Thursday, May 23, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, May 23


10,474 names…10,474 stories…10,474 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, May 23
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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

The Second Virginia Charter (May 23, 1609)

James, by the grace of God [King of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, defender of the faith, etc.] To all [to whom these presents shall come, greeting.]

Whereas, at the humble suite and request of sondrie oure lovinge and well disposed subjects intendinge to deduce a colonie and to make habitacion and plantacion of sondrie of oure people in that parte of America comonlie called Virginia, and other part and territories in America either apperteyninge unto us or which are not actually possessed of anie Christian prince or people within certaine bound and regions, wee have formerly, by oure lettres patents bearinge date the tenth of Aprill in the fourth yeare of oure raigne of England, Fraunce, and Ireland, and the nine and thirtieth of Scotland, graunted to Sir Thomas Gates, Sir George Somers and others, for the more speedie accomplishment of the said plantacion and habitacion, that they shoulde devide themselves into twoe colloniesthe one consistinge of divers Knights, gentlemen, merchaunts and others of our cittie of London, called the First Collonie; and the other of sondrie Knights, gentlemen and others of the citties of Bristoll, Exeter, the towne of Plymouth, and other places, called the Seccond Collonieand have yielded and graunted maine and sondrie priviledges and liberties to each Collonie for their quiet setlinge and good government therein, as by the said lettres patents more at large appeareth.

Nowe, forasmuch as divers and sondrie of oure lovinge subjects, as well adventurers as planters, of the said First Collonie (which have alreadie engaged them selves in furtheringe the businesse of the said plantacion and doe further intende by the assistance of Almightie God to prosecute the same to a happie ende) have of late ben humble suiters unto us that, in respect of their great chardeges and the adventure of manie of their lives which they have hazarded in the said discoverie and plantacion of the said countrie, wee woulde be pleased to graunt them a further enlargement and explanacion of the said graunte, priviledge and liberties, and that suche counsellors and other officers maie be appointed amonngest them to manage and direct their affaires [as] are willinge and readie to adventure with them; as also whose dwellings are not so farr remote from the cittye of London but that they maie at convenient tymes be readie at hande to give advice and assistance upon all occacions requisite.

We, greatlie affectinge the effectual prosecucion and happie successe of the said plantacion and comendinge their good desires theirin, for their further encouragement in accomplishinge so excellent a worke, much pleasinge to God and profitable to oure Kingdomes, doe, of oure speciall grace and certeine knowledge and meere motion, for us, oure heires and successors, give, graunt and confirme to oure trustie and welbeloved subjects,

Daniell Winche, grocer [Samuel Winch] [1]

