Thursday, May 16, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, May 15


10,461 names…10,461 stories…10,461 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, May 15
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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

May 15, 1174: Nur ad-Din died. His power was absdurdly handed to his eleven year old son.[1]

May 15, 1492 - Cheese & Bread rebellion: German mercenaries kills 232 Alkmaarse[2]

May 1527: Rome was invaded by Charles V and his 16,000 man army. The city is sacked. Men run through the church on their horses. 147 Swiss Guards stood bravely on the steps of St. Peters as the ancient city was sacked. They were slaughtered, but their mission was a success. As they gave their lives for the Holy father, a detachment of guards escorted Pope Clement safely from the Vatican.[3]

May 1527: Henry began to believe that his marriage was cursed and sought confirmation from the Bible, which he interpreted to say that if a man marries his brother's wife, the couple will be childless.[39][7] Even if her marriage to Arthur had not been consummated (and Catherine would insist to her dying day that she had come to Henry's bed a virgin), Henry's interpretation of that biblical passage meant that their marriage had been wrong in the eyes of God.[23] Whether the Pope at the time of Henry and Catherine's marriage had had the right to overrule Henry's claimed scriptural impediment would become a hot topic in Henry's campaign to wrest an annulment from the present Pope.[23] It is possible that the idea of annulment had been suggested to Henry much earlier than this, and is highly probable that it was motivated by his desire for a son. Before Henry's father ascended the throne, England was beset by civil warfare over rival claims to the English crown, and Henry may have wanted to avoid a similar uncertainty over the succession.[40]

My tribulations are so great, my life so disturbed by the plans daily invented to further the King's wicked intention, the surprises which the King gives me, with certain persons of his council, are so mortal, and my treatment is what God knows, that it is enough to shorten ten lives, much more mine.

It soon became the one absorbing object of Henry's desires to secure an annulment.[41] Catherine was defiant when it was suggested that she quietly retire to a nunnery, saying, "God never called me to a nunnery. I am the King's true and legitimate wife".[42] He set his hopes upon an appeal to the Holy See, acting independently of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, whom he told nothing of his plans. William Knight, the King's secretary, was sent to Pope Clement VII to sue for an annulment, on the grounds that the dispensing bull of Pope Julius II was obtained by false pretences.

As the Pope was, at that time, the prisoner of Catherine's nephew, Emperor Charles V, following the Sack of Rome in May 1527, Knight had difficulty in obtaining access to him. In the end, Henry's envoy had to return without accomplishing much. Henry now had no choice but to put this great matter into the hands of Thomas Wolsey, and Wolsey did all he could to secure a decision in Henry's favour.[43]



http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Mary_I_by_Master_John.jpg/220px-Mary_I_by_Master_John.jpg

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Catherine and Henry's daughter The Lady Mary

Wolsey went so far as to convene an ecclesiastical court in England with a representative of the Pope presiding, and Henry and Catherine herself in attendance. The Pope had no intention of allowing a decision to be reached in England, and his legate was recalled. (How far the pope was influenced by Charles V is difficult to say, but it is clear Henry saw that the Pope was unlikely to annul his marriage to the Emperor's aunt.[44] The Pope forbade Henry to marry again before a decision was given in Rome.[4]



May 1536

Queen Anne Boleyn fell from favour of King Henry VIII and was executed May, 1536.[5]



May 1537: The Jewish Indian theory was attached to two critical questions. The first is the familiea “where are the ten trihbes? The second was far more important at the time: “how had humans arrived in America to begin with?” “There was a problem accounting for who [the Indians] were and where they came from. If everyone on the surface of earth [were] the descendants of Adam and Eveand the seven survivolrs of the floowd, then the Indians had to be connected to the Biblicaol world.” The charge became particularly acute after the May 1537 encyclical “Sublimus Deus” by Pope Paul III (1468-1549). Addressing the question of the slavement of the Native Americans, the pope stated that they “and all other people who may later be discovered by Christians” were “truly men.” But what men were they?[6]

