Sunday, June 2, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, June 1


“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, June 1
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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



June 1st, 794: - Charles the Great opens general synod in Frankfurt[1]

June 1, 987: Hugh Capet was elected King of France making him the first of the Capetians. During this period, power lay with the nobles and the leaders of the Church. Among other things this meant that the kings were unable to do anything to protect the Jews against the anti-Semitic teachings of the clergy and the resulting hostile actions of the ordinary people against the Jews. To make matters worse, when Hugh Capet was stricken with a mystery malady a Jewish physician was summoned to treat him. Unfortunately, the King died and the Jews were accused of killing him.[2]



June 1, 1096

Emich next proceeded towards Cologne. There had already been anti Jewish riots there in Aopril; and now the Jewsw, panic-stricken by the news from Mainz, scattered themselves among the neighbouring villages and the houses of their Christian acquaintances, who kept them hidden over Whit Sunday, June 1, and the following day, while Emich was in the neighbourhood. The synagogue was burnt and a Jew and a Jewess who refused to apostasize were slain; but the archbishop’s influence was able to prevent further excesses. [3]



About 800 Jews are murdered in Worms, Germany, while many others choose suicide. [4] In Regensburg, the Jews are thrown into the Danube to be “baptized.” In Mainz, Cologne, Prague and many other cities, thousands of Jews are killed and their possessions plundered. During the following hundred years, new crusades are accompanied by massacres and pillage among the Jewish population.[5]



Early June 1096: At Cologne Emich dec ided that his work in the Rhineland was completed. Early in June he set out with the bulk of his forces up the Main towards Hungary. But a large party of followers thought that the Moselle valley also should be purcged of Jews. They broke off from his army at Mainz and June 1 they arrieved at Trier. Most of the Jewish community there was safewly given refuge by the archbishop in his palace; but as the Crusaders approached some Jews in panic began to fight among themselves, while others threw themselves into the Moselle and were drowned. Their persecutors then moved on to Metz, where twenty two Jews perished. About the middle of June thay returned to Colonge, hoping to rejoin Emich; but, finding him gone, they proceeded down the Rhine, spending from June 24 to June 27 in massacring the Jews at Neuss, Wefelinghofen, Eller and Xanten. [6] This was the second massacre at Xanten in a month. Fifty Jews died. At Eller, five Jewish community leaders were assigned the task (by the community) of killing all the members and then themselves rather than suffer at the hands of the Crusaders. Out of a community of three hundred, only four remained, badly wounded.[7] Then the Crusaders dispersed, some returning home, others probably merging with the army of Godfrey of Bouillon.

News of Emich’s exploits reached the parties that had already left for Germany for the East. Volkmar and his followers arrived at Prague at the end of May. [8]





June 1, 1204: King Philip Augustus of France conquered Rouen, the historic capital of Normandy which had been operating under a charter that allowed for self-government. Considering how poorly the French king treated his Jewish subject, his seizure of Rouen could not have been good news for the city’s Jewish population which numbered 6,000 and was strong enough to support its own Yeshiva. During the second half of the twelfth century, whenRouen was governed under the terms of a charter that allowed for self-government, the town was home to 6,000 Jews (approximately 20% of the population) and was the site of yeshiva. In addition, there were a large number of Jews scattered about another 100 communities in Normandy. The well-preserved remains of the yeshiva were discovered in the 1970s under the Rouen Law Courts and the community has begun a project to restore them. In 1215, Rouen would be the site of the Fourth Lateran Council which adopted a panoply of ant-Semitic measures.[9]



June 1, 1252: Alfonso X is elected King of Castile and León. Known as El Sabio (The Learned One) the well educated Christian monarch set out to “to create a Christian culture in the north of Spain that as equal in glory to Moorish culture in the South…He ordered both the Koran and the Talmud to be translated into Latin.” One of the most prominent scientists in his realm was the Jewish astronomer, Yehuda ben Moses Cohen.[10]



