Friday, May 31, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, May 31


“Every Day is Memorial Day at This Day in Goodlove History”

10,485 names…10,485 stories…10,485 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, May 31
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Jeff Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com
Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove

The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, Thomas Jefferson, and ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson and George Washington.
The Goodlove Family History Website:
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html
The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspxy



May 31, 1279 BCE: Ramses II (The Great) (19th dynasty) becomes pharaoh of Ancient Egypt. If you accept the contention that Moses lived from 1391–1271 BCE, Ramses would be the Pharaoh who came to power after the Exodus. During his reign he reasserted Egyptian power over the area that would have included Canaan during the period of the Judges. However, the Bible talks about the Canaanite tribes and Philistines as being the Israelites’ enemies and not the Egyptians.[1]



Courtesy of Lawrence E. Stager The western wall of the Cour de la Cachette. [2]



1275 B.C.E.: This particular scene is on the outer western wall of the Cour de la Cachette. † The wall itself was originally about 158 feet long and 30 feet high and is composed of blocks about 50 to 63 inches long and 40 inches high. Time, unfortunately, has not been kind to the sculptors who created this monument. Except at the extreme left (north) end, the top of the wall is missing. Three scenes at the right (as one faces the wall) are no longer in place. The Romans took down the blocks forming these scenes, in order to widen the gateway to the right when they removed from Karnak the obelisk now in the Lateran Square in Rome. Sometime after the advent of Christianity, Egyptian Copts built their own structures against the wall and pulled out stones so that the holes thereby created in the wall would support sections of their buildings. Stones from the destroyed scenes of the wall are still strewn about in a field nearby. Fortunately, some of these blocks can be identified with particular locations in the wall. †

Near the left side of the wall, between two short engaged pillars that extend several inches from the wall, is a long hieroglyphic text—the text of the Peace Treaty that followed the great battle of Kadesh, on the Orontes in northern Syria in 1275 B.C.E., between Ramesses II and the Hittite army led by Muwatallis. [3]

1274 B.C.E.With Hatusa’s defense in a state of readiness Prince Atusily’s left the city in the year 1274 B.C.E. Appointed commander and Chief of the Hittite army, he set off to face Ramses, the most powerful ruler of the ancient world. At the border town of Kadesh the two armies prepared to clash. Egyptian temples claim Ramses won a magnificent battle. When Hatusa’s was discovered it was found that the Hittite records indicate that they were the victors.[4]

1265 B.C.E: Prince Atusili seized the throne from his unpopular nephew King Mutually.

Hittites were known as the people of a thousand God’s. They were also known as the people of a thousand laws.[5]

Atusili and Tutahephop construct an open air sancuary of Husicalaya. The whole sanctuary is dedicated to the storm god. It is a procession of all the gods and godesses to a central figure, the storm god. This is a new pantheon. This is a new god brought This is a new god that Tutahephop, Atulili III’ wife brought from Selicia, south of the empire when she came to marry the king. Tutahephop attemted to unify the empires thousand gods into groups of similar gods. It seemed to be an attempt to unify the empire, but other groups seemed to be pulling it apart. [6]

1263 BC: It is from here around the year 1263 BC the story of the Exodus in the Bible probably took place.[7]

1258 B.C.E.: The treaty of Kadesh was written sixteen years after the battle between the Hittites and the Egyptians and brought peace between the two superpowers of the day.[8]




Concluded in the 21st year of Ramesses II’s reign (1258 B.C.E.), the Treaty misled earlier scholars into thinking that the four battle scenes, two on each side of the treaty, related to Ramesses II. Although reliefs depicting the battle of Kadesh once stood to the left of the Treaty, they were largely, though imperfectly, erased at some time before Merenptah’s battle reliefs were carved. Who erased the Kadesh reliefs is not known, but it is possible that Ramesses II felt that the commemoration of the battle was inappropriate beside the Peace Treaty and therefore ordered his own relief erased. [9]



To the left of the Peace Treaty text are two battle scenes; to the right, two more. Then, farther to the right are—or were—six more scenes (two of the scenes at the far right are completely gone and must be entirely reconstructed, in part from blocks in the nearby field). The four battle scenes seem to frame the Peace Treaty, two on each side. To the right of these four battle scenes are other scenes that progress from left to right—the binding of prisoners, the collecting of prisoners, marching prisoners off to Egypt, presenting the prisoners to the god Amun, Amun presenting the sword of victory to the king (moving right to left) and finally a large-scale triumphal scene. The scenes stand in two registers, or rows, one above the other, except for the large triumphal scene at the right, which extended all the way from the top to the bottom of the wall. Each of the scenes also contains hieroglyphic inscriptions.