May 1541

Henry allows the publication in England of a vernacular Bible. He was the first mnonarch to fully authorize the printing and distribution of an English Bible, the great Bible of 1539. In May 1541, a royal proclamation ordered every parish church to have a copy for public use of the Great Bible.[7]

In May 1544, the English Earl of Hertford (later Duke of Somerset) raided Edinburgh, and the Scots took Mary to Dunkeld for safety.[25][8]

In May 1546, Beaton was murdered by Protestant lairds,[26][9]

May 1548: Henry VIII died in 1547; Elizabeth's half-brother, Edward VI, became king at age nine. Catherine Parr, Henry's widow, soon married Thomas Seymour of Sudeley, Edward VI's uncle and the brother of the Lord Protector, Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset. The couple took Elizabeth into their household at Chelsea. There Elizabeth experienced an emotional crisis that some historians believe affected her for the rest of her life.[21] Seymour, approaching age 40 but having charm and "a powerful sex appeal",[21] engaged in romps and horseplay with the 14-year-old Elizabeth. These included entering her bedroom in his nightgown, tickling her and slapping her on the buttocks. Parr, rather than confront her husband over his inappropriate activities, joined in. Twice she accompanied him in tickling Elizabeth, and once held her while he cut her black gown "into a thousand pieces."[22] However, after Parr discovered the pair in an embrace, she ended this state of affairs.[23] In May 1548, Elizabeth was sent away.[10]

May 1558: Mary I was weak and ill from May 1558,[147] and died aged 42 at St. James's Palace during an influenza epidemic that also claimed the life of Reginald Pole later the same day. [11]

May 15, 1565: Henry Stewart of Darnley; styled (by courtesy): Lord Darnley [from December 7, 1545]; Earl of Ross and Lord of Ardmannoch [ May 15, 1565 - February 10, 1567]; Duke of Albany [ July 20, 1565 - February 10, 1567] [12]

May 15, 1567, Mary Queen of Scots married Bothwell, arousing suspicions that she had been party to the murder of her husband. Elizabeth wrote to her:

How could a worse choice be made for your honour than in such haste to marry such a subject, who besides other and notorious lacks, public fame has charged with the murder of your late husband, besides the touching of yourself also in some part, though we trust in that behalf falsely.[88][13]

In May 1569, Elizabeth attempted to mediate the restoration of Mary in return for guarantees of the Protestant religion, but a convention at Perth rejected the deal overwhelmingly.[186] Norfolk continued to scheme for a marriage with Mary, and Elizabeth imprisoned him in the Tower of London[14]

May 1591: As for all such expeditions, Elizabeth was unwilling to invest in the supplies and reinforcements requested by the commanders. Norreys left for London to plead in person for more support. In his absence, a Catholic League army almost destroyed the remains of his army at Craon, north-west France, in May 1591.[15]

May 15, 1602: Captain Bartholomew Gosnold becomes the first Englishman to land on the New England Coast, near Cape Cod, Massachusetts.[16]



May 15, 1672: The Masasachusetts General Court enacts the first copyright law in the colonies.[17]



On May 15, 1750 at age 18 Martha married Daniel Parke Custis, a rich planter two decades her senior. They lived at White House Plantation on the south shore of the Pamunkey River, a few miles upriver from Chestnut Grove. She had four children with him. A son and a daughter, Daniel (1751–1754) and Frances (1753–1757), died in childhood, but two other children, John (Jacky) Parke Custis (1754–1781) and Martha ("Patsy") Parke Custis (1756–1773) survived to young adulthood. Her husband's death in 1757 left Martha a rich young widow at age 25, with independent control over a dower inheritance for her lifetime, including properties and slaves, and trustee control over the inheritance of her minor children. "She capably ran the five plantations left to her when her first husband died, bargaining with London merchants for the best tobacco prices."[4]



http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a2/Martha_Dandridge_Custis.jpg/220px-Martha_Dandridge_Custis.jpg

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Martha Dandridge Custis in 1757: mezzotint by John Folwell (1863) after a portrait by John Wollaston[18]