1253: Henry III of England introduces harsh anti-Jewish laws. [11] Death of Tibaut IC King of Navarre and French poet, death of King Wenceslas I King of Bohemia, Ottokar II becomes king of Bohemia, William of Rubruque travels in central Asia and reports his experiences, Linen first manufactured in England, Sorbonne founded, Zen master Dogen of Japan dies, Japanese priest Nichiren founds Lotus Sutra Buddhism, Ottakar II the Great named King of Bohemia to 1278, Commercial rivalry leads to war between Genoa and Venice, both Florence and Genoa introduce gold coinage. [12]

Child by Eleanor of Castile and Edward I…


Thomas

June 1, 1300

August 4, 1338

Buried in the abbey of Bury St Edmunds. Married (1) Alice Hales, with issue; (2) Mary Brewes, no issue.[232][13]


June 1, 1434: King Wladislaus II of Poland passed away. During his reign, persecution of the Jews intensified and Wladislaus did nothing to protect them or reinforce the rights that had been granted to them by his predecessors Instead he actually took steps to limit their business activities by issuing an edict limiting their right to lend money.[14]

1435

The second sentence is incomplete, and the full sentence is not

available on Google Books. But here is what I was able to reconstruct:



'One also finds in these sources a Jew by the name of Gottlieb /

Gutleben, who first [appears in the sources (?)] as a Jew from

Mülhausen in 1409 and 1435...'



Ferner begegnet in den Quellen noch ein Jude namens Gottlieb bzw. Gutleben, der erstmals 1409 und 1435 noch immer als Mülhauser Jude nachweisbar



Good luck with your research,Philippe[15]

1435: Printing press is invented in Gutenburg, Germany. [16] Massacre and forced conversion of Majorcan Jews.[17] Peace of Arras between Charles VII and Philip of Burgundy, Swedish Parliament (Riksdag) meets for first time, Togier van der Weyden paints “Descent from the Cross”, Leon Alberti of Italy gives mathematical laws for drawing perspective, Duke of Burgundy allies with Charles VII, Donatello creates David, Three-masted square-rigged ocean ships invented, Rogier van der Weyden creates Descent from the Cross (wooden altarpiece painted), Duke of Burgundy makes alliance with Charles VII of France. [18]

AD 1435 - Forced conversion of Jews in Spain

Desiring to unify their Spanish empire, King Recaredo (586-601 ) converted to Roman Catholicism proclaiming it the official and only religion. Hence, convert or lose citizenship which had been enjoyed by Hispano-Romans, regardless of religion, Pagan, Jewish or Christian.

The onset of the re conquest of Spain from the Moors found the Catholic church giving that endeavor a "crusading" aspect. While the re conquest had its national goal of reunification of Spain into one state, the church was determined not only to eject the " infidel" but to impose their religion, as the only one for all of Spain.

Proselytizing, (trying to convert) became in their hands not a debate or contest for men's minds but a weapon by which to force their conversion. The church made it mandatory for Jews and infidels to attend sermons where the clergy would preach. They often used Jewish converts to deliver the sermons.[31] [19]


AD 1435 - Church council in Bergen, Norway, condemns Sabbath observance

June 1 1581: Gregory XIII issued “Antiqua judaeorum improbitas,” a Papal Bull that “authorized the Inquisition directly to handle cases involving Jews, especially those concerning blasphemies against Jesus or Mary, incitement to heresy or assistance to heretics, possession of forbidden books, or the employment of Christian wet nurses.” (Jewish Virtual Library shows the date as June 1, 1581)[20]



June 1, 1604: From 1604 to 1609, following the return of François Martin de Vitré, Henry developed a strong enthusiasm for travel to Asia and attempted to set up a French East India Company on the model of England and the Netherlands.[31][32][33] On June 1, 1604, he issued letters patent to Dieppe merchants to form the Dieppe Company, giving them exclusive rights to Asian trade for 15 years. No ships were sent, however, until 1616.[30] In 1609, another adventurer, Pierre-Olivier Malherbe, returned from a circumnavigation and informed Henry of his adventures.[32] He had visited China and in India had an encounter with Akbar.[32]

Character


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2c/Henri_IV_Versailles_Museum.jpg/220px-Henri_IV_Versailles_Museum.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf4/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Henry IV, Versailles Museum.