One of the things that especially interested me in the inscriptions was the cartouches—those oblong rings tied at the bottom that enclose the fourth and fifth names of the pharaoh. Both in the reliefs on the wall and on the loose blocks from these reliefs scattered about, all of the names in the cartouches had been usurped—that is, they had been partially erased and recarved with the names of a later king.[10]


c. 1250

After 1500, contemporaneously with the migrations of the Arameans into that region the Israelite tribes advanced into Palestine C. 1250, under the leadership of Moses, some of the tribes left Egypt (God’s revelation on Mr. Sinai: the pact between God and the chosen Israilite tribes; Jehova the only Lord; the Ark of the Covenant the Ark of the Covenant the focal point of the religious life). Ties were established with the tribes already in Palestine.[11]

1250 BCE: Pinchas earned the kehuna/priesthood, identified as Eliyahu Navi.[12]

100_2257[13]

1250 BC





May 31, 70 C.E.: The Jewish defenders of Jerusalem surrendered the first wall of the city to the Romans.[14]

May 31, 1593: The Jews were barred from living in Riga and Livonia.[15]

1594: In the very ancient description of the western isles, by Donald Monro, Dean of the Isles (1594) he records that the MacKinnon possessions in Skye are as follows:—"The Castill of Dunnakyne, perteining to M'Kynnoun; the Castill Dunringill, perteining to the said M'Kynnoun; the country of Strayts nardill, perteining to M'Kynnoun. At the shore of Skye aforesaid, Iyes ane iyle callit Pabay, neyre ane myle in lenthe, full of woodes, guid for fishing, and a main shelter for thieves and cut throats. It perteins to M'Kynnoun."[16]

May 31, 1647: The Rhode Island General Assembly drafts a constitution calling for separation of church and state.[17]



1648: Since the pogroms of 1648, Polish Jewry had undergone a trauma of dislocation and demoralization that was as intense as the exile of the Sephardim from Spain. Many of the most learned and spiritual Jewish families of Poland had either been killed or had migrated to the comparative safety of Western Europe. [18]

1648: The death tolls of the Khmelnytskyi uprising, as many others from the eras analyzed by historical demography, vary, and became a subject of ongoing reinterpretation as better sources and methodology are becoming available.[8] Population losses of the entire Commonwealth population in the years 1648-1667 (a period which includes the Uprising, but also the Polish-Russian War and the Swedish invasion) are estimated at 4 million (roughly a decrease from 11-12 million to 7-8 million).[9]

Prior to the Uprising, magnates had sold and leased certain privileges to Jewish arendators for a percentage of an estate's revenue. and, while enjoying themselves at their courts, left it to the Jewish leaseholders and collectors to become objects of hatred to the oppressed and long-suffering peasants. Khmelnytsky told the people that the Poles had sold them as slaves "into the hands of the accursed Jews." With this as their battle-cry, Cossacks and the peasantry massacred a large number of Polish-Lithuanian townsfolk, szlachta, and their Jewish allies during the years 1648-1649. The contemporary 17th century Eyewitness Chronicle (Yeven Mezulah) by Nathan ben Moses Hannover states:

Wherever they found the szlachta, royal officials or Jews, they [Cossacks] killed them all, sparing neither women nor children. They pillaged the estates of the Jews and nobles, burned churches and killed their priests, leaving nothing whole. It was a rare individual in those days who had not soaked his hands in blood...[10]

[edit] Jewish

The entire Jewish population of the Commonwealth in that period (1618 to 1717) has been estimated to be about 200,000[11]. Most Jews lived outside Ukraine in the territories unaffected by the uprising, as the Jewish population of Ukraine of that period is estimated at about 50,000.[12] However virtually all sources agree that Jewish Ukrainian communities were devastated by the uprising. It should be noted that in two decades following the uprising the Commonwealth suffered two more major wars (The Deluge and Russo-Polish War (1654–1667); during that period total Jewish casualties are estimated at least 100,000.[9]

The accounts of contemporaneous Jewish chroniclers of the events tended to emphasize large casualty figures, but they have been reevaluated downwards at the end the 20th century, when modern historiographic methods, particularly from the realm of historical demography, became more widely adopted.[8]. According to Orest Subtelny:

Weinryb cites the calculations of indicating that about 50,000 Jews lived in the area where the uprising occurred. See B. Weinryb, "The Hebrew Chronicles on Bohdan Khmelnytsky and the Cossack-Polish War", Harvard Ukrainian Studies 1 (1977): 153-77. While many of them were killed, Jewish losses did not reach the hair-raising figures that are often associated with the uprising. In the words of Weinryb (The Jews of Poland, 193-4), "The fragmentary information of the period—and to a great extent information from subsequent years, including reports of recovery—clearly indicate that the catastrophe may have not been as great as has been assumed." [13]