Robert, Earl of Salisbury, Thomas, Earl of Suffolk, Henry, Earl of Southampton, William, Earl of Pembroke, Henry, Earl of Lincoln, Earl of Dorset, Thomas, Earl of Exeter, Philip, Earl of Montgomery, Robert, Lord Viscount Lisle, Theophilus, Lord Howard of Walden, James Montague, Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells, Edward, Lord Zouche, Thomas, Lord Lawarr, William, Lord Mounteagle, Ralph, Lord Ewre, Edmond, Lord Sheffield, Grey, Lord Chandois, Lord Compton, John, Lord Petre, John, Lord Stanhope, George, Lord Carew, Sir Humphry Weld, Lord Mayor of London, George Piercy, Esq. Sir Edward Cecil, Knt. Sir George Wharton, Knt. Francis West, Esq. Sir William Wade, Knt. Sir Henry Nevil, Knt. Sir Thomas Smith, Knt. Sir Oliver Cromwell, Knt. Sir Peter Manwood, Knt. Sir Drue Drury, Knt. Sir Peter Scott, Knt. Sir Thomas Challoner, Knt. Sir Robert Drury, Knt. Sir Anthony Cope, Knt. Sir Horatio Vere, Knt. Sir Edward Conway, Knt. Sir William Brown, Knt. Sir Maurice Berkeley, Knt. Sir Robert Maunsel, Knt. Sir Amias Preston, Knt. Sir Thomas Gates, Knt. Sir Anthony Ashley, Knt. Sir Michael Sandys, Knt. Sir Henry Carey, Knt. Sir Stephen Soame, Knt. Sir Callisthenes Brooke, Knt. Sir Edward Michelborn, Knt. Sir John Ratcliffe, Knt. Sir Wilmot, Knt. Sir George Moore, Knt. Sir Hugh Wiral, Knt. Sir Thomas Dennis, Knt. Sir John Holles, Knt. Sir William Godolphin, Knt. Sir Thomas Monson, Knt. Sir Thomas Ridgwine, Knt. Sir John Brooke, Knt. Sir Robert Killigrew, Knt. Sir Henry Peyton, Knt. Sir Richard Williamson, Knt. Sir Ferdinando Weyoman, Knt. Sir William St. John, Knt. Sir Thomas Holcroft, Knt. Sir John Mallory, Knt. Sir Roger Ashton, Knt. Sir Walter Cope, Knt. Sir Richard Wigmore, Knt. Sir William Cocke, Knt. Sir Herbert Crofte, Knt. Sir Henry Fanshaw, Knt. Sir John Smith, Knt. Sir Francis Wolley, Knt. Sir Edward Waterhouse, Knt. Sir Henry Seckford Knt. Sir Edwin Sandys, Knt. Sir Thomas Waynam, Knt. Sir John Trevor, Knt. Sir Warwick Heele, Knt. Sir Robert Worth, Knt. Sir John Townshend, Knt. Sir Christopher Perkins, Knt. Sir Daniel Dun, Knt. Sir Henry Hobert, Knt. Sir Francis Bacon, Knt. Sir Henry Montague, Knt. Sir George Coppin, Knt. Sir Samuel Sandys, Knt. Sir Thomas Roe, Knt. Sir George Somers, Knt. Sir Thomas Freake, Knt. Sir Thomas Harwell, Knt. Sir Charles Kelke, Knt. Sir Baptist Hicks, Knt. Sir John Watts, Knt. Sir Robert Carey, Knt. Sir William Romney, Knt. Sir Thomas Middleton, Knt. Sir Hatton Cheeke, Knt. Sir John Ogle, Knt. Sir Cavellero Meycot, Knt. Sir Stephen Riddleson, Knt. Sir Thomas Bludder, Knt. Sir Anthony Aucher, Knt. Sir Robert Johnson, Knt. Sir Thomas Panton, Knt. Sir Charles Morgan, Knt. Sir Stephen Pole, Knt. Sir John Burlacie, Knt. Sir Christopher Cleave, Knt. Sir George Hayward, Knt. Sir Thomas Davis, Knt. Sir Thomas Sutton, Knt. Sir Anthony Forrest, Knt. Sir Robert Payne, Knt. Sir John Digby, Knt. Sir Dudley Digges, Knt. Sir Fowland Cotton, Knt. Dr. Matthew Sutclide, Dr. Meadows, Dr. Turner, Dr. Poe, Captain Pagnam, Captain Jeffrey Holcrofte, Captain Romney, Captain Henry Spry, Captain Shelton, Captain Sparks, Captain Thomas Wyat, Captain Brinsley, Captain William Courtney, Captain Herbert, Captain Clarke, Captain Dewhurst, Captain John Blundell, Captain Fryer, Captain Lewis Orwell, Captain Edward Lloyd, Captain Slingsby, Captain Hawley, Captain Acme, Captain Cookhouse, Captain Mason, Captain Thomas Holcroft, Captain John Coke, Captain Holles, Captain William Proud, Captain Henry Woodhouse, Captain Richard Lindesey, Captain Dexter, Captain William Winter, Captain Pearse, Captain John Gingham, Captain Burray, Captain Thomas Conway, Captain Rockwood, Captain William Lovelace, Captain John Ashley, Captain Thomas Wynne, Captain Thomas Mewtis, Captain Edward Harwood, Captain Michael Everard, Captain Comock, Captain Mills, Captain Pigot, Captain Edward-Maria Wingfield, Captain Christopher Newport, Captain John Sicklemore, alias Ratcliffe, Captain John Smith, Captain John Martin, Captain Peter Wynne, Captain Waldo, Captain Thomas Wood, Captain Thomas Button, George Bolls, Esq. Sheriff of London, William Crashaw, Clerk, Batchelor of Divinity, William Seabright, Esq., Christopher Brooke, Esq., John Birigley, Esq., Thomas Watson, Esq., Richard Percival, Esq., John Moore, Esq., Hugh Broker, Esq., David Woodhouse, Esq., Anthony Aucher, Esq., Robert Boyer, Esq., Ralph Owens, Esq., Zachary Jones Esq., George Calvert, Esq., William Dobson, Esq., Henry Reynolds, Esq., Thomas Walker, Esq., Anthony Barnars, Esq., Thomas Sandys, Esq., Henry Sandys, Esq., Richard Sandys, Esq., Son of Sir Edwin Sandys, William Oxenbridge, Esq., John Moore, Esq., Thomas Wilson Esq., John Bullock, Esq., John Waller, Esq., Thomas Webb, Jehu Robinson, William Brewster, Robert Evelyn, Henry Danby, Richard Hackluit, Minister, John Eldrid, Merchant, William Russel, Merchant, John Merrick, Merchant, Richard Banister, Merchant, Charles Anthony, Goldsmith, John Banks, William Evans, Richard Humble, Richard Chamberlayne, Merchant, Thomas Barber, Merchant, Richard Pomet, Merchant, John Fletcher, Merchant, Thomas Nicholls, Merchant, John Stoke, Merchant, Gabriel Archer, Francis Covel, William Bonham, Edward Harrison, John Wostenholme, Nicholas Salter, Hugh Evans, William Barnes, Otho Mawdet, Richard Staper, Merchant, John Elkin, Merchant, William Coyse, Thomas Perkin, Cooper, Humphrey James, Cooper, Henry Jackson, Robert Singleton, Christopher Nicholls, John Harper, Abraham Chamberlayne, Thomas Shipton, Thomas Carpenter, Anthony Crew, George Holman, Robert Hill, Cleophas Smith, Ralph Harrison, John Farmer, James Brearly, William Crosby, Richard Cox, John Gearing, Richard Strongarm, Ironmongers, Thomas Langton, Griffith Hinton, Richard Ironside, Richard Dean, Richard Turner, William Lawson, Mercer, James Chatfield, Edward Allen Tedder, Robert Hildebrand Sprinson, Arthur Mouse, John Gardiner, James Russell, Richard Caswell, Richard Evans, John Hawkins, Richard Kerril, Richard Brooke, Matthew Screvener, Gentleman, William Stallenge, Gentleman, Arthur Venn, Gentleman, Sandys Webbe, Gentleman, Michael Phetiplace, Gentleman, William Phetiplace, Gentleman, Ambrose Prusey, Gentleman, John Taverner, Gentleman, George Pretty, Gentleman, Peter Latham, Gentleman, Thomas Montford, Gentleman, William Central, Gentleman, Richard Wiffin, Gentleman, Ralph Moreton, Gentleman, John Cornelius, Martin Freeman, Ralph Freeman, Andrew Moore, Thomas White, Edward Perkin, Robert Offley, Thomas Whitley, George Pit, Robert Parkhurst, Thomas Morris, Peter Harloe, Jeffry Duppa, John Gilbert, William Hancock, Matthew Brown, Francis Tyrrel, Randolph Carter, Othowell Smith, Thomas Hammond, Martin Bond, Haberdasher, John Moulsoe, Robert Johnson, Wiliam Young, John Woodal, William Felgate, Humfrey Westwood, Richard Champion, Henry Robinson, Francis Mapes, William Sambach, Ralegh Crashaw, Daniel Tucker, Thomas Grave, Hugh Willeston, Thomas Culpepper, of Wigsel, Esq., John Culpepper, Gentleman, Henry Lee, Josias Kerton, Gentleman, John Pory, Gentleman, Henry Collins, George Burton, William Atkinson, Thomas Forest, John Russel, John Holt, Harman Harrison, Gabriel Beedel, John Beedel, Henry Dawkes, George Scot, Edward Fleetwood, Gentleman, Richard Rogers, Gentleman, Arthur Robinson, Robert Robinson, John Huntley, John Gray, William Payne, William Field, William Wattey, William Webster, John Dingley, Thomas Draper, Richard Glanvil, Arnold Hulls, Henry Roe, William More, Nicholas Gryce, James Monger, Nicholas Andrews, Jeremy Haydon, Ironmonger, Philip Durette, John Quarles, John West, Matthew Springham, John Johnson, Christopher Hore, Thomas Snead, George Berkeley, Arthur Pet, Thomas Careles, William Berkley, Thomas Johnson, Alexander Bents, Captain William King, George Sandys, Gentleman, James White, Gentleman, Edmond Anne, Charles Towlar, Richard Reynold, Edward Webb, Richard Maplesden, Thomas Lever, David Bourne, Thomas Wood, Ralph Hamer, Edward Barnes, Mercer, John Wright, Mercer, Robert Middleton, Edward Littlefield, Katharine West, Thomas Web, Ralph Lying, Robert Coppin, James Askew, Christopher Holt, William Bardwell, Alexander Chiles, Lewis Tate, Edward Ditchfield, James Swifte, Richard Widdowes, goldsmith, Redmond Brudenell, Edward Purcell, John Hansford, Edward Wooller, William Palmer, haberdasher, John Badger, John Hodgson, Peter Mounsel, John Carril, John Bushride, Lillian Dun, Thomas Johnson, Nicholas Benson, Thomas Shipton, Nathaniel Wade, Randal Wetwood, Matthew Dequester, Charles Hawkins, Hugh Hammersley, Abraham Cartwright, George Bennet, William Cater, Richard Goddard, Henry Cromwell, Phineas Pet, Robert Cooper, John Cooper, Henry Newce, Edward Wilkes, Robert Bateman, Nicholas Farrar, John Hewhouse, John Cason, Thomas Harris, Gentleman, George Etheridge, Gentleman, Thomas Mayle, Gentleman, Richard Stafford, Thomas Richard Cooper, John Wrestrow, Edward Welch, Thomas Britain, Thomas Knowles, Octavian Thorne, Edmond Smith, John March, Edward Carew, Thomas Pleydall, Richard Let, Miles Palmer, Henry Price, John Joshua, Gentleman, William Clauday, Jeremy Pearsye, John Bree, Gentleman, William Hampson, Christopher Pickford, Thomas Hunt, Thomas Truston, Christopher Salmon, Jolm Howard, clerk, Richard Partridge, Allen Cassen, Felix Wilson, Thomas Bathurst, George Wilmer, Andrew Wilmer, Maurice Lewellin, Thomas Godwin, Peter Burgoyne, Thomas Burgoyne, Robert Burgoyne, Robert Smith, Merchant Taylor, Edward Cage, grocer, Thomas Cannon, Gentleman, William Welby, stationer, Clement Wilmer, Gentleman, John Clapham, Gentleman, Giles Francis, Gentleman, George Walker, Sadler, John Swinhow, stationer, Edward Bishop, stationer, Leonard White, Gentleman, Christopher Baron, Peter Benson, Richard Smith, George Proctor, minister, Millicent Ramsdent, widow Joseph Soane, Thomas Hinshaw, John Baker, Robert Thornton, John Davis, Edward Facet, George Newce, Gentleman, John Robinson, Captain Thomas Wood, William Brown, shoemaker, Robert Barker, shoemaker, Robert Pennington, Francis Burley, minister, William Quick, grocer, Edward Lewis, grocer, Laurence Campe, draper, Aden Perkins, grocer, Richard Shepherd, preacher, William Sherley, haberdasher, William Taylor, haberdasher, Edwin Lukin, Gentleman, John Franklyn, haberdasher, John Southwick, Peter Peate, George Johan, ironmonger, George Yeardley, Gentleman, Henry Shelly, John Prat, Thomas Church, draper, William Powel, Gentleman, Richard Frith, Gentleman, Thomas Wheeler, draper, Francis Easlerig, Gentleman, Hugh Shipley, Gentleman, John Andrews, the Elder, Doctor of Cambridge, Francis Whistler, Gentleman, John Vassal, Gentleman, Richard Howle, Edward Berkeley, Gentleman, Richard Keneridgburg, Gentleman, Nicholas Exton, draper, William Bennet, fishmonger, James Haywood, Merchant, Nicholas Isaac, Merchant, William Gibbs, Merchant, Bishop, Bernard Mitchel, Isaac Mitchel, John Streate, Edward Gall, John Martin, Gentleman, Thomas Fox, Luke Lodge, John Woodliffe, Gentleman, Richard Webb, Vincent Long, Samuel Burnham, Edmund Pears, haberdasher, John Googe, John St. John, Edward Vaughan, William Dunn, Thomas Alcocke, John Andrews, the younger, of Cambridge, Samuel Smith, Thomas Gerrard, Thomas Whittingham, William Canning, Paul Canning, George Chandler, Henry Vincent, Thomas Ketley, James Skelton, James Mountaine, George Webb, gentleman, Joseph Newbridge, smith, Josiah Mand, Captain Ralph Hamer, the younger, Edward Brewster, the son of William Brewster, Leonard Harwood, mercer, Philip Druerdent, William Carpenter, Tristian Hill, Robert Cock, grocer, Laurence Grecie, grocer, Samuel Winch, grocer, Humphry Stile, grocer, Avern Dransfield, grocer, Edward Hodges, grocer, Edward Beale, grocer, Thomas Culler, grocer, Ralph Busby, grocer, John Whittingham, grocer, John Hide, grocer, Matthew Shepherd, grocer, Thomas Allen, grocer, Richard Hooker grocer, Lawrence Munks, grocer, John Tanner, grocer, Peter Gate, grocer, John Blunt, grocer, Robert Phipps, grocer, Robert Berrisford, grocer, Thomas Wells, grocer, John Ellis, grocer, Henry Colthurst, grocer, John Cavady, grocer, Thomas Jennings, grocer, Edmond Baschall, grocer, Timothy Bathurst, grocer, Giles Parslow, grocer, Robert Milmay, grocer, Richard Johnson, grocer, William Johnson, vinetner, Ezekiel Smith, Richard Martin, William Sharpe, Robert Rich, William Stannard, innholder, John Stocken, William Strachey, gentleman, George Farmer, gentleman, Thomas Gypes, cloth-worker, Abraham Davies, gentleman, Thomas Brocket, gentleman, George Bache, fishmonger, John Dike, fishmonger, Henry Spranger, Richard Farrington, Christopher Vertue, vintner, Thomas Bayley, vintner, George Robins, vintner, Tobias Hinson, grocer, Urian Spencer, Clement Chickeley, John Scarpe, gentleman, James Campbell, ironmonger, Christian Clitheroe, ironmonger, Philip Jacobson, Peter Jacobson, of Antwerp, William Berkeley, Miles Banks, cutler, Peter Higgons, grocer, Henry John, gentleman, John Stokley, merchant taylor, the Company of Mercers, the Company of Grocers, the Company of Drapers, the Company of Fishmongers, the Company of Goldsmiths, the Company of Skinners, the Company of Merchant Taylors, the Company of Haberdashers, the Company of Salters, the Company of Ironmongers, the Company of Vintners, the Company of Clothworkers, the Company of Dyers, the Company of Brewers, the Company of Leathersellers, the Company of Pewterers, the Company of Cutlers, the Company of Whitebakers, the Company of Wax-Chandlers, the Company of Tallow-Chandlers, the Company of Armourers, the Company of Girdlers, the Company of Butchers, the Company of Sadlers, the Company of Carpenters, the Company of Cordwaynes, the Company of Barber-Chirurgeons, the Company of Paintstainers, the Company of Curriers, the Company of Masons, the Company of Plumbers, the Company of Innholders, the Company of Founders, the Company of Poulterers, the Company of Cooks, the Company of Coopers, the Company of Tylers and Bricklayers, the Company of Boyers, the Company of Fletchers, the Company of Blacksmiths, the Company of Joiners, the Company of Weavers, the Company of Woolmen, the Company of Woodmongers, the Company of Scriveners, the Company of Fruiterers, the Company of Plasterers, the Company of Brownbakers, the Company of Stationers, the Company of Imbroiderers, the Company of Upholsterers, the Company of Musicians, the Company of Turners, the Company of Gardners, the Company of Basketmakers, the Company of Glaziers, John Levet, Merchant, Thomas Nornicot, clothworker, Richard Venn, haberdasher, Thomas Scott, gentleman, Thomas Juxon, merchant-taylor, George Hankinson, Thomas Seyer, gentleman, Matthew Cooper, George Buttler, gentleman, Thomas Lawson, gentleman, Edward Smith, haberdasher, Stephen Sparrow, John Jones, merchant, Reynolds, Brewer, Thomas Plummer, merchant, Jame Duppa, brewer, Rowland Coitmore, William Southerne, George Whitmore, haberdasher, Anthony Gosnold, the younger, John Allen, fishmonger, Simon Yeomans, fishmonger, Lancelot Davis, gentleman, John Hopkins, alderman of Bristol, John Kettleby, gentleman, Richard Clene, goldsmith, George Hooker, gentleman, Robert Chening, yeoman, [2]

And to such and so manie as they doe or shall hereafter admitt to be joyned with them, in forme hereafter in theis presentes expressed, whether they goe in their persons to be planters there in the said plantacion, or whether they goe not, but doe adventure their monyes, goods or chattels, that they shalbe one bodie or communaltie perpetuall and shall have perpetual succession and one common seale to serve for the saide bodie or communaltie; and that they and their successors shalbe knowne, called and incorporated by the name of The Tresorer and Companie of Adventurers and Planters of the Citty of London for the Firste Collonie in Virginia.