Henry IV proved to be a man of vision and courage. Instead of waging costly wars to suppress opposing nobles, Henry simply paid them off. As king, he adopted policies and undertook projects to improve the lives of all subjects, which made him one of the country's most popular rulers ever.

Henry is said to have originated the phrase "a chicken in every pot". What he is supposed to have said is:




Si Dieu me prête vie, je ferai qu’il n’y aura point de laboureur en mon royaume qui n’ait les moyens d’avoir le dimanche une poule dans son pot!

(If God keeps me, I will make sure that no peasant in my realm will lack the means to have a chicken in the pot on Sunday!)




This statement epitomizes the peace and relative prosperity Henry brought to France after decades of religious war and demonstrates how well he understood the plight of the French worker or peasant farmer. This real concern for the living conditions of the "lowly" population – who in the final analysis provided the economic basis on which the power of the king and the great nobles rested – was perhaps without parallel among the kings of France. It also made Henry extremely popular with the population.

Henry's forthright manner, physical courage, and military successes also contrasted dramatically with the sickly, effete languor of the last Valois kings, as evinced by his blunt assertion that he ruled with "weapon in hand and arse in the saddle" (on a le bras armé et le cul sur la selle). He was also a great womanizer, fathering many children by a number of his mistresses.

Nicknames [edit]

Henry was nicknamed Henry the Great (Henri le Grand), and in France is also called le bon roi Henri ("the good king Henry") or le vert galant ("The Green Gallant").[34] In English he is most often referred to as Henry of Navarre.

Assassination


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Fran%C3%A7ois_Ravaillac.jpg/170px-Fran%C3%A7ois_Ravaillac.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf4/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

François Ravaillac, assassin of King Henry IV, brandishing his dagger, in a 17th-century engraving[21]



June 1, 1656: The Jews of New Amsterdam are allowed to practice their religion, after reminding the Dutch West India Company that Jews "in quietness" were allowed to practice in Holland and other Dutch colonies.[22]

June 1, 1725: (DEEDS SPOTSVYLVANIA - Excerpts) Deed Book A 1722-1729, page 94; 'April 6, 1725, Harry Beverly of Spts Co. to Andrew Harrison of Essex Co. 4600 LBS of tobacco, 600a. in SPTS Co. part of a Pat. granted sd. Beverly. Witnesses, Moseley Battaley, Richard Bayley. Rec June 1, 1725' [23]

June 1, 1778

Winch, Joseph.Private, Capt. John Homes's co., Col. Jonathan Reed's (1st) regt. of guards; muster roll dated June 1, 1778; enlistment, 3 months from April 2, 1778;[24]

June 1, 1779

Month of June. The 1st. At daybreak the row galleys began firing again. During the night General Pattison had erected a battery of two mortars and four heavy guns on Stony Point, from which side the fort was now cannonaded with very good effect. Toward midday the fort surrendered after a loss of thirty killed and as many badly wounded, whereupon the garrison became prisoners of war. The English grenadiers immediately took possession of the fort, and I hurried there to inspect it, where I found the following.

The fort was built of rocks and building stones: an exposed square without flanks or bastions. Each interior side was approximately thirty good paces long. The ditches were a man’s height, a good twelve feet wide, partly in hewn stones and partly walled up with palisades. The breast-work was provided with stockades. In front of the outer scarp of the ditches were chevaux-de-frise, and at a distance of ten paces the whole was surrounded with an abatis of pointed trees. In the middle of the work there was a bomb-proof blockhouse. In the work itself were only two cannon toward the land side; but at the foot of the fort, or on the slope of the hill toward the river side, there was a battery built of stones whose communication was maintained with the ditches. Toward the land and water sides lay several flèches, which, however, were not occupied. In a word, the work was too small, and since everything was of stone each shell caused the greatest injury to the garrison. We found a uniform with silken inner lining near the prisoners, and a dead man wrapped up in blankets hidden under the platform. But we could not learn who this man, to all appearances a French officer, was.