Early twentieth-century estimates of Jewish deaths were based on the accounts of the Jewish chroniclers of the time, and tended to be high, ranging from 100,000 to 500,000 or more; in 1916 Simon Dubnow stated:

The losses inflicted on the Jews of Poland during the fatal decade 1648-1658 were appalling. In the reports of the chroniclers, the number of Jewish victims varies between one hundred thousand and five hundred thousand. But even if we accept the lower figure, the number of victims still remains colossal, even exceeding the catastrophes of the Crusades and the Black Death in Western Europe. Some seven hundred Jewish communities in Poland had suffered massacre and pillage. In the Ukrainian cities situated on the left banks of the Dnieper, the region populated by Cossacks... the Jewish communities had disappeared almost completely. In the localities on the right shore of the Dneiper or in the Polish part of the Ukraine as well as those of Volhynia and Podolia, wherever Cossacks had made their appearance, only about one tenth of the Jewish population survived.[14]

Stories about massacre victims who had been buried alive, cut to pieces, or forced to kill one another spread throughout Europe and beyond. These stories filled many with despair, and resulted in a revival of the ideas of Isaac Luria, and the identification of Sabbatai Zevi as the Messiah.[15]

From the 1960s to the 1980s historians still considered 100,000 a reasonable estimate of the Jews killed, and, according to Edward Flannery, many considered it "a minimum".[16] Max Dimont in Jews, God, and History, first published in 1962, writes "Perhaps as many as 100,000 Jews perished in the decade of this revolution." [17] Edward Flannery, writing in The Anguish of the Jews: Twenty-Three Centuries of Antisemitism, first published in 1965, also gives figures of 100,000 to 500,000, stating "Many historians consider the second figure exaggerated and the first a minimum".[16] Martin Gilbert in his Jewish History Atlas published in 1976 states "Over 100,000 Jews were killed; many more were tortured or ill-treated, others fled..."[18] Many other sources of the time give similar figures.[19]

Although many modern sources still give estimates of Jews killed in the uprising at 100,000[20] or more,[21] others put the numbers killed at between 40,000 and 100,000,[22] and recent academic studies have argued fatalities were even lower.

A 2003 study by Israeli demographer Shaul Stampfer of Hebrew University dedicated solely to the issue of Jewish casualties in the uprising concludes that 18,000-20,000 Jews were killed out of a total population of 40,000.[23] Paul Robert Magocsi states that Jewish chroniclers of the seventeenth century "provide invariably inflated figures with respect to the loss of life among the Jewish population of Ukraine. The numbers range from 60,000-80,000 (Nathan Hannover) to 100,000 (Sabbatai Cohen), but that "[t]he Israeli scholars Shmuel Ettinger and Bernard D. Weinryb speak instead of the 'annihilation of tens of thousands of Jewish lives', and the Ukrainian-American historian Jarowlaw Pelenski narrows the number of Jewish deaths to between 6,000 and 14,000".[24] Orest Subtelny concludes:

Between 1648 and 1656, tens of thousands of Jews—given the lack of reliable data, it is impossible to establish more accurate figures—were killed by the rebels, and to this day the Khmelnytsky uprising is considered by Jews to be one of the most traumatic events in their history.[25]

It should also be noted that occasionally the Jewish population was spared, notably after the sack of the town Brody (the population of which was 70% Jewish). The Jews of Brody were judged and "deemed as not engaged in maltreatment of the Ruthenians" and were only required to pay a tribute in "textiles and furs"[26].



1648: Tens of thousands of Jews had been displaced and many had become wanderers, roaming from town to town, barred from permanent settlement. [19]

1648-1655: The Ukrainian Cossacks lead by Bohdan Chmielnicki massacre about 100,000 Jews and similar number of Polish nobles, 300 Jewish communities destroyed. [1][20] In Spain Jews could escape persecution by conversion, whereas in the massacres in the Ukraine in 1648-1649 conversion made no difference. Were the attackers out to capture the souls of the Jews or their money? [2][21]



May 31, 1665: Sabbeti Zevi proclaimed himself Messiah. The most famous of all the False Messiahs, Sabbeti Zevi enthralled tens of thousands of Jews. His message was accepted across all social and economic classes. His followers were to be found throughout Jewish communities in Europe and the Orient. Turkish authorities became alarmed at his growing popularity and had him arrested. The Sultan gave him the choice of proving his claims or suffering the death penalty. The would-be Messiah gave up the game, accepted a minor governmental position in Turkey and converted to Islam. The whole episode might be written off as a farce if it were not for the fact that so many had believed in him and were disillusioned by the outcome. In addition, charges of being a secret supporter of his beliefs would tear at the fabric of Jewish society for decades to come.[22]