May 15, 1750: The pleadings and testimony in this cause, with the briefs of counsel on the part

of Pennsylvania, fill the whole of Volume XVI. of the Second Series of Pennsylvania Archives, and the decision by Lord Chancellor Hardwicke in favor of Pennsylvania, on May 15, 1750, the lawyer will find reported in Penn v. Lord Baltimore, 1 Vesey Sr., 444.[19]



May 15, 1758



Valentine Crawford to John Crawford, May 15, 1758, Reciepts

Received of Lt. Crawford ten shillings and ten Recruiting Expences given under my hand this 15th day of May 1758. [20]



May 15, 1758



Received of Lt. Crawford Seven and six pence. Recruiting Expences given under my hand this 15th May 1758 Val Crawford[21]



May 1, 1777 to May 15, 1780

May 15, 1777: Winch, Thomas, Framingham (also given Norfolk).List of men raised to serve in the Continental Army from 2d co., 5th Middlesex Co. regt., as returned by Lieut. Lawson Buckminster to Col. Micah Stone; residence, Framingham; engaged for town of Framingham; joined Capt. Brewer's co., Col. Brewer's regt.; term, 3 years; also, Fifer, Major's co., Col. Ebenezer Sprout's regt.; Continental Army pay accounts for service from May 1, 1777, to May 15, 1780; also, Private, Capt. Brewer's co., Col. Brewer's regt.; return dated Camp Valley Forge, January 23, 1778; residence, Norfolk; enlisted for town of Norfolk; mustered by State Muster Master.[22]

May 15, 1797: The first special session of Congress convenes, to debate a crisis in French-American relations.[23]



May 15, 1816: Joseph CABELL, Jr.

· Born: January 6, 1762, Amherst County, Virginia, USA

· Marriage (1): Pocahontas Rebecca BOLLING in 1783 in Bollingbrook House, Petersburg, Virginia, USA

· Marriage (2): Anne E. BOLLING

· Died: August 31, 1831, Henderson Co., KY aged 69

· Joseph and his (2d wife) Anne Everard Bolling (Duval) Cabell had issue:

84. xi. Jane Randolph. 85. xii. John Breckinridge. 86. xiii. Elizabeth R. 87. xiv. Robert B. (2d). 88. xv. George Washington. xvi. Joseph H., b. November 23, 1815; d. May 15, 1816. xvii. William Nicholas, b. November 1, 1817; d. September 10, 1820. xviii. Richard R., b. March 9, 1822; d. October 9, 1843, unmarried. 89. xix. Mary A. H. xx.George C., b. April 16, 1825; d. infant.

And several others who died in early infancy with­out names. "There are said to have been by both wives 39 children in all."

·
picture

· Joseph married Pocahontas Rebecca BOLLING, daughter of Robert BOLLING and Susan WATSON, in 1783 in Bollingbrook House, Petersburg, Virginia, USA. (Pocahontas Rebecca BOLLING was born in 1764 in Chellowe, VA and died in 1803 in Chellowe, VA.)

·
picture

· Joseph next married Anne E. BOLLING.





May 15, 1844: Miss Sarah C. Pyle, who was born in Clark county, Ohio. May 15. 1844 and prior to her marriage engaged in teachng. Her parents, John and Catherine Myers) Pyle, were both natives of West Virginia, whence they removed to Ohio in pioneer times, the father there passing away in 1846. The mother made her home with her daughter Mrs. Goodlove, until her death in 1894, when she departed this life at the age of eighity eight years. Mrs. Goodlove is the youngest in their family of six children. [24] Sarah was born May 15, 1844, in Moorefield Township, Clark County, Ohio, daughter of John Ingraham Pyle and Catherine (Myers) Pyle. Sarah died Jan­uary 6, 1929 and is buried at Jordan’s Grove. Prior to her mar­riage, Sarah was a school teacher. To their union was born seven children: Nettie, Willis, Oscar, Cora, Earl, and Jessie, whose twin died at birth. [25]

May 15, 1844 - January 5, 1929


Sarah Catherine Pyle Goodlove

Birth:

May 15, 1844


Death:

Jan. 5, 1929



http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
w/o William H.