And that they and their successors shalbe from hensforth, forever enabled to take, acquire and purchase, by the name aforesaid (licens for the same from us, oure heires or successors first had and obtained) anie manner of lands, tenements and hereditaments, goods and chattels, within oure realme of England and dominion of Wales; and that they and their successors shalbe likewise enabled, by the name aforesaid, to pleade and to be impleaded before anie of oure judges or justices, in anie oure courts, and in anie accions or suits whatsoever.

And wee doe also, of oure said speciall grace, certaine knowl- edge and mere mocion, give, grannte and confirme unto the said Tresorer and Companie, and their successors, under the reservacions, limittacions and declaracions hereafter expressed, all those lands, countries and territories scituat, lieinge and beinge in that place of America called Virginia, from the pointe of lande called Cape or Pointe Comfort all alonge the seacoste to the northward twoe hundred miles and from the said pointe of Cape Comfort all alonge the sea coast to the southward twoe hundred miles; and all that space and circuit of lande lieinge from the sea coaste of the precinct aforesaid upp unto the lande, throughoute, from sea to sea, west and northwest; and also all the island beinge within one hundred miles alonge the coaste of bothe seas of the precincte aforesaid; togeather with all the soiles, groundes, havens and portes, mynes, aswell royall mynes of golde and silver as other mineralls, pearles and precious stones, quarries, woods, rivers, waters, fishings, comodities, jurisdictions, royalties, priviledges, franchisies and preheminences within the said territorie and the precincts there of whatsoever; and thereto or there abouts, both by sea and lande, beinge or in anie sorte belonginge or appertayninge, and which wee by oure lettres patents maie or cann graunte; and in as ample manner and sorte as wee or anie oure noble progenitors have heretofore graunted to anie companie, bodie pollitique or corporate, or to anie adventurer or adventurers, undertaker or undertakers, of anie discoveries, plantacions or traffique of, in, or into anie forraine parts whatsoever; and in as large and ample manner as if the same were herin particulerly mentioned and expressed: to have, houlde, possesse and enjoye all and singuler the said landes, countries and territories with all and singuler other the premisses heretofore by theis [presents] graunted or mencioned to be grannted, to them, the said Tresorer and Companie, their successors and assignes, forever; to the sole and proper use of them, the said Tresorer and Companie, their successors and assignes [forever], to be holden of us, oure heires and successors, as of oure mannour of Estgreenewich, in free and common socage and not in capite; yeldinge and payinge, therefore, to us, oure heires and successors, the fifte parte onlie of all oare of gould and silver that from tvme to time, and at all times hereafter, shalbe there gotton, had and obtained, for all manner of service.

And, nevertheles, oure will and pleasure is, and wee doe by theis presentes chardge, commannde, warrant and auctorize, that the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors, or the major parte of them which shall be present and assembled for that purpose, shall from time to time under their common seale distribute, convey, assigne and set over such particuler porcions of lands, tenements and hereditaments, by theise presents formerly grannted, unto such oure lovinge subjects naturallie borne of denizens, or others, aswell adventurers as planters, as by the said Companie, upon a commission of survey and distribucion executed and retourned for that purpose, shalbe named, appointed and allowed, wherein oure will and pleasure is, that respect be had as well of the proporcion of the adventure[r] as to the speciall service, hazarde, exploite or meritt of anie person so as to be recompenced, advannced or rewarded.

And for as muche as the good and prosperous successe of the said plantacion cannot but cheiflie depende, next under the blessinge of God and the supporte of oure royall aucthoritie, upon the provident and good direccion of the whole enterprise by a carefull and understandinge Counsell, and that it is not convenient that all the adventurers shalbe so often drawne to meete and assemble as shalbe requisite for them to have metings and conference aboute theire affaires, therefore we doe ordaine, establishe and confirme that there shalbe perpetually one Counsell here resident, accordinge to the tenor of oure former lettres patents, which Counsell shall have a seale for the better governement and administracion of the said plantacion besides the legall seale of the Companie or Corporacion, as in oure former lettres patents is also expressed.

And further wee establishe and ordaine that :
•Henrie, Earl of Southampton
•William, Earl of Pembrooke
•Henrie, Earl of Lincoln
•Thomas, Earl of Exeter
•Roberte, Lord Viscounte Lisle
•Lord Theophilus Howard
•James, Lord Bishopp of Bathe and Wells
•Edward, Lord Zouche
•Thomas, Lord Laware
•William, Lord Mounteagle
•Edmunde, Lord Sheffeilde
•Grey, Lord Shanndoys [Chandois]
•John, Lord Stanhope
•George, Lord Carew
•Sir Humfrey Welde, Lord Mayor of London
•Sir Edward Cecil
•Sir William Waad [Wade]
•Sir Henrie Nevill
•Sir Thomas Smith
•Sir Oliver Cromwell
•Sir Peter Manwood
•Sir Thomas Challoner
•Sir Henrie Hovarte [Hobart]
•Sir Franncis Bacon
•Sir George Coppin
•Sir John Scott
•Sir Henrie Carey
•Sir Roberte Drurie [Drury]
•Sir Horatio Vere
•Sir Eward Conwaye [Conway]
•Sir Maurice Berkeley [Barkeley]
•Sir Thomas Gates
•Sir Michaele Sands [Sandys]
•Sir Roberte Mansfeild [Mansel]
•Sir John Trevor
•Sir Amyas Preston
•Sir William Godolphin
•Sir Walter Cope
•Sir Robert Killigrewe
•Sir Henrie Faushawe [Fanshaw]
•Sir Edwyn Sandes [Sandys]
•Sir John Watts
•Sir Henrie Montague
•Sir William Romney
•Sir Thomas Roe
•Sir Baptiste Hicks
•Sir Richard Williamson
•Sir Stephen Powle [Poole]
•Sir Dudley Diggs
•Christopher Brooke, [Esq.]
•John Eldred, and
•John Wolstenholme

shalbe oure Counsell for the said Companie of Adventurers and Planters in Virginia.

And the said Sir Thomas Smith wee ordaine to be Tresorer of the said Companie, which Tresorer shall have aucthoritie to give order for the warninge of the Counsell and sommoninge the Companie to their courts and meetings.

And the said Counsell and Tresorer or anie of them shalbe from henceforth nominated, chosen, contynued, displaced, chaunged, altered and supplied, as death or other severall occasions shall require, out of the Companie of the said adventurers by the voice of the greater parte of the said Counsell and adventurers in their assemblie for that purpose; provided alwaies that everie Councellor so newlie elected shalbe presented to the Lord Channcellor of England, or to the Lord Highe Treasurer of England, or the Lord Chambleyne of the housholde of us, oure heires and successors, for the tyme beinge to take his oathe of a Counsellor to us, oure heires and successors, for the said Companie and Collonie in Virginia.

And wee doe by theis presents, of oure especiall grace, certaine knowledge and meere motion, for us, oure heires and successors, grannte unto the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors, that if it happen at anie time or times the Tresorer for the tyme beinge to be sick, or to have anie such cause of absente from the cittie of London as shalbe allowed by the said Counsell or the greater parte of them assembled, so as he cannot attende the affaires of that Companie, in everie such case it shall and maie be lawfull for such Tresorer for the tyme beinge to assigne, constitute and appointe one of the Counsell for Companie to be likewise allowed by the Counsell or the greater parte of them assembled to be the deputie Tresorer for the said Companie; which Deputie shall have power to doe and execute all things which belonge to the said Tresorer duringe such tyme as such Tresorer shalbe sick or otherwise absent, upon cause allowed of by the said Counsell or the major parte of them as aforesaid, so fullie and wholie and in as large and ample manner and forme and to all intents and purposes as the said Tresorer if he were present himselfe maie or might doe and execute the same.

And further of oure especiall grace, certaine knowledge and meere mocion, for us, oure heires and successors, wee doe by theis presents give and grannt full power and aucthoritie to oure said Counsell here resident aswell at this present tyme as hereafter, from time to time, to nominate, make, constitute, ordaine and confirme by such name or names, stile or stiles as to them shall seeme good, and likewise to revoke, dischardge, channge and alter aswell all and singuler governors, oficers and ministers which alreadie hath ben made, as also which hereafter shalbe by them thought fitt and meedefull to be made or used for the government of the said Colonie and plantacion.

And also to make, ordaine and establishe all manner of orders, lawes, directions, instructions, formes and ceremonies of government and magistracie, fitt and necessarie, for and concerninge the government of the said Colonie and plantacion; and the same att all tymes hereafter to abrogate, revoke or chaunge, not onely within the precincts of the said Colonie but also upon the seas in goeing and cominge to and from the said Collonie, as they in their good discrecions shall thinke to be fittest for [the] good of the adventurers and inhabiters there.

And we doe also declare that for divers reasons and consideracions us thereunto especiallie moving, oure will and pleasure is and wee doe hereby ordaine that imediatlie from and after such time as anie such governour or principall officer so to be nominated and appointed by oure said Counsell for the governement of the said Colonie, as aforesaid, shall arive in Virginia and give notice unto the Collonie there resident of oure pleasure in this behalfe, the government, power and aucthority of the President and Counsell, heretofore by oure former lettres patents there established, and all lawes and constitucions by them formerlie made, shall utterly cease and be determined; and all officers, governours and ministers formerly constituted or appointed shalbe dischardged, anie thinge in oure said former lettres patents conserninge the said plantacion contayned in aniewise to the contrarie notwithstandinge; streightlie chardginge and commaundinge the President and Counsell nowe resident in the said Collonie upon their alleadgiance after knowledge given unto them of oure will and pleasure by theis presentes signified and declared, that they forth with be obedient to such governor or governers as by oure said Counsell here resident shalbe named and appointed as aforesaid; and to all direccions, orders and commandements which they shall receive from them, aswell in the present resigninge and giveinge upp of their aucthoritie, offices, chardg and places, as in all other attendannce as shalbe by them from time to time required.