May 31, 1740: Frederick William I passed away. As a result of his death, recently passed legislation that would have led to the end of the Jewish community in Berlin was not enforced.[23]



May 31, 1754



[24] Joshua Fry Historical Marker This photograph by Beverly Pfingsten is reprinted here courtesy of the Historical Marker Database. Copyright © 2006–2010 hmdb.org (http://www.hmdb.org/)



The Fry and Jefferson map was originally prepared by Joshua Fry and Thomas Jefferson‘s father

Peter in 1751. It was published in London in 1755 after Fry‘s May 1754 death. Fry was in charge

of leading a military expedition from Wills Creek, but fell from his horse and died. A Colonel

Joshua Fry historical marker is located at Riverside Park in Cumberland, Maryland.[25]



In his 1880 book ―Memoir of Col. Joshua Fry: sometime professor in William and Mary

College, Virginia, and Washington’s senior in command of Virginia forces, 1754, etc., etc.,

…‖, the Reverend P. Slaughter indicates that he found the following anonymous record among

the Fry family‘s papers:

Col. Fry was buried near Fort Cumberland 72, near Will‘s Creek, on May 31, 1754.

Washington and the army attended the funeral; and on a large oak tree, which now

stands as a tomb and a monument to his memory, Washington cut the following

inscription, which can be read to this day: ―Under this oak lies the body of the good, the

just and the noble Fry.‖

Washington did not attend the May 31 burial, as he did not learn of Fry‘s death until June 6. If he

attended Fry‘s funeral service, it was at a later date.[26]







May 31, 1762: Susannah Smith10 [Francis Smith9, William Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1739 / d. 1823) married Col William Preston (b. 1729 / d. 1783).

A. Children of Susannah Smith and William Preston:
. i. Elizabeth Preston (b. May 31, 1762 / d. February 4, 1837)
. ii. John Preston (b. may 2, 1764 / d. March 27, 1827)
+ . iii. Francis Preston (b. August 2, 1765 / d. May 26,1835)
. iv. Sarah Preston (b. may 3, 1767 / d. July 3, 1841)
. v. Ann Preston (b. February 12, 1769 / d. 1782)
. vi. William Preston (b. September 5, 1770 / d. January 24, 1821)
+ . vii. Susannah Preston (b. October 7, 1772 / d. July 21, 1833)
. viii. James Patton Preston (b. June 21, 1774 / d. May 4, 1843)
. ix. Mary Preston (b. September 29, 1776 / d. February 4, 1824)
. x. Letitia Preston (b. September 26, 1779 / d. September 13, 1852)
. xi. Thomas Lewis Preston (b. August 19, 1781 / d. August 11, 1812)
. xii. Margaret Brown Preston (b. February 23, 1784 / d. May 4, 1843)


More about Elizabeth Preston
Elizabeth married William Strouther Madison (b. 1752 / d. 1782)

More about John Preston
John married Mary Rayford (b. 1765 /d. 1810). He also married Eliza Ann Carrington (b. 1769 / d. 1839).

More about Sarah Preston
Sarah married James McDowell (b. 1765)

More about William Preston
William married Caroline Hancock (b. 1785 / d. 1847)

More about Mary Preston
Mary married John Lewis (b. 1758 / d. 1823)

More about Letitia Preston
Letitia married John Floyd (b. 1783 / d. 1837). John was Major as a Surgeon in the War of 1812. John was the Governor of Virginia from 1830 to 1834. Receive the Electoral Vote from North Carolina in the 1832 Presidential Race.

More about Thomas Preston
Thomas married Edmonia Madison Randolph (b. 1787 / d. 1847).

