th Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Colonel William B. Keeler

33rd Missouri Infantry Regiment --- Major George W. Van Beck

3rd Division - Brigadier General Joseph Anthony Mower

1st Brigade - Colonel William F. Lynch

58th Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Major Thomas Newlan

119th Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Thomas J. Kinney

89th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Charles D. Murry

2nd Brigade - Colonel William T. Shaw

14th Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Captain Warren C. Jones

27th Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Colonel James I. Gilbert

33rd Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Colonel John Scott

24th Missouri Infantry --- Major Robert W. Fyan

3rd Brigade - Colonel Risdon M. Moore

49th Indiana Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Jacob E. Gauen

117th Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Jonathan Merriam

178th New York Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Edward Wehler

Artillery - Captain James M. Cockefair

3rd Battery, Indiana Light Artillery --- Captain James M. Cockefair

9th Battery, Indiana Light Artillery --- Captain George Brown

Provisional Division - Brigadier General Thomas Kilby Smith

1st Brigade - Colonel Jonathan B. Moore

41st Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel John H. Nale

3rd Iowa Infantry Regiment --- Colonel James Tullis

33rd Wisconsin Infantry Regiment --- Major Horatio H. Virgin

2nd Brigade - Colonel Lyman M. Ward

81st Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Lieutenant Colonel Andrew W. Rogers

95th Illinois Infantry Regiment --- Colonel Thomas W. Humphrey

14th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment --- Captain Carlos M. G. Mansfield

Artillery

Battery "M", 1st Missouri Light Artillery --- Lieutenant John H. Tiemeyer



http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/pottery/1080/red_river_campaign_la_10mar64.htm




[38]


[39] Alexandria/Pineville; Bailey’s Dam, which Union troops constructed to deepen the Red river so their fleet could escape. The dam was suggested by Colonel Joseph Bailey, a Wisconsin lumberman before the War. (318/443-7049) (Civil War Military Sites) http://www.crt.state.la.us/tourism/civilwar/milsites.htm



Colonel Joseph Bailey



“The U.S. Civil War Out West.” The History Channel.


[40] “At this point appeared the deus ex machine in the person of Colonel Joseph Bailey…”In one of the most imaginative engineering feats of military history, Bailey, using a lumberman’s technique, raised the water level by a series of wing dams, and the fleet completed its passage of the obstacle on May 13.

While this engineering project was going on, Taylor split his small force (5,200) to block the Red River below Alexandria while also maintaining pressure on Banks, who had to remain who had to remain in the latter town to protect the fleet.



The U.S. Civil War Out West, The History Channel


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


[42] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=11850812&


[43] Winton Goodlove papers.


[44] Winton Goodlove papers.


[45] Winton Goodlove papers.


[46] http://www.gase.nl/InternettreeUSA/b1018.htm#P37354


[47] Winton Goodlove papers.


[48] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 184.


[49] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 207-208.

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