In the afternoon, about two or three o’clock, the entire army marched through the mountains to Verplanck’s Point, which is made into an island by a creek with very marshy banks. The army encamped in the form of a half-circle, being covered by the creek with the Hudson River in the rear.[25]

June 1, 1780: Carl von Clausewitz




Carl Philipp Gottfried von[1] Clausewitz


Clausewitz.jpg
in Prussian service, 1999 painting based on an 1830 original by Karl Wilhelm Wach


Born

(1780-06-01)June 1, 1780
Burg bei Magdeburg, Prussia


Died

November 16, 1831(1831-11-16) (aged 51)
Breslau, Prussia


Allegiance

Kingdom of PrussiaPrussia
(1792–1808, 1813–1831)
RussiaRussian Empire
(1812–1813)


Years of service

1792–1831


Rank

Major-General


Unit

Russian-German Legion
III Corps


Commands held

Kriegsakademie


Battles/wars

Siege of Mainz
Napoleonic Wars


Carl Philipp Gottfried von Clausewitz[1] (play /ˈklaʊzəvɪts/; July 1, 1780 – November 16, 1831[2]) was a Prussian soldier and military theorist who stressed the moral (in modern terms, "psychological") and political aspects of war. His most notable work, Vom Kriege (On War), was unfinished at his death.

•Clausewitz espoused a romantic conception of warfare, though he also had at least one foot planted firmly in the more rationalist ideas of the European Enlightenment. His thinking is often described as Hegelian because of his references to dialectical thinking but, although he probably knew Hegel, Clausewitz's dialectic is quite different and there is little reason to consider him a disciple. He stressed the dialectical interaction of diverse factors, noting how unexpected developments unfolding under the "fog of war" (i.e., in the face of incomplete, dubious, and often completely erroneous information and high levels of fear, doubt, and excitement) call for rapid decisions by alert commanders. He saw history as a vital check on erudite abstractions that did not accord with experience. In contrast to Antoine-Henri Jomini, he argued that war could not be quantified or reduced to mapwork, geometry, and graphs. Clausewitz had many aphorisms, of which the most famous is that "War is the continuation of Politik by other means" (Politik being variously translated as 'policy' or 'politics,' terms with very different implications), a description that has won wide acceptance.[3]


Name

Von Clausewitz's Christian names are sometimes given in non-German sources as "Carl Philipp Gottlieb" or "Carl Maria", because of reliance on mistaken source material, conflation with his wife's name, Marie, or mistaken assumptions about German orthography. He spelled his own given name with a "C" in order to identify with the classical Western tradition; writers who wrongly use "Karl" are seeking to emphasize his German identity. "Carl Philipp Gottfried" appears on Clausewitz's tombstone and thus is most likely to be correct.[26]



June 1, 1781: The 1782 replacement recruits included detactments from all six of the German states supplying troops (Hesse-Cassel, Hesse-Hanau, Brunswick, Anspach-Bayreuth, Waldeck, and Anhalt-Zerbst). The detachment comprised 2018 officers and men, 112 women, and 33 children. They embarked at Bremerlehe on June 1, 1781 and sailed on June 9 I do not have a copy of the embarkation list but the citation is: "Liste von der Einschiffung der nach Amerika bestimmten Troupen zu BremerLehe den 31ten May 1782," Bestand 13, A. 6. (accession 1930/5), Nr. 198, 9. 108, Hessisches Staatsarchiv Marburg. Also "Return of the German Recruits, destin'd for America, after their Embarkation, Bremer Lehe, June 1, 1782" signed by Major General William Fawcett, UK/TNA/PRO, SP 81/195. The fleet comprising two frigates and 14 transports arrived at Halifax on August 13, 14 1782. The Frigates were HMS Emerald, 32-guns, Captain William Knell, and HMS Cyclops, 28-guns, Captain Brabazon Christian. The transports were the Rebecca, Ocean, Littledale, Chudleigh, Hesperus, Berwick, Diana, Elizabeth & Molly, Montagu, Enterprise, Soverign, Neptune, Apollo, and Jupiter."[27]



June 1, 1782

Virginia, also, took measures to inquire into the “Gnadenhuetten affair,” as the following from the Pennsylvania Packet, June 11, 1782 (No. 896), shows:

“Richmond, VA., June 1 [1782].