Family links:
Spouse:
William Harrison Goodlove (1836 - 1916)



Burial:
Jordans Grove Cemetery
Central City
Linn County
Iowa, USA



Created by: Gail Wenhardt
Record added: Apr 03, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 67860849




Sarah Catherine Pyle Goodlove
Added by: Gail Wenhardt

Sarah Catherine Pyle Goodlove
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jackie L. Wolfe

May 15, 1853: AMY WINANS b September 19, 1834 in Shelby Co., Ohio d March 31, 1929 at Los Angeles, Calif. buried at Santa Ana, Calif. md May 15, 1853 at Quincy, Ohio James Dotson Cornell b January 13, 1831 at Quincy, Logan, [26]

May 15, 1853: Emma Florence Cornell b September 1, 1861 at Bristow, Butler, Ia. d July 14, 1932 at Clarinda, Ia. (believed to be buried at Truro, Ia. but if not at Des Moines, Ia. with husband) md May 15, 1881 Ira Strait b January 20, 1860 at Kanakee Co., Ill. son of George W. Strait d April 14, 1904 at Des Moines, Ia. They had the following children:

1. George D. Strait b ca 1882 d May 1903 (age 21) unmarried.

2. Dessie Strait who d as a young woman, unmarried. [27]

May 15, 1862: The Department of Agriculture is created by act of Congress.[28]

May 15, 1864: The 18th Cav was part of the Confederate force that guarded the Shenandoah Valley in 1863 and 1864. It participated in the Valley Campaign of 1864, including the Battle of New Market (May 15), [29]



Sun. May 15

Marched 3 m and laid on red river levee until 5 am went past where our boats were taken marched until 1 oclock at night. Camped near fort gerersia (uransuro)[30]



May 15, 1864: Battle of New Market of VA.[31] The 18th Virginia Cavalry participated. [32]



On May 15, 1865, Captain Theodore McGowan, who had been seated on the south side of the Dress Circle testified during the Conspiracy Trial that “He [Booth} took a small pack of visiting cards from his pocket, selecting one and replacing the others, stood a second, perhaps, with it in his hand, and then showed it to the President’s messenger, who was sitting just below him. Whether the messenger took the card into the box, or , after looking at it, allowed him to go in, I do not know, but in a moment or two more, I saw him go through the door of the lobby leading to the box, and closed the door.[33] Two years later Dr. Charles Leale, who was also seated on the south side of the Dress Circle, wrote that “I saw a man speaking with another near the door [to the Presidential box] and endeavoring to enter which he at last succeeded in doing after which the door was closed.”[34] [35]

Saturday, May 20, 2006 (11)[36]

May 15, 1917: Chalice turned his attention to organizing what turned out to be the first step taken in Delaware County toward obtaining a county agent under the Smith Lever Act of 1914. At his urging, the Buck Creek Brotherhood scvheduled a community meeting on the war emergency for May 15. The new county agent from Jounes County was the featured speaker. The meeting was announced in the Hopkinton Leader and attracted delegations of interested businessmen and farmers form Earlville, Delhi, Milo Township, and Hazel Green Township. The Jones County agent explained that the idea of a county agricultural expert originated in Denmark and Germanyu, and that thise countries had benefited considerably from the practice. By farming intensively and scientifically, Danish and German farmers were able to feed their own people and much of the rest of Europe. He described the full range of services that a county agenet could provide farmers, likening the county agent to a farmer’[s “consulting physician.” At the conclusion of the meeting, several of those in attendance signed a petition asking that a county agent be employed in Delaware County by giving demonstrations for canning fruit, vegetables, and meat. At these demonstrations they also secured signatures to their petition.[37]