More about Margaret Preston



Margaret married John Preston (b. 1781 / d. 1864) [27]

May 31, 1776: After waiting until May 31, 1776, for the last of the contingency to arrive from Cork, Clinton contemplated moving the British forces to the Chesapeake Bay, since North Carolina had already fallen to the Patriots, but Parker convinced him to head instead for Charleston, South Carolina. [28]

May 31, 1777: Captain Molitor reported two accidents in his diary entry of May 31, 1777. “Today the anchor ropes were fastened on [the anchors] and the anchors secured on the sides of the ship. The 1st mate Briggs, in so doing, had the misfortune that an anchor of sixteen hundredweight, which slipped fell on him. It hit him in the groin above the right hip and knocked him, seriously injured, under it. The mast, which it fell against at the same time, absorbed part of the heavy weight and saved his life. Today we received the report that during the last storm a sailor from the ship Symetry fell from the mast and was never seen again”[29]

May 31st, 1782

May 31st .Friday.—We started earlier this morning than we had done any day yet; & had in the forepart of the Day a midling level Country & open Woods. After 7 miles march we came to a very small run with steep Banks, where on the edge of the Bank the Tuscarawos road joins this path. I went to examine this path with our pilot, and found fresh tracks that had gone down. Not quite 2 miles from this run stood formerly Mohickin John’s Town, surrounded by Glades & small Lakes. A litle fresh run originates at a small Spring, about 300 Yards Back meandreing [sic] through Grottos of Wood and the eastermost Branch of White woman’s Creek winds along the foot of a mountain which closes the prospect, the soil here though not very rich seems sufficiently so for the production of grain, and the lakes are full of fish.

Swamps & Mires intersect the Country, who are almost unavoidable & form dangerous Defiles, to avoid these our pilots sat out a South course along a blind path close to the right of the first Lake: a road they formerly had travelled & they were acquainted with; & left 2 very plain paths to our right bearing W. of which the northermost one leads past a large Lick.

After marching 2 miles we crossed Ku-kub-sing (a branch of White woman’s Creek so called from a Town at the mouth of it) traversed a Glade—recrossed the same Creek, and came upon a miry place but a few yards wide—deep to the shoulders of a horse, & passable by one man at a time only, occasioned by an impenetrable morass on the right & a high steep Hill on the Left. It is a kind a Draft [sic] which empties itself out of this morass into the Creek a few yards from where the main Body crossed it. I tryed whether it was not possible to avoid this draft by crossing the Creek some distance below it, & found it practicable. But a narrow path for 2 or 300 yards continues along the foot of the hill, only passable in an Indian File & beset with thickets.

Our pilots asserted that the other 2 paths we left at Mohickin John’s Town to our right running W. were so miry & hilly that it was impossible for a traveller on foot to get along, three miles farther on we came upon the midle fork of White Woman’s Creek, on which we encamped & here the Glades end— [30]



May 31, 1782

The 1782 recruit shipment for the Waldeck Regiment, escorted by Sergeant Stuckenfrock, included 1 officer, 5 NCOs, 1 medic, 4 drummers, and 124 recruits, plus either 13 or 16 wives. They boarded the transport Enterprise at Bremerlehe with recruits from Anhalt-Zerbst and Brunswick. The Neptune carried equipment for the Waldeck Regiment and the convoy was escorted by the frigates Emerald, Cyclops, and Pettipoint.[31]



To JOHN HARVIE



Mount Vernon, May 31, 1785.

Sir: I. am informed that a patent (in consequence of a Cer­tificate from Commrs. appointed to enquire into, and decide upon claims for settlement of the Western Lands) is about to issue to the heirs of Michl. Cresap, from the Land Office of this Commonwealth, for a tract of land on the river Ohio formerly in Augusta County, now commonly called and dis­tinguished by the [name of Round bottom: against grant­ing which to the heirs of the said Cresap, I enter a Caveat for the following reasons; First, because this Land was discovered by me in the month of Octor. 1770, and then marked; which was before, as I have great reason to believe, the said Cresap, or any person in his behalf had ever seen, or had the least knowledge of the tract. Secondly, because I did at that time, whilst I was on the Land, direct Captn. (afterwds. Col.) Willm. Crawford to survey the same for my use, as a halfway place or stage between Fort Pitt and the 200,000 acres of land which he was ordered to survey for the first Virginia regi­ment agreeably to Govr. Dinwiddie’s Proclamation of 1754. Thirdly, because consequent of this order he made the survey (this survey is either in the hands of the County Surveyc Augusta, or with my agent in the Westn. Country: it is to be found among my papers; tho’ I am sure of the fact, will procure it if necessary) in the month of the following for 587 acres, and returned it to me accord in~ and equally certain I am that it was made before Mr. Cre or any person in his behalf had ever stretch’d a chain there knew of, or, as I have already observed, had taken a sin step to obtain the land. Fourthly, because subsequent of t survey; but previous to any claim of Cresaps, a certain I Brisco possessed himself of the Land, and relinquished after I had written him a letter in the words contained in ti inclosure No. ~ Fifth1y, because upon the first informatic I received of Cresaps pretentions, I wrote him a letter, which No. 2 is a copy. Sixthly, because it was the practic of Cresap, according to the information given me, to notch few trees, and sell as many bottoms on the river above th Little Kanhawa as he could obtain purchasers, to the disquie and injury of numbers. Seventhly, Because the Commrs wh( gave the Certificate under which his heirs now claim, coulc have had no knowledge of my title thereto, being no person in that District properly authorised; during my absence, to support my claim. Eighthly, Because the survey, which was made by Cob. Crawford, who was legally appointed by the Masters of Wm. and Mary College for the purpose of sur­veying the aforesaid 200,000 acres, is expressly recognized and deemed valid by the first section of the Act, entitled an Act, see the Act; as the same was afterwards returned by the sur­veyor of the county in which the Land lay. Ninthly and lastly, Because I have a Patent for the said Land, under the seal of the said Commonwealth signed by the Governr. in due form on the 3oth. day of Octor. 1784; consequent of a begai Survey made the i4th. of (July 14) 73 as just mentioned, and now of record in the Land Office.