“Reports from our northwestern frontier mention some very daring inroads of the Indians, who, it is said, have cut off several families settled upon the branches of the Monongahela. . . . We learn that [the Virginia] government have appointed persons [Colonel William Crawford and anotherl to in­quire into the circumstances of the late massacre of the Moravian Indians at the Muskingum towns, which we have great reason to fear has been a very unjustifiable aggression.”[28]



[June 1, 1782—Saturday]



The Delaware and Wyandot spies who were carefully watching the progress of the army marching against them, saw the large force reach the headwaters of the Sandusky River and begin following its left bank along the trail that led to their villages. They immediately sent runners to those villages to alert them, and now preparations began in earnest for the confrontation that would doubtless occur sometime in the next three or four days.

At the orders of their chiefs, Pimoacan and Wingenund, the majority of the Delaware women, children and elderly in the villages and settlements near McCormick’s Trading Post gathered up their goods and trudged northward. Seven miles later, just west of the new Monakaduto’s Town at the mouth of Tymochtee Creek, they entered a deep, well hidden and expansive ravine. Here they set up a temporary camp, where they would remain for their own safety until the confrontation was concluded.

Wingenund and Pimoacan then conferred with Monakaduto and made plans for a surprise attack upon the Americans. Encouraging word had reached them that a force of close to 100 British Rangers[29] was en route to help, and, behind them some miles, under Maj. Butler, was the promised British artillery—two cannon and a coehorn. Traveling with the Rangers, under command of the British deputy Indian agent, Capt. Matthew Elliott, was a fair-size war party of Chippewas and a few Potawatomies, Ottawas and Miamis. Word had also come that upward of 200 Shawnees under their war chief Shemeneto—Black Snake[30]—would be arriving from their villages along the Mad River, some 40 miles to the southwest.

The Indian spies informed the Wyandot and Delaware chiefs on the upper Sandusky that the advance column of Americans had regularly been traveling no more than a few hundred yards ahead of the main force. This made the planning of their ambush easy. In the area the Indians chose to spring their trap, they would simply let the advance pass by unharmed and then strike the main body on all sides simultaneously. They harbored no doubt as to what the outcome of the struggle would be, but it was Pimoacan—the feared Captain Pipe—who put it into words.

“We will destroy them all,” he said simply.[31]



June 1st, Saturday, 1782

June 1st Saturday.—Immediately after crossing this middle Fork the road takes Westerly and is very broken, hilly, & full of disagreeable thickets. After passing a small Bottom, we ascended a ridge full of fallen timber several miles long running between N.W. & due North. the distance from the middle to the, third fork of White woman’s Creek, which is thought the main branch is here about 5 miles. After crossing it, you crawl upon an uneven road beset with thickets along the slanting side of a bill for near 1 Mile, which ends in a beautifull Bottom & continues 1? miles to Hell Town, which on account of the pleasantness of its situation rather deserves the name of the Elysian fields. Hell Town lies upon the Banks of this third fork of White Woman’s Creek, which we recrossed at the Town, entered a beautifull Bottom where we halted to form & consult the discovery of a large Indian trail to our Right occasioned the sending out of reconnoitring parties. these detected 2 Indians who were fired at 8 times but they made their escape. This unexpected alarm moved us to form in Line of Batle of which this i&? our plan: everybody facing outwards, viz—