And wee doe further by theis presentes ordaine and establishe that the said Tresorer and Counsell here resident, and their successors or anie fower of them assembled (the Tresorer beinge one), shall from time to time have full power and aucthoritie to admitt and receive anie other person into their companie, corporacion and freedome; and further, in a generall assemblie of the adventurers, with the consent of the greater parte upon good cause, to disfranchise and putt oute anie person or persons oute of the said fredome and Companie.

And wee doe also grannt and confirme for us, oure heires and successors that it shalbe lawfull for the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors, by direccion of the Governors there, to digg and to serche for all manner of mynes of goulde, silver, copper, iron, leade, tinne and other mineralls aswell within the precincts aforesaid as within anie parte of the maine lande not formerly graunted to anie other; and to have and enjoye the gould, silver, copper, iron, leade, and tinn, and all other mineralls to be gotten thereby, to the use and behoofe of the said Companie of Planters and Adventurers, yeldinge therefore and payinge yerelie unto us, oure heires and successors, as aforesaid.

And wee doe further of oure speciall grace, certaine knowledge and meere motion, for us, oure heires and successors, grannt, by theis presents to and withe the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors, that it shalbe lawfull and free for them and their assignes at all and everie time and times here after, oute of oure realme of England and oute of all other [our] dominions, to take and leade into the said voyage, and for and towards the said plantacion, and to travell thitherwards and to abide and inhabite therein the said Colonie and plantacion, all such and so manie of oure lovinge subjects, or anie other straungers that wilbecomme oure lovinge subjects and live under oure allegiance, as shall willinglie accompanie them in the said voyadge and plantation with sufficient shippinge armour, weapons, ordinannce, municion, powder, shott, victualls, and such merchaundize or wares as are esteemed by the wilde people in those parts, clothinge, implements, furnitures, catle, horses and mares, and all other thinges necessarie for the said plantation and for their use and defence and trade with the people there, and in passinge and retourninge to and from without yeldinge or payinge subsedie, custome, imposicion, or anie other taxe or duties to us, oure heires or successors, for the space of seaven yeares from the date of theis presents; provided, that none of the said persons be such as shalbe hereafter by speciall name restrained by us, oure heires or successors.

And for their further encouragement, of oure speciall grace and favour, wee doe by theis present for us, oure heires and successors, yeild and graunte to and with the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors and everie of them, their factors and assignes, that they and every of them shalbe free and quiett of all subsedies and customes in Virginia for the space of one and twentie yeres, and from all taxes and imposicions for ever, upon anie goods or merchaundizes at anie time or times hereafter, either upon importation thither or exportation from thence into oure realme of England or into anie other of oure [realms or] dominions, by the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors, their deputies, factors [or] assignes or anie of them, except onlie the five pound per centum due for custome upon all such good and merchanndizes as shalbe brought or imported into oure realme of England or anie other of theis oure dominions accordinge to the auncient trade of merchannts, which five poundes per centum onely beinge paid, it shalbe thensforth lawfull and free for the said Adventurers the same goods [and] merchaundizes to export and carrie oute of oure said dominions into forraine partes without anie custome, taxe or other duty tO be paide to us oure heires or successors or to anie other oure officers or deputies; provided, that the saide goods and merchaundizes be shipped out within thirteene monethes after their first landinge within anie parte of those dominions.

And wee doe also confirme and grannt to the said Tresorer and Companie, and their successors, as also to all and everie such governer or other officers and ministers as by oure said Counsell shalbe appointed, to have power and aucthoritie of governement and commannd in or over the said Colonie or plantacion; that they and everie of them shall and lawfullie maie from tyme to tyme and at all tymes forever hereafter, for their severall defence and safetie, enconnter, expulse, repell and resist by force and armes, aswell by sea as by land, and all waies and meanes whatsoever, all and everie such person and persons whatsoever as without the speciall licens of the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors shall attempte to inhabite within the said severall precincts and lymitts of the said Colonie and plantacion; and also, all and everie such person and persons whatsoever as shall enterprise, or attempte at anie time hereafter, destruccion, invasion, hurte, detriment or annoyannce to the said Collonye and plantacion, as is likewise specified in the said former grannte.

And that it shalbe lawful for the said Tresorer and Companie, and their successors and everie of them, from time to time and at all times hereafter, and they shall have full power and aucthoritie, to take and surprise by all waies and meanes whatsoever all and everie person and persons whatsoever, with their shippes, goods and other furniture, traffiquinge in anie harbor, creeke or place within the limitts or precincts of the said Colonie and plantacion, [not] being allowed by the said Companie to be adventurers or planters of the said Colonie, untill such time as they beinge of anie realmes or dominions under oure obedience shall paie or agree to paie, to the hands of the Tresorer or [of] some other officer deputed by the said governors in Virginia (over and above such subsedie and custome as the said Companie is or here after shalbe to paie) five poundes per centum upon all goods and merchaundizes soe brought in thither, and also five per centum upon all goods by them shipped oute from thence; and being straungers and not under oure obedience untill they have payed (over and above such subsedie and custome as the same Tresorer and Companie and their successors is or hereafter shalbe to paie) tenn pounds per centum upon all such goods, likewise carried in and oute, any thinge in the former lettres patents to the contrarie not withstandinge; and the same sommes of monie and benefitt as aforesaid for and duringe the space of one and twentie yeares shalbe wholie imploied to the benefitt and behoof of the said Colonie and plantacion; and after the saide one and twentie yeares ended, the same shalbe taken to the use of us, oure heires or successors, by such officer and minister as by us, oure heires or successors, shalbe thereunto assigned and appointed, as is specified in the said former lettres patents.

Also wee doe, for us, oure heires and successors, declare by theis presents, that all and everie the persons beinge oure subjects which shall goe and inhabit within the said Colonye and plantacion, and everie of their children and posteritie which shall happen to be borne within [any] the lymitts thereof, shall have [and] enjoye all liberties, franchesies and immunities of free denizens and naturall subjects within anie of oure other dominions to all intents and purposes as if they had bine abidinge and borne within this oure kingdome of England or in anie other of oure dominions.

And forasmuch as it shalbe necessarie for all such our lovinge subjects as shall inhabitt within the said precincts of Virginia aforesaid to determine to live togither in the feare and true woorshipp of Almightie God, Christian peace and civill quietnes, each with other, whereby everie one maie with more safety, pleasure and profitt enjoye that where unto they shall attaine with great paine and perill, wee, for us, oure heires and successors, are likewise pleased and contented and by theis presents doe give and graunte unto the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors and to such governors, officers and ministers as shalbe, by oure said Councell, constituted and appointed, accordinge to the natures and lymitts of their offices and places respectively, that they shall and maie from time to time for ever hereafter, within the said precincts of Virginia or in the waie by the seas thither and from thence, have full and absolute power and aucthority to correct, punishe, pardon, governe and rule all such the subjects of us, oure heires and successors as shall from time to time adventure themselves in anie voiadge thither or that shall at anie tyme hereafter inhabitt in the precincts and territorie of the said Colonie as aforesaid, accordinge to such order, ordinaunces, constitution, directions and instruccions as by oure said Counsell, as aforesaid, shalbe established; and in defect thereof, in case of necessitie according to the good discretions of the said governours and officers respectively, aswell in cases capitall and criminall as civill, both marine and other, so alwaies as the said statuts, ordinannces and proceedinges as neere as convenientlie maie be, be agreable to the lawes, statutes, government and pollicie of this oure realme of England.

And we doe further of oure speciall grace, certeine knowledge and mere mocion, grant, declare and ordaine that such principall governour as from time to time shall dulie and lawfullie be aucthorised and appointed, in manner and forme in theis presents heretofore expressed, shall [have] full power and aucthoritie to use and exercise marshall lawe in cases of rebellion or mutiny in as large and ample manner as oure leiutenant in oure counties within oure realme of England have or ought to have by force of their comissions of lieutenancy. And furthermore, if anie person or persons, adventurers or planters, of the said Colonie, or anie other at anie time or times hereafter, shall transporte anie monyes, goods or marchaundizes oute of anie [of] oure kingdomes with a pretence or purpose to lande, sell or otherwise dispose the same within the lymitts and bounds of the said Collonie, and yet nevertheles beinge at sea or after he hath landed within anie part of the said Colonie shall carrie the same into anie other forraine Countrie, with a purpose there to sell and dispose there of that, then all the goods and chattels of the said person or persons so offendinge and transported, together with the shipp or vessell wherein such transportacion was made, shalbe forfeited to us, oure heires and successors.

And further, oure will and pleasure is, that in all questions and doubts that shall arrise upon anie difficultie of construccion or interpretacion of anie thinge contained either in this or in oure said former lettres patents, the same shalbe taken and interpreted in most ample and beneficiall manner for the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors and everie member there of.

And further, wee doe by theis presents ratifie and confirme unto the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors all privuleges, franchesies, liberties and immunties graunted in oure said former lettres patents and not in theis oure lettres patents revoked, altered, channged or abridged.

And finallie, oure will and pleasure is and wee doe further hereby for us, oure heires and successors grannte and agree, to and with the said Tresorer and Companie and their successors, that all and singuler person and persons which shall at anie time or times hereafter adventure anie somme or sommes of money in and towards the said plantacion of the said Colonie in Virginia and shalbe admitted by the said Counsell and Companie as adventurers of the said Colonie, in forme aforesaid, and shalbe enrolled in the booke or record of the adventurers of the said Companye, shall and maie be accompted, accepted, taken, helde and reputed Adventurers of the said Collonie and shall and maie enjoye all and singuler grannts, priviledges, liberties, benefitts, profitts, commodities [and immunities], advantages and emoluments whatsoever as fullie, largely, amplie and absolutely as if they and everie of them had ben precisely, plainely, singulerly and distinctly named and inserted in theis oure lettres patents.

And lastely, because the principall effect which wee cann desier or expect of this action is the conversion and reduccion of the people in those partes unto the true worshipp of God and Christian religion, in which respect wee would be lothe that anie person should be permitted to passe that wee suspected to affect the superstitions of the Churche of Rome, wee doe hereby declare that it is oure will and pleasure that none be permitted to passe in anie voiadge from time to time to be made into the saide countrie but such as firste shall have taken the oath of supremacie, for which purpose wee doe by theise presents give full power and aucthoritie to the Tresorer for the time beinge, and anie three of the Counsell, to tender and exhibite the said oath to all such persons as shall at anie time be sent and imploied in the said voiadge.