May 15, 1936: Upon al-Husseini's initiative, the leaders of Palestinian Arab clans formed the Arab Higher Committee under the Mufti's chairmanship. The Committee called for nonpayment of taxes after May 15 and for a general strike of Arab workers and businesses, demanding an end to the Jewish immigration. The British High Commissioner for Palestine, Sir Arthur Wauchope, responded by engaging in negotiations with al-Husseini and the Committee. The talks, however, soon proved fruitless. Al-Husseini issued a series of warnings, threatening the 'revenge of God Almighty' unless the Jewish immigration were to stop, and the general strike began, paralyzing the government, public transportation, Arab businesses and agriculture.[89][38]



May 15, 1939: The Ravensbruck concentration camp for women is established in Germany.[39]

May 15, 1940: The Dutch Army surrenders to the Germans as the French withdraw.[40] In France, German forces break through the French lines at Sedan. Mid May 1940: In mid May 1940, despairing of their ability to secure control of Iraq's oil fields and deny access to Germany, the British turned to the extremist Irgun, approaching one of its commanders, David Raziel, whom they had imprisoned in Palestine. They asked him if he would undertake to destroy Iraq's oil refineries, and thus turn off the spigots to Germany. Raziel agreed on condition he be allowed to kidnap the Mufti and bring him back to Palestine. The mission plan was changed at the last moment, however, and Raziel died when his plane was shot down by a German fighter.[116][117]When the Anglo-Iraqi War broke out, like many clerics in Iraq, al-Husseini issued a fatwa for a holy war against Britain. When the coup d'état failed, - what little German and Italian assistance was given played a negligible role in the war[118] - he escaped to Persia, where he was granted legation asylum first by Japan, and then by Italy. [41]

May 15, 1941: A law is passed in Romania permitting Jews to be drafted for forced labor.[42]



Between May 15 and August 15, 1941:

Approximately 475,000 Jews were deported from Hungary in about 170 train loads of Hungarian Jews were sent to the death camp at Auschwitz. [43]


100_1213[44]

May 15, 1942: Gas rationing begins in 17 states in the United States.[45]



May 15, 1942 - an enemy "snooper" appeared on Enterprise's radar, 70 miles out. The plane was allowed to approach. In a short while, Enterprise's intelligence unit overheard a contact report sent by the snooper. Fighters were scrambled, but were unable to intercept the first snooper, nor the several that soon arrived to radio contact reports of their own. Sure that Task Force 16 - and the two carriers - had been sighted and reported, Halsey turned his force due east. The next day, Task Force 16 was ordered to "expedite return" to Pearl Harbor ... and to avoid being sighted again.

This ploy, and overly optimistic assessments of Coral Sea, led Japanese intelligence to conclude that three US fleet carriers, at most, were operating in the Pacific: Enterprise, Hornet, and possibly Wasp CV-7. By allowing Halsey's force to be sighted on May 15, Nimitz intended to convince the Japanese that Enterprise and Hornet were deep in the south Pacific, and forestall any operation in that area that Japan might have planned. This, in turn, freed Nimitz to commit both carriers to operations in the north Pacific, over two thousand miles away. [46]

May 15, 1944Between May 15 and July 9, 437,000, primarily Hungarian Jews are deported to Auschwitz. Most of those sent to Auschwitz are gassed soon after their arrival.[47]



Laszlo Csatary, Most-Wanted Nazi War Criminal, Found In Hungary

Posted: 07/16/2012 1:25 pm Updated: 07/16/2012 3:14 pm

Laszlo Csatary

One of the last most-wanted Nazi war criminals still at large has been found living comfortably in Budapest and the group that has been hunting him for decades is urging Hungarian prosecutors to finally bring him to justice.

Laszlo Csatary, who is accused of helping send 15,700 Jews to their death at Auschwitz, was photographed by Britain's tabloid Sun newspaper, which identified him as Ladislaus Csizsik-Csatary, living in a two-bedroom apartment in a "smart district" of the city. The photos show the fugitive, now 97, standing at his door wearing just socks and underpants.