For these reasons I protest against a Patent’s issuing for the Land for which the Commissioners have given a Certificate to the Heirs of Mr. Cresap so far as the same shall interfere with mine: the legal and equitable right thereto being in me.

If I am defective in form in entering this Caveat, I hope to be excused, and to have my mistakes rectified, I am unaccus­tomed to litigations; and never disputed with any man until the ungenerous advantages which have been taken of the pe­culiarity of my situation, and an absence of eight years from my country, has driven me into Courts of Law to obtain com­mon justice. I have the honor, etc.”[32]

May 31, 1796: Treaty of New York (also known as Treaty with the Seven Nations of Canada) was a treaty signed on May 31, 1796, between leaders of the First Nations comprising the Seven Nations of Canada and a delegation headed by Abraham Ogden for the United States.[33][34]

May 31, 1821: The Cathedral of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in Baltimore, becomes the first Catholic cathedral in the United States.[35]

May 31, 1836: JEPTHA M. CRAWFORD:
Settled 1831 a short distance South of Oak Grove near Round Prairie, Jackson County, Missouri.
Bought 40 acres, April 25, 1833 in Section 15 Range 48 Township 30. Jackson County Missouri.
Bought 40 acres, May 31, 1836 Section 15 Range 48 Township 30. Jackson County, Missouri.
Bought 40 acres from Richard and Saryn Sneed, 19 September 1846 (NW 1/4 of the NE 1/4 S15 T49 R30) [36]

May 31, 1841: William Henry Harrison's only official act of consequence was to call Congress into a special session. He and Henry Clay had disagreed over the necessity of such a session, and when on March 11 Harrison's cabinet proved evenly divided, the president vetoed the idea. When Clay pressed Harrison on the special session on March 13, the president rebuffed his counsel and told him not to visit the White House again, but to address him only in writing.[71] A few days later, however, Treasury Secretary Thomas Ewing reported to Harrison that federal funds were in such trouble that the government could not continue to operate until Congress' regularly scheduled session in December; Harrison thus relented, and on March 17 proclaimed the special session in the interests of "the condition of the revenue and finance of the country." The session was scheduled to begin on May 31.[72][73][37]



May 31, 1860: Mary Elizabeth Smith12 [Gabriel D. Smith11 , Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. July 3, 1829 in Franklin co MS / d. October 20, 1910 in Carroll Co. GA) married Walter Tillman Warren (b. March 5, 1830 in Henry Co. GA / d. May 14, 1915 in Carroll Co. GA) on August 14, 1853 in Carroll Co. GA.

A. Children of Mary Smith and Walter Warren:
+ . i. William Gabriel Warren (b. August 10, 1854 in GA / d. April 3, 1926 in GA)
+ . ii. Mary Elizabeth Warren (b. June 1857 in GA / d. abt. 1940)
+ . iii. James Walter Warren (b. May 31, 1860 / d. November 11, 1928)
+ . iv. Charles Marion Warren (b. March 31, 1862 in GA / d. December 5, 1940)
. v. Infant Warren (b. abt. 1864 in GA)
+ . vi. Peter Columbus Warren (b. April 24, 1866 in GA / d. January 15, 1941 in TX)
+ . vii. Martha Ann Warren (b. December 20, 1867 in GA / d. January 24, 1959 in TX)
+ . viii. Joseph Abel Warren (b. January 2, 1870 in GA / d, August 13, 1933)
+ . ix. David Solomon Warren (b. July 4, 1871 in GA / d. September 9, 1959)
+ . x. Ida Lelia Warren (b. January 11, 1873 in GA / d. abt. 1956)
. xi. Infant Warren (b. abt. 1875 in GA) [38]