Although expresse mention [of the true yearly value or certainty of the premises, or any of them, or of any other gifts or grants, by us or any of our progenitors or predecessors, to the aforesaid Treasurer and Company heretofore made, in these presents is not made; or any act, statute, ordinance, provision, proclamation, or restraint, to the contrary hereof had, made, ordained, or provided, or any other thing, cause, or matter, whatsoever, in any wise notwithstanding.] In witnes whereof [we have caused these our letters to be made patent. Witness ourself at Westminster, the 23d day of May (1609) in the seventh year of our reign of England, France, and Ireland, and of Scotland the ****]

Per ipsum Regem exactum. [3]

Daniell Winche is the 11th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

July 4, 1609: Bohemia is granted freedom of religion in the same year as that in which Rabbi Judah Loew ben Bezalel also known as the Maharal, one of the most famous Jewish scholars and educators from Prague passed away. “Rabbi Loew published more than 50 religious and philosophical books and became the center of legends, as the mystical miracle worker who created the Golem. The Golem is an artificial man made of clay that was brought to life through magic and acted as a guardian over the Jews. The Maharal had positive relations with Rudolph II and was even invited to his castle. [5][4]

.May 23, 1633: Children of Thomas Smythe and Barbara Sidney:
+ . i. Phillip Smythe (b. May 23, 1633 / d. August 8, 1708)[5]



Phillip Smythe7 [Thomas Smythe6, John Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. May 23, 1633 / d. August 8, 1708) married Isabella Sidney (b. September 30, 1634 / d. 20 Jun 1663). Phillip also married Mary Porter (d. 1730).

More about Phillip Smythe:
Phillip was the 2nd Viscount Strangford.

A. Children of Phillip Smythe and Isabella Sidney:
. i. Dianna Smythe (b. 1660)
. ii. Infant Son Smythe (b. 1664)
B. Children of Phillip Smythe and Mary Porter:
. i. George Smythe (b. 1672 / d. November 18, 1703)
. ii. Katherine Clare Smythe (b. August 1683 / d. April 16, 1711)
+ . iii. Endymion Smythe (b. unk / d. September 9, 1724)
. iv. Elizabeth Smythe
. v. Olivia Smythe
. vi. Philip Smythe (d. 1674)
. vii. John Smythe (d. 1681)
. viii. Thomas Smythe (d. 1695)[6]



Phillip Smythe is the 2nd cousin 10x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove



May 23, 1740: John Gibson was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, May 23, 1740, the son of George Gibson, Sr., a well known and respected tavern owner, and brother 286 EDWARD G. WILLIAMS SEPTEMBER of Colonel George Gibson, also of the Virginia Line. His mother was the highly educated daughter of a French count (Huguenot). Her sons and grandsons received much of their classical education from her, especially in French and Spanish. The two sons later had opportunity to use their linguistic knowledge. T. P. Roberts, Memoir of John Bannister Gibson, Pittsburgh (1890), 12-13. About 1770, the Gibsons moved to Silver Spring in the Cumberland Valley, where the father established a mill. At the age of 18, John's first military experience was with the army ofGeneral Forbes to the Forks of the Ohio, and he remained to enter the Indian trade. When Pontiac's Indians struck, John, with two men in his employ, were captured at the mouth of the Beaver. The two men were tortured and burned; but Gibson was adopted by a squaw to replace a son who had been killed, and thus was saved. His linguistic ability aided him in quickly mastering the Indians' language and learning their customs. Itis mentioned by C. W. Butterfield's Washington-Irvine Correspondence, vii-xi, that John Gibson was one of those captives released by Bouquet at the end of 1764. A search of the lists of names in the Gage Papers in the William L. Clements Library, however, did not yield the name of Gibson. The author personally has searched the lists inclosed with overing letters in the Gage Papers. These lists were published by Dr. William S. Ewing in WPHM, XXXIX,187-203, but John Gibson's name was not included. Dr. Ewing, however, has since found an additional list of 15 names printed in New York Mercury, for onday, January 21, 1765, no. 691; and John Gibson's name there appears. See Williams, "The Orderly Book of Henry Bouquet, 1764," WPHM, XLII,298 n 63. For the next few years Gibson continued in the trading business and built a house opposite Logstown, where he acquired land in the "Indian cornfields." It was here that the Rev. David McClure visited him and reported his having a "temporary" Indian wife. Diary of Rev. David McClure, F. B. Dexter, ed., New York (1899), 15ff; Hanna, Wilderness Trail, I, 380. It is here stated that this Indian woman was the sister of Chief Logan's wife and that both were killedby the whites, thus precipitating the outbreak known as Dunmore's War in 1774. Gibson acted an important role in negotiating peace. It was he who received the celebrated oration of Logan and so eloquently translated it, so that it has remained a classic of the English language. Gibson participated in the treaty at Fort Pitt and undertook a tour of the Western tribes in the interest of peace, after which he went into the army, as Lieutenant Colonel of the 6th Virginia Regiment, November 12, 1776. After being engaged at Trenton, Princeton, Brandywine and Germantown, and spending the winter at Valley Forge, he was ordered to Fort Pitt to take command of the 13th Virginia. He marched to the Tuscarawas with Mclntosh and remained in command of the "Forlorn hope" of 150 men (plus officers) to garrison Fort Laurens during the terrible winter. Kellogg, Frontier Advance, 186, 197, 409. He served inBroadhead's campaigns and was left in command at Fort Pitt, when that officer was recalled. Biographers have generally overlooked the fact that Col. Gibson was in Virginia with Lafayette in 1781 for a short while. WPHM, III,31. After the war Gibson was made a Judge of Common Pleas in Pittsburgh, was a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1790, and was appointed Major General of Militia of Pennsylvania. He was on the side of law and order during the Whisky Insurrection. In 1800, President Jefferson appointed him Secretary of the Territory of Indiana, which office he held until Indiana became a State, in 1816. He died at the home of his son-in-law, George Wallace, at Braddock's Field (now North Braddock, Pa.), and was buried in Pittsburgh. Biographical sketches may be found in C. W. Butterfield, Washington-Irvine Correspondence, Madison, Wis. (1882), 349; C. W. Butterfield, Washington-Crawford Letters, Cincinnati (1877), 69; T. P. Roberts, Memoir of John Bannister Gibson, Pittsburgh (1890), 219.

Thursday May 23, 1754

Washington writes to his superior officer Joshua Fry about his attempt to investigate the Youghiogheny. "We traced the watercourse near thirty miles, with the full expectation of succeeding in the much desired aim; but, at length, we came to a fall, which continued rough, rocky, and scarcely passable, for two miles, and then fell, within the space of fifty yards, nearly fourty feet perpendicular." Washington had come to the falls in what is today Ohiopyle and unfortunately had to give up on this possibility since boats could not go down the falls and the rapids below. [7]



George Washington is the grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



May 23, 1759: Colonel Thomas Bullit became on of the most interesting figures in this movement, because of his survey of lands down the Ohio Valley. He was an officer in the Forbes army of 1758, and while guarding convoys of the traders along the Forbes Road, suffered his defeat at the hands of the Indians three miles east of Ligonier on May 23, 1759. He afterwards secured a surveyor’s commission from William and Mary College, at Williamsburg, and started marking out lands in the Ohio Valley. Some of his surveys were questioned. The famed William Crawford also received a commission from the same college, and he interested himself mostly in the lands which he had selected for Washington.[8]



William Crawford is the 6th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



May 23, 1770

The first two justices of the peace in the territory now embraced in what is now Fayette County were Capt. William Crawford and Thomas Gist, appointed May 23, 1770, for Cumberland County, [9]



[May 23, 1774—Monday]

The express messengers to the Virginia governor from Maj John Connolly and Capt. William Crawford reached Williamsburg within hours of each other and informed Lord Dunmore what had occurred on the Ohio—the attacks by Cresap’s party, the massacre perpetrated by the Greathouse party and the ensuing mass exodus of the majority of the settlers.[10]

May 23, 1778

The Commander in chief, in writing to the Board of War on the twenty-third of the following May (see Letter No. 34), spoke of Crawford as “a brave and active officer.” His being ordered to the Western Department, lost him the command of the Thirteenth Virginia and his place in the Continental line, which Washington, although he regretted the circumstance, could not get restored to him. Under Brigadier General Laehlari McIntosh, who succeeded Hand in August, 1778, at Pittsburgh, Crawford took command of the militia of the Western counties of Virginia and had in charge the building of Fort McIntosh at what is now Beaver, in Beaver County, Pennsylvania. He marched with that officer into the Indian country in November, in command of a brigade, and was present at the building in December of Fort Laurens, upon the west bank of the Tusearawas river, in what is now Tusearawas county, Ohio. He returned soon after to his home with but few prospects before him in a military way, nevertheless he lost no opportunity, when called upon, in serving his country ; for he still held his commission as colonel, and continued to hold it until his death.[11]

No. 34. WASHINGTON TO THE BOARD OF WAR.

HEADQUARTERS, VALLEY FORGE, May 23, 1778.



DEAR SIR :—I have been favored with yours of the 19th, with its inclosures, on the subject of the Indian ravages upon the western frontier. Previous to the receipt of it, I had put that part of the 13th Virginia regiment which remained here under marching orders, with an intent of sending them to Fort Pitt; as they were raised in that country. Immediately upon receiving the account of the alarming situation of the frontier inhabitants from you, I ordered the 8th Pennsylvania regiment to march. They were also raised to the westward, and are a choice body of men; about one hundred of them have been constantly in Morgan’s rifle corps. These two regiments will march hence, with the full number of two hundred and fifty men.

There are upward of one hundred of the 13th Virginia flow at and near Fort Pitt, and many deserters belonging to both will come in, when they find their regiments are to do duty in that country.

As Colonel Russell [12] of the 13th Virginia regiment is already at Fort Pitt, and Colonel Brodhead [13] commands, and goes up with, the 8th Pennsylvania, it was impossible to give the command of the detachment to Lieutenant-Colonel Butler.[14][15] Indeed he does not seem to wish to go upon the expedition, as he says his influence is not so great with the inhabitants of the back country as the Board imagines. From his knowledge of the Indian country, their language and manners, he certainly would be very useful; and I shall, therefore, either send him or Colonel John Gibson [16] up, who, I am informed, can render equal service. I can very illy spare the troops which I have sent, especially the 8th Pennsylvania regiment, which composed the greatest part of Morgan’s corps, as the drafts and recruits from the different States not only fall short of the stipulated numbers, but come in extremely slow.

If Colonel John Gibson goes up, he will take the command of the 13th Virginia regiment pro tempore, and Colonel Russell will come down to Gibson’s. There is a dispute subsisting between Colonel Russell and Colonel William Crawford for the 13th Virginia regiment, and I do not mean that this temporary appointment of Colonel Gibson to the command of it should prejudice Colonel Crawford’s claim, should he incline to prosecute it hereafter. If the two regiments to be raised upon the frontiers are not disposed of I would recommend Colonel Crawford to the command of one of them. I know him to be a brave and active officer, and of considerable influence upon the western frontier of Virginia. I am, etc.[17]

May 23, 1780

Court met according to adjournment May 23, 1780.