The newspaper quoted him denying complicity with the Holocaust-era killings but last week the Nazi-hunting Simon Wiesenthal Center submitted new evidence to Hungarian prosecutors on the man who is No. 1 on its most-wanted list.

The Center said Csatary was a senior police officer in the Slovakian city of Kassa (now known as Kosice), then under Hungarian rule. In 1941, he is said to have played a "key role" in the deportation of 300 Jews to Ukraine, where they were killed.

As a “commander” in the Royal Hungarian Police in Kassa, Csatary is accused of complicity in the deportations of thousands of other Jews from Kosice and the surrounding area to the Auschwitz death camp in the spring of 1944. According to the Wiesenthal Center, witnesses reported that he oversaw the Jewish ghetto with extreme cruelty, whipping women and forcing them to dig holes with their bare hands.

“Several thousand Jewish families have felt sorrow and hurt because of this man and it would be a disgrace, for the entire Hungarian nation, if Csatary were to escape justice,” Peter Feldmajer, president of the Hungarian Jewish Community, told the Sun.

Cstary was sentenced in abstentia to death by a Czech court after the war. By then he had fled to Canada, where he worked under a false identity as an art dealer. He was discovered in the mid-1990s but disappeared before the Canadian government could deport him. His whereabouts were unknown for 15 years until he was tracked down in a quiet neighborhood of Budapest.[48]

May 15, 1944: Erich Gottlieb born April 29, 1911. Transport AAm- Olomouc

Terezin July 4, 1942. Dz- May 15, 1944 Osvetim.[49]



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[1] Warriors of God by James Reston Jr, page 7.


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


[3] Secret Access: the Vatican, 12/22/10.


[4] Wikipedia


[5] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 116.


[6] The Ten Lost Tribes, A World History by Zvi Ben-Dor Benite


[7] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 119


[8] Wikipedia


[9] Wikipedia


[10] Wikipedia


[11] Wikipeda


[12] http://www.archontology.org/nations/uk/scotland/stuart1/darnley.php


[13] Wikipedia


[14] Wikipedia


[15] Wikipedia


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


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


[18] Wikipedia


[19] http://www.mdlpp.org/pdf/library/1905AccountofVirginiaBoundaryContraversy.pdf


[20] George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799: Series 4. General Correspondence. 1697-1799


[21] George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799: Series 4. General Correspondence. 1697-1799


[22] About Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols.Prepared by the Secretary of the Commonwealth, this is an indexed compilation of the records of the Massachusetts soldiers and sailors who served in the army or navy during the...


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


[24] History of Linn County pgs. 374-375 Public Library of Cedar Rapids, Iowa.




[25] Winton Goodlove:A History of Central City Ia and the Surrounding Area Book ll 1999




[26] http://cwcfamily.org/egy3.htm


[27] http://cwcfamily.org/egy3.htm


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


[29] Jim Funkhouser email, June 16, 2010.


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


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


[32] Jim Funkhouser email, June 16, 2010.


[33] Conspiracy Trial Testimony , Major Theodore McGowan National Archioves, Washington, D.C. M-600.


[34] Dr. Charles Lewale letter, July 1867, Library of Congress, 39th Congress, 39th Congressional Record, 2nd Session, Washington, D.C.


[35] Http://www.nps.gov/archive/foth/linsecur.htm


[36] Red River Campaign * POLITICS AND COTTON IN THE CIVIL WAR BY LUDWELL H. JOHNSON The Johns Hopkins Press * BALTIMORE




[37] There Goes the Neighborhood by David R. Reynolds, page 171-172.


[38] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini#World_War_I


[39] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1761.


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


[41] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini#World_War_I


[42] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1765.


[43] Adolf Eichmann: Hitler’s Master of Death.1998. HISTI


• [44] Hitler and the Occult, HISTI


[45] On This Day in America byu John Wagman.


[46] http://www.cv6.org/1942/midway/midway_3.htm


[47] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1778.


[48] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/16/laszlo-csatary-nazi-war-criminal-hungary_n_1676702.html


[49] Terezinska Pametni Kniha, Zidovske Ob

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