Immediately after Col. Crawford called here a Council of all his field officers & Captains. He was moved to this step, he said: by the murmuring of the party communicated to him and by finding the evening before that upon a particular enquiry some Men were reduced to 5 Lb. of Flour & that the generality did not exceed 10 days provisions. He represented; that: as we had been discovered since the 28th May, the enemy would have sufficient time to collect all their forces to Sandusky. By the information he had of Gen’ Clarke, who was particularly assiduous in getting this information, all their forces would be collected within a Circle of about 50 Miles. Roche de Bout where the Brittish kept a regular Port was but 80 miles from either of the Sanduskies by Selover’s information. The Shawnoes lived within 40 miles—Lower Sanduskies from the upper but 35 miles & from this place they could sail in 20 hours across the Lake to Detroit.—He doubted not, but what he could reach Sandusky with his forces, but his return would certainly be very difficult. How would we carry our wounded along and wounded we would have if we proceeded—How secure a retreat, if we were defeated? How succeed in taking the Town & destroying the Indians if as he was told, they had strong Block houses?[32]

If they did relinquish that design of proceeding to Sandusky, these frequent & larger Indian trails to the North did certainly indicate to his opinion an Indian Settlement. they would follow them & could not fail of meeting with success. Mr. Zaines our pilot who was called upon, confirmed that he knew there had been half ways to Sandusky about 30 Miles from this place a Town called D” Town [sicj That it lay about 10 Miles to the North east from the common Road to Sandusky. That they could not take off from the Road on the Beach ridge, opposite that place, to get to it; but that they ought to quit the beaten path here, & follow the Trail to our Right— But the opinion of the council was against receding from the first proposed plan, and determined to go to Sandusky. Accordingly we took up our Line of march, crossed a run, marched 9 miles through a variable country along a path quite blind, & only recognizable by the Blazes in the trees. We encamped this night on the midle fork of White-woman’s Creek.[33]



ORDERS GIVEN ON AN EXPEDITION OF VOLUNTEERS TO SAN­DUSKY, 1782.



WHITE WOMAN’s CREEK N° 7

Orders June 1st 1782

The most criminal neglect of the Sentries on their posts requires the utmost Vigilance of the officers mounting Guard to prevent it. The different Officers on Picquet must alternately visit all their Sentries every half hour—and the Field Officer of the day twice every Night. the Col. Command is sorry that officers would leave it in the power of their men to excuse their punishable conduct by a similar criminality in the Officer. The utmost exertions are necessary and it is likewise necessary that the Officer set the example of ‘Vigilance Activity and attention to his men. A Soldier forfeits his Life, by leaving his post or being found asleep on it. Our fatigues are of so short a duration that this certainly aggravates our criminal conduct.[34]



June 1, 1784: In the spring of 1782 occurred the Indian raids into Washington

county, followed by the slaughter of the peaceful Moravian Indians in

the Ohio towns by Col. David Williamson's command, and the Craw-

ford expedition against the Sandusky Indians, resulting in the burning

of Col. Wm. Crawford at the stake. The times were almost as cloudy

as ever. But in 1783, the authorities of each state appointed four

commissioners to run and mark the permanent boundary. Rev. John

Ewing, David Rittenhouse, John Lukens and Thomas Hutchins were

appointed by Pennsylvania. By Virginia, Rev. James Madison, Rev.

Robert Andrews, John Page and Thomas Lewis were appointed. June

1, 1784, was the time set for beginning the work.[35]

June 1, 1792: Kentucky joins the Union as the fifteenth state.[36]

June 1, 1798: William Henry Harrison resigned from the army. [37]

June 1, 1809

Appropriation for the Year of 1809

For the associate Judges the Sum of 150.00

For the States Atorney the Summ of 100.00

For the Commissioner’s the Sum of 100.00

For the Clerk of Court Pay 60.00

For the Sheriff of the County Pay 60.00

For the Sheriff of the County Pay 60.00

For the Grand juror’s Pay 90.00

For the Clerk for opening Receiving and Certifying elections 5.00

For pay 80.00

For Blank Books and Stationary Pay 18.00

For Lisgter Collector and Treasurer’s Pay 160.00

For Wolf and Panthers Scalps Pay 150.00

For Judges Carrying in Election Returns Pay 10.00

For the Clerk attending Sopecial Sessions Pay 6.00

For Extraordinary Services Pay 60.00

Fopr the Clerk of the Commissioner’s Pay 40.00

For the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas sfor making out the Duplicate of Military Land and Sending the Same to the Auditor’s office Pay.