Present Edward Ward Joseph Beeler George Vablandingham Samuel Newell William Harrison, Thos. Freeman.



Boling v Wells, P C

Workman, Assee. v Saltsman P C.

Ross v Manning C 0.

Miner v Blazier &e P C.

Thomas Freeman proved to the Court That he served as Dept. Comissy in the Last war between Great Britian & France & was regularly discharged. 0. to be Certified. David Vance being bound in Recogn. being called came into Court which ordered to be diseontd, also the witness Recogn. discd. said Vance giving security for his good behaviour for one year and one day in the sum of ten thousand Pounds with one Security in the like Sum whereon the sd. Vance with Moses Holladay his Security came into Court & entered into Reeg. accordingly.

Ordered that John Bradly be bound over to his good Behavor for a year & a Day in the Sum of two Hundred five Hundred Pound & one Security in the like sum, whereon the sd. Bradly with Jacob Bousman his security came into Court & entered into Reeognc. accordingly.

Jacob Bousman —John Ormsby. order’d. a writ to stay Waste, Isue.

James Boys v John Atkins. then came a Jury towit. Zadock Wright Hugh Stirling James Quick John Vanater, William Redick. Willm. Bruce Jacob Bousman John Springer Gabriel Cox Skiner Hutson Garsham Hull John Marshall. Verdt, for Plaintiff, Judt. L Enock Enis v William Hoglan. then came the same Jury as before. Verdit for pt. Judmt. for I~ 12.26.

Rich’d, McMahen v Paul Matthews, Then came the same Jury as before. Verdit. for pt. Judmt for L ~ io.

Ordered that James Innis, Thomas Gist, Thomas Warren, Hezekiah McGruder, James Eager, David Ritchie, Henry Taylor, Benjaman Johnston, Samuel Semple, Charles Wheeler

Jacob Bouseman, Joseph Scott James Ewing, Samuel Johnston,

William Lea, Andrew Heath, John Robinson, Thomas Moore,

Jacob Beeson, Reuben Kemp, and Walter Wall be recommended to the Governor as proper persons to be added to the Commission of the peace, and that the Clerk certify to the The Grand Jury present the following Bills, against Garsham

Hull: for an assault on the body of John McDonald N. G.

against John Brackinrig an assault on Mary Spear, order a Capias Isue: against Do, assault on the Body of Jas. Spear, Cap.; against Joseph Parkeson assault on the Body of Sarah Jacob. Cap. Isue.

Garshom Hull with Richd. MeMahen & John Dean his securities come into Court and entered into recognizance for his personal Appearance at the Next Court to answer a Bill of Indictnient exhibited agt. him, held in Then thousand pounds his Securities in five thousand each.

The Grand Jury found a Bill agt. Garshom Hull for an assault on John McDonald Gent. Ordered that Capias Issue.

Ordered that Court be adjourned to Court in Course.



SAMUEL NEWELL.[18]

May 23, 1781: The first letter by Washington is dated September 21, 1767; the last by Crawford is dated

May 23, 1781, a few months before his awful death. Other letters no doubt passed between these true friends and great men, that

were lost or destroyed. Crawford selected and surveyed for Washington11 on and near the Youghiogheny, Great Kanawha,

and Ohio rivers, a great deal of land, forty or fifty thousand acres, and these lands in the language of Washington were "the first

choice of," and "the cream of the country."" He also selected and surveyed lands for Samuel and John, brothers of George Wash-

ington, and for their cousin Lund Washington. Some of the earliest surveys in Brooke, Ohio, and Marshall counties, Virginia,

were made by Captain Crawford.[19]



May 23, 1781.

DEAR GENERAL :—Sometime ago, I wrote you relative to your Round Bottom tract of land. I can never find out what has been done about it, whether Thomas Lewis has returned rued it or not. If you can give me any direction about it, I will do anything in my power for you. The survey ought to be returned to the office, if it has not been. This I will have done, if it has not been returned; as I can have it done immediately.

I intend going out with General Clark, on the present expedition[20], if my health will permit but I am very unhealthy lately, having got much cold on the two last expeditions, they having been made in the winter, or, at least, in cold weather. Any directions you may want to give me, you can send by Mr. Randolph, who comes to my house on his way to General Clark. I am, etc.[21][22]





Michael and Barnard Gratz, Jewish Merchants, demonstrated a combination of service to America and the expansion of Jewish mercantile interests. Born in the 1730s, in Silesia, a Polish region recently brought undr Prussian rule, the Gratz brothers first migrated to London and then to Amsterdam, where they apprenticed with a number of Jewish merchants. By the 1750s the brothers had moved to Philadelphia, where they worked and lived among the city’s Jews, worshiping with the small Jewsh band in a private home on Sterling Alley.



Their American business ventures took them in many directions. As Western men, the Gratz brothers learned an American lesson early on: they realized that fortunes could be made in the vast lands and resources beyond the urban fring. They cast their eyes to the west and participated in numerous effors to plant colonies in the American interior. The brothers established trading posts in what would become Pittsburgh and Louisville and maintained an active interest on the Illinois Com[any, which helped to develop the Midwest for white settlement. For merchants like them, British restrictions on trade west of the Appalachians would have been a disaster, and not surprizxingly, they sided with the patrios supplying arms and clotheing to the American army. They outfitted George Rogers Clark’s expedition to defeat the British in the Northwest, while Virginia officials relied on the Graz brothers to “act for them” in procuring the goods needed for an effective militia.[23]

May 23, 1788: South Carolina becomes the eighth state to ratify the Constitution.[24]

May 23, 1797: Records of 1st Court of Brooke County, Virginia (now West Virginia)-"Tuesday May 23, 1797, Charleston, (now Wellsburg) Members present: John Beach, (Beck) William Griffith, John Connell, etc. Gentlemen" John Connell was made Clerk of the Court. [25]

May 23, 1797

John Crawford: Vol. 9, No. 2128. 500 a. Shelby Co. Gess Cr. 5/23/1797. Bk. 4, p. 117. No Grant Located.[26]



John Crawford is the 5th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.





May 23, 1809



Harrison County Court Record.

Cynthinia, Kentucky. Deed book 8, page 179.

This Indenture made and entered into this May 23, 1809 between John Minter and Elizabeth his wife of the County of Del­aware and State of Ohio of one part and John Berry of the County of Harrison and State of Kentucky of the Other part Witnesseth that the said John Minter & Elizabeth his wife for and in consid­eration of the Sum of 310 pounds Current money of Kentucky to them in hand paid the receipt whereof they Do hereby acknowledge have granted bargained & Sold and by these presents doth grant bargain & Sell unto the said John Berry & his heirs one Tract or parcel of land laying in the County of Harrison and State of Kentucky on the waters of Indian Creek Containing 2231/2 acres and Bounded as

followeth Begining at a blue ash Corner to James Craig thence S 20 degrees W 202 poles to twoSugartrees Corner to John Estis John Smith and Jacob Carabaugh thence S 70 degrees E 102 poles to a corner to sd Carabaugh N 20 degrees F 53 poles to an Elm Sugartree and dogwood Corner to Archibald VanHook & Carabaugh thence S 70 degrees F 188 poles to an Elm in Mason Johnson’s line thence N 20 degrees E 174 poles to two Sugartrees thence N 70 degrees W 20 poles to a Dogwood & Sugartree Corner to William McFarland thence S 20 degrees W 69 poles to a Sugartree corner to sd McFarland thence N 70 degrees W. 5 2/3 poles to two Sugartrees Corner to John Breake thence S 20 degrees P1. 60 poles to two white Oaks Corner to Sd Beaken thence N 70 degrees W~ 133 1/3 poles To an Elm Corner to Sd Beaken thence N 20 degrees E 120 poles to a stake in William McFarland’s Line thence N 73Y~ degrees P1 128 poles to the Begining.

To have and to hold the Said Tract of land with its appur­tenances to the said John Berry & his heirs forever to his or their use and behoof and sd John Minter for himself & his heirs & will Warrant and defend the sd Tract of land appurtenances to the sd John Berry & his heirs & provided the said land be lost the sd Minter Doth bind himself as to refund the above mentioned 310 pounds to the sd John Berry or his heirs. In Testimony whereof the said John Minter & Eliz. his wife have hereunto Set their hands and Seals the date above written.

Isaac Lambert

John Minter John Minter Senr L S

Wm. Minter her

Aaron Miller Elizabeth X Minter L S

mark[27]

John Minter is the husband of the 1st cousin 7x removed, and Elizabeth (Crawford) is the 1st cousin 7x removed.

May 23, 1814: Andrew Jackson becomes Major General of the United States Army, during the War of 1812.[28]



Andrew Jackson is the 2nd cousin 9x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



May 23, 1818: American troops commanded by General Andrew Jackson capture Pensacola, Florida during the First Seminole War.[29]




May 23, 1825: : The Life of Washington is published by Parson Weems in 1808:

Mason Locke Weems Biography

Description: Print-FriendlyDescription: Order the PDF versionDescription: Order the RTF version


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Parson Weems Summary


Description: http://images.bookrags.com/images/h1_bottom.gif


Name:

Mason Locke Weems


Birth Date:

October 1, 1759


Death Date:

May 23, 1825


Place of Birth:

Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States


Place of Death:

Beaufort, South Carolina, United States


Nationality:

American


Gender:

Male


Occupations:

Minister


Description: http://images.bookrags.com/images/s.gif

Dictionary of Literary Biography on Mason Locke Weems

Parson Weems's claim to a small place in American literary history has often seemed to rest on his having retailed the fabulous story of George Washington and the cherry tree. He is more justly regarded as a writer whose The Life of George Washington (1808) transcends its subgenre. Although this edifying biography's starchy simplicity has drawn the derision of generations, critics who have looked beneath its didactic idiom have found revealing testimony to the needs of a society in transition.

Very little is known of Weems's youth. He was born 11 October 1759 at Marshes Seat, Herring Bay, in Maryland's Anne Arundel County, the son of a Scottish farmer who had fathered eighteen earlier children, eleven of them by his second wife, the former Esther Hill. After receiving his early schooling in Maryland, Weems studied medicine in London and possibly in Edinburgh between 1773 and 1776. By one report he was a surgeon in the British navy at the outbreak of the Revolution, but by 1779 he had returned to Maryland. He was again in England from 1781 to 1784, this time preparing for the Anglican priesthood. Following his ordination by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1784, he returned to America to serve as pastor of a series of parishes in the Chesapeake area. Weems held fixed clerical appointments for less than a decade, and then, after 1792, while remaining a minister, he traveled the Eastern seaboard as an itinerant book salesman. On 2 July 1795 he married Frances Sewall, the daughter of Colonel Jesse Sewall of Bel Air, near Drumfries, in Prince William County, Virginia. The young couple, who would become the parents of ten children, made their home at Drumfries until moving to the Bel Air plantation Mrs. Weems inherited from her father in 1806.