May 31, 1862: Battle of Seven Pines, VA.[39]



Late May, 1862: Wardensville

Trails sign located at 301 E Main St, Wardensville WV 26851
This busy crossroads town saw lots of action during the war. Union Gen. John C. Fremont’s 20,000 soldiers marched through here in late May 1862 on their way back to the Valley after their defeat at the hands of Stonewall Jackson there. Other units large and small found an easy route to Winchester and points south. Southern guerrillas found friends here but were warned that harboring the partisans might result in the destruction
of the town. [40]

Tues. May 31, 1864

Started back at 6 went 12 m and camped

Got a letter and paper from home May 15 date rained hard shower at 4 pm[41]





May 31, 1882: Joseph Gottleib, born May 31,1882 in Neuhof LK Fulda, resided Neuhof. Deportation: 1942, Osttransport. Missing. Osten (last place of residence). [42]



May 31, 1884: Dr. John H. Kellog of Battle Creek, Michigan, applies for a patent for a process to manufacture corn flakes.[43]



To Augusta, May 31, 1865: [44] With the war obviously over, the regiment found it strange that they had to continue with daily battalion or company drill and dress parade every evening. False hopes were raised when orders to march were issued. Instead of a return to Savannah, the regiment was marched to an old United States arsenal three miles southwest of Augusta. Once again, the Iownas put on a show as they marched through town. Large brick buildings provided comfortable quarters for both officers and men. The arsenal had manufactured ammunition and supplies for the Confederate Army during the war. A number of shell fuses and signal rockets provided the regiment with a beautiful evening of fireworks until a misdirected signal rocket killed a member of the 28th Iowa, ending the festivities.[45]



May 31, 1887: Daniel F. MCKINNON

Oct 1831 - 31 May 1887

Repository ID Number: I4632



◾RESIDENCE: Logan, OH
◾BIRTH: Oct 1831, Logan, OH
◾DEATH: 31 May 1887
◾RESOURCES: See: [S434]

Father: Josiah MCKINNON
Mother: Catherine "Catty" Griffin HARRISON



Family 1 : Nancy Lavinia HILL

§ MARRIAGE: 28 Aug 1852



Notes

Early Clark County, Ohio Families, Vital Statistics, Volume 1 Friends of the Library Genealogical Research Group Warder Public Library Springfield, Ohio 45501 1985 Submitted by: Helen Graham Silvey 6947 Serenity Dr., Sacramento, CA 95823


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


_Daniel MCKINNON _______

|

_Daniel MCKINNON ____|

| (1767 - 1837) |

| |________________________

|

_Josiah MCKINNON ____________________|

| (1804 - 1837) m 1826 |

| | _William HARRISON ______+

| | | (1750 - 1782) m 1765

| |_Nancy HARRISON _____|

| (1772 - 1856) |

| |_Sarah CRAWFORD ________+

| (1748 - ....) m 1765

|

|--Daniel F. MCKINNON

| (1831 - 1887)

| _Lawrence HARRISON _____+

| | (1720 - 1771) m 1748

| _Lawrence HARRISON __|

| | (1753 - 1833) m 1788|

| | |_Catherine MARMADUKE ? _

| | (.... - 1772) m 1748

|_Catherine "Catty" Griffin HARRISON _|

(1801 - ....) m 1826 |

| ________________________

| |

|_Mary ALLISON _______|

(1769 - ....) m 1788|

|________________________

[46]


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December 8, 1887

The American Federation fo Labor is established with Samuel Gompers as its first President.[47]



1888: The Secret Doctrine by H. P. Blavatsky is published. [48] An Austrian writer, Guido Van Liste, picks up Blavatski’s idea of an Aryan race. Blavatski rewrote history, Liste rewrote geograph.[49]



Louise C. LeClere, Born May 31, 1818 Died May 31, 1897



June 22, 2009 091

Mary Winch Goodlove takes a time out from the 2009 Tractorcade in Dubuque, Iowa to visit for the first time the French Cemetery where many LeClere’s are buried. She used to visit the LeClere farm for family outings when she was a young girl. Louise Catherine Laude, Mary’s GGGrandmother was born in Semondaus Doube, France. She married George Frederick LeClere in Oswego, Mexico County New York April 3, 1841. He was born in Dampieire, Outre France. Photo June 14, 2009 by Jeff Goodlove

\

May 31, 1900

(Jordan’s Grove) Dick Bowdish was surprised with a birthday present, a new buggy.[50]



It is speculated that W.H. Goodlove purchased this birthday present on May 10, 1900.