Made by the Commissioners of the County of Champaign



Joseph Vance Clk

For B.C.C.C.[38]



June 1, 1812: James Madison becomes the first President to ask Congress to declare war. President Madison lists his grievances justifying his call for war on Great Britain.

They include interfering with trade on the high seas, and inciting Indian attacks on the frontier. The issue that causes the most outrage tops Madison’s list, “British ships have continually violated the American flag on the great highway nations and have seized and carried off person’s sailing under its protection. They spill American blood within the waters under our territorial control.” [39]



June 1, 1880: HISTORY OF CLARK COUNTY. - 243

MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS FOR THE YEAR ENDING JUNE 1 1880.

CHART NOT SHOWN

COUNTY POPULATION




1820

1830

1840

1850

1860

1870

1880


POPULATION

9533

13114

16882

22178

25300

32070

41948


[40]



June 1, 1830: Sarah Preston:
Sarah married 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. [41]





June 1-July 18, 1862: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) a soldier in the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry at Grand Junction and Holly Springs. [42]



Wed. June 1, 1864

In camp all eday on a small mudy byo near

Where gen green took 19th Iowa prisoners 1863 lightshower of rain[43]



June 1-12, 1864: Battle of Cold Harbour, VA.[44]



June 1, 1897: George Frederick LeClere immigrated with his parents to America in 1828 and settled in Mexico Oswego Co. New York. They settled in heavy timber, some which they cut, piled up and burnt using the ashes as fertilizer, as the soil was thin and rocky, then used the cleared off land to raise crops on.

On April 23 1841 he was married to Miss Louise Katherine Laude, a native of France (Semondaus Doubs France)

They began farming in Oswego Co. New York, where they lived until 1840 when they came to Iowa and settled on a Mineral reserve, an 80 acre farm 8 miles south of Dubuque.

They traveled from New York by the way of the canal and over the Great Lakes to Chicago, which was then swamp. Their emigrant wagons and oxen were put on shore. There were 18 in the party, which helped each other get through the swamp, with wooden poles prying their heavy wagons up as oxen pulled.

By good management and thrift he continued to add to his land until he became the owner of over 1800 acres of land. He accumulated a considerable fortune a goodly portion of which he presented to his children several years before his death.

They moved to Monticello Iowa in 1878. His wife died June 1st, 1897 and was buried in the French Cemetery near Dubuque Iowa. After her death he made his home with his children. He died October 24th 1904 and was buried in the French Cemetery near Dubuque Iowa.

To this union eight children were born. Names are in the following history.

For example to trace use Charles F. LeClere No.I, find Charles F. LeClere with (I) under that you will find all of his children. Take his oldest child No. ( or any other, turn to (9) and find all of Henry C. LeClere’s children etc.

You will find some of the history not filled, but I have tried to find all of the information I could. From year to year you will have to add on yourself.[45]

June 1, 1941: British forces withdraw from Crete.[46]



June 1, 1942: UP report from London in striking contrast to 700,000 slain Polish Jews that the BBC would broadcast the next day, it declared that the Nazis had killed 200,000 Jews in Russia, Poland, and the Baltic states.[47] The Seattle Times chose this report for its top story on June 1; the paper’s main headline read, “JEWS SLAIN TOTAL 200,000!” (It was one of the very few times during World War II when a Holocaust even received a front –page headline in an American metropolitan daily.)[48]

June 1, 1943: The final liquidation of the Lvov ghetto begins. When the Jews resist, 3,000 are killed. Seven thousand are sent to Janowska.[49]



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[1] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/794


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


[3] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 88.


[4] http://www.friends-partners.org/partners/beyond-the-pale/english/08.html


[5] http://www.friends-partners.org/partners/beyond-the-pale/english/08.html


[6] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 88.


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


[8] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 88.


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


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


[11]


[12] mike@abcomputers.com


[13] Wikipedia


[14]


[15] Phillippe Email, May 8, 2010.