Weems, however, was only occasionally at home. Book-peddling had become his livelihood, and he became the author of many of his wares; besides moralistic pamphlets and The Life of George Washington , he wrote exemplary lives of Francis Marion (1809), Benjamin Franklin (1815), and William Penn (1822). He died in Beaufort, South Carolina, on May 23, 1825.

Weems the minister and Weems the peddler were ever at work in Weems the biographer. In his travels as a book purveyor, he saw that the religious and patriotic reading tastes of the new nation might be drawn together and addressed as one. His biographies of the early American heroes became, for Protestant and unchurched readers, equivalents of the sentimental saints' lives popular among some Catholics. His sources were many and varied. He borrowed freely, as in his biography of Franklin, for which he drew heavily on his subject's autobiography. What was new and correct in the life of Marion seems chiefly to have been contributed by the book's intended coauthor, Peter Horry, who withdrew his name when he saw the "romance" that Weems was fashioning. Some of what the biographies tell may be uncritically collected hearsay gathered as his salesman's travels brought Weems into contact with people offering accurate, embellished, or invented memories of his subjects. Much, however, such as the story of the dying Franklin contemplating a picture of Christ, was but his own contrivance. Certainly it was Weems's shameless improvement of history that gave his The Life of George Washington its singular appeal. Begun as one of the many tributes that appeared after the venerated hero's death in December of 1799, the biography was expanded as a corrective to the inadequacies Weems perceived in John Marshall's five-volume biography of Washington (1804-1807), which gave only a page to its subject's growing years. The popularity of his own biography was again and again a spur to Weems the imaginative writer. The eighty-page first edition that appeared in 1800 more than tripled in length as the book grew through more than thirty editions--three of them translations into German--by the year of his death. The stories of the cherry tree and the elder Washington's cabbage garden, in which the father plants seeds that come up in the pattern of George's name to teach the Heavenly Father's design in creation, first appeared in the 1806 edition. That such instruction--the first a tale invented by the author, the second a moral lesson cribbed from James Beattie--became enshrined in the American folk consciousness was largely due to the prim earnestness of Weems's telling the "low hortatory" or "juvenilehomiletic" rhetoric that was employed to persuade the young but has earned the scorn of critics.

The continuing interest of Weems's writings resides not in any intrinsic merit but in their reflection of the widespread American concern with public and private virtue in the decades following the Revolution. An increasingly secular age was more receptive to instructional writings than doctrinal sermons, and in inscribing his The Life of George Washington to Thomas Jefferson, Weems expressed his hope that the book would serve as a school text. It came to influence countless readers--Lincoln would tell of its impact on him--especially when its moral anecdotes were mined for McGuffey's readers. The theme of rebellion that runs through the biography of Washington has been read as a transposition of the Revolution and the subsequent intergenerational tensions felt by a society still unsure of itself. Weems's exemplary teachings have been found to incorporate important post-Lockian insights into the nature and improvement of children. Thus young George's disobedience to his father is represented in terms of filial incapacity rather than of moral failure. The accounts of the boy's lapses and his father's corrections are free of the terrifying analogies with original sin so familiar in earlier instruction. Instead Weems presents an understanding father whose admonitions are accompanied by reassurances of parental solicitude. The Life of Washington thus mirrors a change from Americans' backward-looking obsession with guilt to the confidence that attended their advance into the nineteenth century.[30]



May 23, 1828: Gideon Smith11 [Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. October 8, 1787 in Wilkes Co. GA / d. April 14, 1858 in Dawson, GA) married Suzanne Martin (b. in SC / d. February 11, 1897 in Dawson, GA) on May 23, 1828 in Habersham Co. GA.

A. Children of Gideon Smith and Suzanne Martin:
+ . i. Emily H. Smith (b. July 31, 1819 in SC / d. abt. 1900 in Union Co GA)
. ii. Mary Smith (b. Elbert co GA)

More about Mary Smith
Mary married John Burt (b. abt. 1800 / d. in Franklin Co. GA) on January 13, 1820.[31]

Gideon Smith is the 4th cousin 7x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

May 23, 1836 – President Jackson proclaims the Treaty of New Echota to the American people.[32]

May 23 or 25, 1846: Queen Victoria and Prince Albert’s daughter…


The Princess Helena

May 23 or 25, 1846


June 9, 1923

married 1866, Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein; had issue[33]


Princess Helena is the 16th cousin 6x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

May 23, 1856: A Free State company under the command of John Brown, Jr., set out, and the Osawatomie company joined them. On the morning of May 22, 1856, they heard of the sack of Lawrence and the arrest of Deitzler, Brown, and Jenkins. However, they continued their march toward Lawrence, not knowing whether their assistance might still be needed, and encamped that night near the Ottawa Creek. They remained in the vicinity until the afternoon of May 23, at which time they decided to return home.

On May 23, John Brown, Sr. selected a party to go with him on a private expedition. Captain John Brown, Jr., objected to their leaving his company, but seeing that his father was obdurate, acquiesced, telling him to "do nothing rash." The company consisted of John Brown, four of his sons—Frederick, Owen, Salmon, and Oliver—Thomas Weiner, and James Townsley, whom John had induced to carry the party in his wagon to their proposed field of operations.

They encamped that night between two deep ravines on the edge of the timber, some distance to the right of the main traveled road. There they remained unobserved until the following evening.[34]

May 23, 1861: John Buchanan Floyd (b. 1806 / d. 1863) on June 1, 1830 in Washington Co. VA. John was the Governor of Virginia from 1849 – 1852. . He married Sarah Buchanan Preston, his cousin. They had no children, but adopted their orphaned cousin Eliza Mary Johnston. Although a strong opponent of secession, he was in 1860 involved in incidents which gave rise to controversy, particularly over the sending of arms to the southern states in excess of their requirements. He resigned a Secretary of War on December 29, 1860 on Buchanan's refusal to order Maj. Robert Anderson back from Fort Sumter to Fort Moultrie. He was also involved in troubles which occurred when fraud in connection with Indian trust funds was discovered. After Virginia seceded he was appointed Colonel of Volunteers in the Provisional Army of Virginia may 17, 1861 and having raised a brigade of volunteers for the Confederate army was appointed Brigadier General May 23, 1861. He was in command of forces in West Virginia in 1861 and then was sent to reinforce Albert Sydney Johnston, who sent him to Fort Donelson. Before the surrender of that fort he withdrew his troops, pursuant to an agreement with Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner to whom he turned over the command. President Davis removed him from command without a Court of Inquiry for failure to ask for reinforcements, for not evacuating sooner, and for abandoning command to Buckner and escaping. Two months later, however, he was made a Major General by the Virginia State Line with responsibility for defending the salt mines near Saltville. His death resulted from exposure in the field. [35]

John Buchanan Floyd is the husband of the 4th cousin 6x removed and Sarah Buchanan Preston is the 4th cousin 6x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

May 23, 1862: Battle of Front Royal, VA.[36]



May 23, 1863: The siege of Port Hudson began on May 23, 1863. Roughly 30,000 Union troops, under the command of Major General Nathaniel P. Banks, were pitted against 6800 Confederates, under the command of Major Franklin Gardner. [37]



Mon. May 23, 1864:

In camp all day hot day

Wrote a letter to Dr hunter

Went 3 miles down the river at night to unload boats[38]



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

May 23, 1865: Sim Whitsett surrendered at Lexington on May 23, 1865 and took the amnesty oath. Many unionists believed that the guerrillas should be punished, not forgiven. Many were harassed, threatened and some were killed after taking the amnesty oath. Many guerrillas left Missouri and went to Texas. Apparently, Sim went back to Texas immediately after the war. A little later he went to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and worked as a teamster crossing the plains to as far as Fort Laramie, Wyoming. A year or two of that he returned home in Missouri which still showed the scars of the war. [39]

May 23, 1865: American flags fly at full mast for the first time in four years as the victorious Army of the Potomac passes in grand review in Washington, D.C.[40]

On May 23, 1869, Doctor William M. Goodlove married Miss Mary L. LeFevre, daughter of Elias and Henrietta LeFevre, of Shelby Co., O. She was the sister of Gen. Benjamin LeFevre, member of Congress from the 5th Congressional District of Ohio.[41]

Benjamin LeFevre was U.S. consul at Nuremberg, Germany, by appointment of President Johnson, 1868-69.[42]



Dr. Goodlove was the son of John Goodlove who died at Quincy in 1856. Dr. Goodlove’s mother later married D. H. McKinnon, then of Logan county, but they later moved to Clay county, Illinois. Dr. Goodlove was born October 15, 1846, near Springfield, O. At the age of fifteen he enlisted in the Civil war in the 57th O. V. I. and served until the close of the war in the Fifteen Army corps. Under General John A. Logan, “Sherman’s Army,” and was discharged at Little Rock, Ark. In the fall of 1865 entered Medical College at Cincinnati, where he took a progressive course and graduated the same year. He began practice in Montra, Shelby county, O. In 1874 he became a member of the State Medical Society at Toledo, and also of the National Medical Society at Detroit in the same year. On May 23, 1869, Dr Goodlove married Miss Mary L. Lefevre…(missing section).[43]



William McKinnon Goodlove is the 1st cousin 3x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.


100_1356

Andrew Johnson, who became President after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, appointed Benjamin LeFevre to be the U.S. Counsul to Germany at Nuremburg in 1868 to 1869.[44]

May 23, 1900: Nancy L. Smith (b. May 12, 1876 in GA / d. May 23, 1900 in GA). [45]

May 23, 1931: THOMAS L. VANDEVER, b. December 26, 1857, Jackson County, Missouri; d. May 23, 1931, Jackson County, Missouri. [46]

May 23, 1942: In this Convoy 3, a young girl of 20, Annette Zelman, was deported. A French woman, she was guilty not only of being Jewish but also of having dared to be loved by a non-Jewish Frenchman. Document #XLII-27 of the CDJC, the police write-up on her, states:

“ Annette Zelman, Jew, born in Nancy on October 6, 1921. Arrested on May 23, 1942. Imprisoned by the Police Prefecture from May 23 to June 10; sent to the Tourelle camp from June 10 to June 21; transferred to Germany on June 22. Reason for arrest: intention to marry an Aryan, Jean Jausion. The two declared their written intention to give up the project to marry, according to Dr. Jausion’s desire, who had hoped that they would be dissuaded and the young Zelman girl would simply be returned to her family without any further trouble.” Continued but missing. [47]



May 23, 1944: An Allied offensive begins at Anzio, in Italy.[48]



September 30, 1951 - May 23, 1989


Susan Jane Goodlove


Birth:

September 30, 1951


Death:

May 23, 1989

http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif

Burial:
Lyndon Cemetery
Lyndon
Osage County
Kansas, USA

Created by: David Woody
Record added: Sep 08, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 76195694

[49]


1989: Soviet forces withdrew from Afganistan in 1989.[50]



1989

Atelopus longirostris


Credit: Pierre Fidenci / Endangered Species International, www.endangeredspeciesinternational.org

Atelopus longirostris

Atelopus longirostriswas a toad native to the humid forests of northern Ecuador. A. longirostris — named so for it's long snout — has not been recorded since 1989.