May 31, 1914: Albert Elwell STEPHENSON. [6] Born on September 7, 1886 in Chariton County, Missouri. Albert Elwell died in Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri on April 21, 1972; he was 85. Buried in Stephenson Cemetery, Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri.



On May 31, 1914 when Albert Elwell was 27, he married Maude Ann VANCE, in Dade County, Missouri. Born on September 30, 1887 in Dade County, Missouri. Maude Ann died in May 1929; she was 41. Buried in Stephenson Cemetery, Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri.



They had the following children:

i. Nelda May (1915-1973)

ii. Lois (Louis?) Eldridge (1917-1993)

iii. Eldon Pershing (1918-)

iv. Ollie Verlee (1920-)

v. Robert (1922-)

vi. Glendon Dale (1924-)[51]





May 31, 1921: On May 31, Ottilie again overruled them and the objectors reappealed the decision to the county board of education.[52]



May 31, 1944: Departing May 31, for the assault on the Mariana Islands, Morrison with Laws and Benham escorted escort carriers Kitkun Bay and Gambier Bay of VAdm R. K. Turner’s Fifth Fleet attack force, which arrived off Saipan June 15 to commence air strikes. There, attached to Destroyer Squadron 55. [53]



Uncle Howard Snell was on board the Morrison.



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


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


[2] Editor, H. S. (2002;2002). BAR 16:05 (Sep/Oct 1990). Biblical Archaeology Society.


[3] Editor, H. S. (2002;2002). BAR 16:05 (Sep/Oct 1990). Biblical Archaeology Society.


[4] Lost Superpower of the Bible, HIST, 10/10/2007.


[5] Lost Superpower of the Bible, HIST, 10/10/2007.


[6] Lost Superpower of the Bible, HIST, 10/10/2007.


[7] The Greatest Pharoahs, Part 4, 1/26/2001, HISTI


[8] Lost Superpower of the Bible, HIST, 10/10/2007.


[9] Editor, H. S. (2002;2002). BAR 16:05 (Sep/Oct 1990). Biblical Archaeology Society.


[10] Editor, H. S. (2002;2002). BAR 16:05 (Sep/Oct 1990). Biblical Archaeology Society.


[11] The Anchor Atlas of World History, Volume I, page 37.


[12] www.cohen-levi.org


[13] The Oriental Institute Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove January 2, 2011


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


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


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


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


[18] A History of God by Karen Armstrong, page 334.


[19] A History of God by Karen Armstrong, page 334.


[20] [1] www.wikipedia.org




[21] [2] The Changing Face of Antisemitism, by Walter Laquer, page 38.


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


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


[24] In Search of the Turkey Foot Road, page 17.


[25] In Search of the Turkey Foot Road, page 17.


[26] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 78.


[27] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[28] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/lord-dunmore-dispatches-note-of-inexpressible-mortification


[29] Enemy Views, Bruce E. Burgoyne pgs. 42-43


[30] Journal of a Volunteer Expedition to Sandusky, Baron Rosentha, “John Rose”.


[31] Waldeck Soldiers of the American Revolutionary War Compiled by Bruce E. Burgoyne, Heritage Books


[32] The Writings of George Washington from the original manuscript sources, 1745-1799 John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor, Volume 28.



•[33] Ellis, Joseph J. "I Wish I'd Been There: The McGillivray Moment". Random House Inc: 2006.
•Laurence M. Hauptman, Conspiracy of Interests: Iroquois Dispossession and the Rise of New York State (2001).
•Prucha, Francis Paul. "American Indian Treaties: The History of a Political Anomaly". University of California Press: 1994.


[34] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_New_York


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


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


[37] Wikipedia


[38] Descendants of William Smythe


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


[40] http://www.visithardy.com/civil-war/wv-civil-war-history/


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


[42] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

[2] Memorial Book: Victims of the Persecution of Jews under the National socialist Oppression in Germany, 1933-1945. Gedenkbuch (Germany)* does not include many victims from area of former East Germany).


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


[44]

http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/template.cfm?unitname=24th%20Regiment%2C%20Iowa%20Infantry&unitcode=UIA0024RI




[45] Rigby Journal, May 31, 1865; Hoag Diary, May 31, 1865; Longley, Annals of Iowa (April, 1895), p. 51; The History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 205-206.)




[46] Sources

[S434]


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INDEX

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


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HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 10/20/01 12:48:53 PM Central Standard Time. [46]




[47]On This day in America by John Wagman.


[48] Hitler and the Occult, 11/05/2007 NTGEO


[49] Hitler and the Occult, 11/05/2007 NTGEO


[50] Winton Goodlove papers.


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


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


[53] http://destroyerhistory.org/fletcherclass/ussmorrison/

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