[16] The Reformation, The Adventure of English. 12/10/2004, HISTI


[17] www.wikipedia.org


[18] mike@abcomputers.com


[19] Romano, D. (1988). Per a una historia de la Girona Jueva (Vols. 1-2). [A History of the Jews of Girona] Girona: Ajuntamente de Girona. http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/




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


[21] Wikipedia


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


[23] Notes provided by Carrie Hoffert:


[24] Ancestry.com. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols. [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1998. Original data: Secretary of the Commonwealth. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution. Vol. I-XVII. Boston, MA, USA: Wright and Potter Printing Co., 1896.


[25] Diary of the American War: A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs 161-163


[26] Wikipedia


[27] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/ts/ships.htm


[28] Washington-Irving Correspondence by Butterfield, 1882.




[29] Sending runners to Detroit, the Indians also garnered support from their allies the British. Upon hearing of the coming American invasion, Arent Schuyler de Peyster, commandant at Detroit, immediately dispatched a mounted force of British soldiers known as Butler’s Rangers to Sandusky to assist the Indians. The English force, numbering about 100 men, took with them two canons and a mortar. With help approaching from the north and the south it was up to the Wyandots and Delawares to hold off the Americans until help arrived. It was decided to make no effort to impede the Americans’ progress.

(Dan Reinart)


[30] Black snake. Actually two different snakes. First, the black racer is a snake that’s all black except for the whitish coloring on the bottom of its neck. It’s 3 to 5 feet long. Its neck is thin about the same as the rest of its body. Walking through the woods, this snake can be bothersome due to its habit of shaking its tail in a way that rustles dry leaves sounding like a rattlesnake.

The other black snake, the bigger one, is the black rat snake. It can grow to be 4 to 8 feet long. The chances are you’ll never come across a longer snake in PA. Its belly from head to tail is a whitish-yellow, and its head is fairly large and boxy. The Indians left snakes alone and would not eat them like the settlers sometimes did. Because several of the bigger snakes were good mousers, farmers with grain storage would leave them alone and tell their children to do likewise. These snakes can help keep the field mouse population in check.

Non-poisonous snakes were sometimes known to enter barns or sheds where chickens would lay eggs and help themselves. Anyone living around snakes for any period has come across a dead snake with an animal lodged inside its mouth where the snake was unable to ingest the creature, but also unable to eject it. The snake would literally die from biting-off more than it could chew.

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


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


[32] Block House. Five brick Block Houses were built in 1764 at the site of Fort Pitt after Pontiac’s War. Known at the time as Bouquet’s Redoubt. One Block House has survived and has been refurbished into a popular museum.



Block House. Point State Park—Pittsburgh. Photo by the compiler. Enlarged photo

One of the five "redoubts" built by Colonel Henry Bouquet in 1764 to protect Fort Pitt from Indian attacks. Serving as a part of the Fort Pitt complex, it remains as the oldest building in Pittsburgh as well as being perhaps the oldest authenticated structure west of the Allegenies.

After Fort Pitt was dismantled, the Issac Craig family used the Block House as a detached kitchen—as was common in those days. Craig's son, Neville, was born in the Block House in 1787. The property became one of the many holdings of James O'Hara and eventualy ended-up with his descendent Mary Croghan Schenley. Mrs. Schenley transferred ownership of the Block House to The Pittsburgh Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1894.

The Block House is free to the public and is a privately owned national historical landmark.


(See Isaac Craig and Anthony Wayne.)

http://www.thelittlelist.net/bactoblu.htm#blanket


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


[34] Journal of a volunteer Expedition Against Sandusky, Von Pilchau


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


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


[37] http://www.in.gov/history/markers/515.htm


[38] Champaign County Clerk


[39] First Invasion: The War, HISTI, 9/12/2004


[40]HCCO


[41] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[42] History of Logan County and Ohio, O.L. Basking & Co., Chicago, 1880. page 692.


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


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


[45] Mrs. M.J. Cass Sec.

Monticello, Iowa.

August 1st. 1956.

Compiled by Mrs. Lulu Howie Cass, Monticello Iowa


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


[47] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 22.


[48] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 22.


[49] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1776

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