The cause of the amphibian's extinction has not been determined, but scientists think chytridiomycosiswas certainly involved. In recent years, the disease chytridiomycosis, which is caused by the fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, has become world famous as a frog killer, boasting a 100 percent mortality rate for some amphibian species. Researchers think A. longirostris may have had to contend with climate change and habitat loss, in addition to the deadly disease.[51]



May 23, 2009



June 22, 2009 076

Jacqulin Goodlove Graduates from Larkin High School





June 22, 2009 088



Anne, Lauren, Lee, Anna, Jay, Jay, Jacqulin, Jillian, Sherri, Mary, and Gary, celebrate Jacqulin’s Goodlove’s Graduation.



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


[1] http://www.let.rug.nl/~usa/D/1601-1650/virginia/chart02.htm


[2] http://www.learner.org/channel/workshops/primarysources/virginia/docs/svc.html


[3] http://www.let.rug.nl/~usa/D/1601-1650/virginia/chart02.htm


[4] thisdayinjewishhistory


[5] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[6] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[7] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm


[8] Annals of Southwestern ‘Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, A. M. 1939, pgs. 42-43.


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


[10] That Dark and Bloody River, Allan W. Eckert


[11] The Washington Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield


[12] 1 William Russell, a Virginian. He early attempted to settle within “the limits of the expected new government” upon the Ohio, but failed. The following account of his mishap is from Bind’e Pa. Gaz., Dec. 23, 1773:

The following inhuman affair we are assured from good authority was transacted on the frontiers of Fincastle [county, Virginia; the then most westerly county of the province], about the latter end of September last. Captain William Russell, with several families and upwards of thirty men, set out with the intention to reconnoiter the country toward the Ohio, and settle in the limits of the expected new government. A few days after they set out, unluckily the party was separated into three detachments; the main body in the front with the women and children and their cattle and baggage; in the center was Captain Russell’s son with five white men and two negroes, who, the fatal night before the murder, encamped a few miles short of the front. I the morning, about daybreak, while asleep in the camp, they were fired upon by a party of Indians, who killed young Mr. Russell and four other white men and one negro. Captain Russell, shortly after, bringing up the rear, unexpectedly came upon the corpse of his son, which was mangled in an inhuman manner; and there was left in him a dart-arrow, and a war-club was left .beside him. After this unexpected event, the party getting intelligence of it returned to the inhabitants.”




[13] 1 Daniel Brodhead raised a company of riflemen in 1775, and took part in the battle of Long Island. He was afterward appointed Colonel of the 8th Pennsylvania regiment, and marched to Fort Pitt, as indicated above, in the summer of 1778. Here he served under General Laclilan McIntosh, until the next spring, when he succeeded to the command of the Western Department, headquarters at that post. He retained his position until the fall of 1781, making a very efficient and active commander; twice leading expeditions into the Indian country, in both of which he was successful. He was, after the war, Surveyor-General of Pennsylvania. He died at Milford, that State, on the 15th November, 1800.


[14] 2 Richard Butler. At the beginning of the Revolution, he was made a Lieutenant Colonel, holding the same rank, at date of this letter, in Morgan’s rifle corps, but was Colonel of the 9thPennsylvania regiment at the close of the war. He was afterward agent of Indian affairs in the West; and in the expedition of St. Clair against the Indians, in 1791, he commanded the right wing of the army with the rank of Major-General. He was killed by the savages on the 4th of November, after receiving several wounds, being tomahawked and scalped by the merciless foe.


[15] Butler. Richard Butler. Son of Irish immigrants coming to the colonies sometime before 1760. The Butlers built the first cabins after the Indian (Seneca, Delaware, and Shawnee) siege of Fort Pitt in 1763. At the beginning of the Revolutionary War, Richard was made a lieutenant colonel (1777). He served with Daniel Morgan and Lafayette. At the end of the war he was a colonel and was appointed agent for Indian Affairs for the Ohio territory in 1787. Richard Butler served as a Major General under the commander-in-chief of the army fighting the Indians in Ohio, Arthur St. Clair, and was killed November 4, 1791 during action against Indians on the Miami River in Ohio. He served as a lawyer, a legislator, a Revolutionary War soldier and an Indian agent.

Richard’s brother William served as a Lieutenant Colonel in the 4th Pennsylvania Regiment during the Revolutionary War. William Butler gravestone photo.

Another brother, Thomas, was born in PA in 1754 and also served with distinction during the Revolutionary War as a company commander with heartfelt thanks and commendations from George Washington at Brandywine and Anthony Wayne at Monmouth.





Butler County marker and Courthouse. South Main Street (PA 8). Photos by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged marker and enlarged courthouse.

"Butler County. Formed March 12, 1800 from Allegheny County. Named for Gen. Richard Butler, Revolutionary officer. A young George Washington had crossed this area, 1753. County seat was established at Butler in 1803, and the county was home of the Harmony Society, 1804-15.

"Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1981."

Although the Butler brothers all distinguished themselves in service to their country, Butler County in western PA is specifically named after Richard Butler. Butler County with a population of 230 was formed from Allegheny County in 1800 .

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


[16] 1 John Gibson was born at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on the 23d of May, 1740. He received a classical education, and was an excellent scholar at the age, of eighteen, when he entered the service. His first campaign was under General Forbes, in the expedition which resulted in the acquisition of Fort Duquesne-afterward Fort Pitt—from the French. At the peace of 1763, He settled at that post as a trader. War broke out, shortly after, with the Indians, and Gibson was taken prisoner at the mouth of Beaver in what is now Beaver county, Pennsylvania, together with two men who were in his employ. They were, at the time, descending the Ohio in a Canoe. One of the men was immediately tortured at the stake, and the other shared the same fate as soon as the party reached the Kanawha. Gibson, however, was preserved by an aged squaw, and adopted by her in the place of her son, who had been killed in battle. After remaining several years with the Indians, and becoming familiar with their language, manners, customs, and traditions, he again settled at Fort Pitt, resuming his occupation of trading with the Indians.

In 1774, Gibson acted a conspicuous part in the expedition against the Shawanese, under Lord Dunmore; particularly in negotiating the peace which followed. It was upon this occasion, near the waters of the Scioto river, in what is now Pickaway county, Ohio, that Logan, the Mingo chief, made to him the speech so celebrated in history.

On the breaking out of the Revolution, Gibson was the Western agent of Virginia, at Fort Pitt. After the treaty held in October, 1775, at that post, between the Delawares and representatives of the Shawanese and Seniecas on the one part, and the Commissioners of the American Congress on the other part, by which the neutrality of the former tribe was secured, He undertook a tour to the Western Indians in the interest of peace. Upon his return, he entered the service, rising, finally, to the command of the 13th Virginia regiment, being sent back to Fort Pitt as indicated by Washington, in the above letter, in the summer of 1778. He remained at that post until the close of the war, He was a member of the convention which framed the Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania in 1790; and, subsequently, was a judge of Allegheny county, that State; also, a major-general of militia. He was Secretary of the Territory of Indiana until it became a State. He died in Fayette county, Pennsylvania, April 10, 1822.


[17] The Washington Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield


[18] MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY 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. 419.


[19] Ohio Arch. and His. Society Publications.


[20] This was an expedition intended, in reality, to strike Detroit—but first to attack the Indian tribes that had their homes between Kentucky and that post; as the army was to move from that country. George Rogers Clark with volunteers and militia obtained from the vicinity of Fort Pitt, including a regiment of Virginia State troops and a company of artillery—in all about four hundred men—moved down the Ohio from Pittsburgh about the first of August, 1781, for the Falls (Louisville). The enterprise, finally, proved unsuccessful. Crawford did not accompany the expedition as he had intended.


[21] This, so far as is known, ended the correspondence between Crawford and Washington. One year and a day from that date, he penned his last letter, while on his way to Sandusky, upon the expedition which cost him his life, particulars of which are given in Butterfield’s Crawford’s Campaign against Sandusky, in 1782. It was directed to Brigadier-General William Irvine, who was then in command of Fort Pitt, under whose authority he was acting. In it are these words: “I shall endeavor to do all in my power for the good of my country.”


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


[23] The Jews of the united States, by Hasia R. Diner, page 47.


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


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


[26] Index for Old Kentucky Surveys and Grants in Old State House, Fkt. KY. (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 454.50.)


[27] This instrument reveals the price of locating the 1,000 acres, by Benjamin Harrison.

This deed in John Minter’s name, shows that he and his wife, Elizabeth (Crawford) Minter, were selling another parcel of land in Harrison County, Kentucky. It is most likely , it was at this time, John and Elizabeth were planning to remove to the Ohio territory. ( From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969. pp. 98-99.)


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


[29]


[30] http://www.bookrags.com/biography/mason-locke-weems-dlb2/


[31] Proposed Descendant of William Smythe.


[32] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


[33] Wikipedia




[34] Wikipedia


[35] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[36] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012


[37] http://www.lastateparks.com/porthud/pthudson.htm


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


[39] http://whitsett-wall.com/Whitsett/whitsett_simeon.htm


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


[41] History of Logan County, Ohio. 1880 pp.691-692 http://www.heritagepursuit.com/Logan/LoganRushCreek.htm


[42] The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans: Volume VI


[43] Weekly Index-Republican, Bellefontaine, Ohio, Thursday, December 30, 1915, page 1.


[44] Anna Goodlove at the State Capital at Raleigh North Carolina, 2008. Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[45] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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


[47] “Memorial to the Jews Deported from France 1942-1944, page 25-30.`


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


[49] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=76195694&


[50] International Profile, Ayman al-Zawahir, 12/11/2007 HISTI.


[51] http://www.livescience.com/23711-history-mysterious-extinctions.html

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