Saturday, June 15, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, June 14


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

10,542 names…10,542 stories…10,542 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, June 14
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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 14, 1287: Kublai Khan defeated the force of Nayan and other traditionalist Borjigin princes in East Mongolia and Manchuria. It is quite possible that there were Jewish soldiers serving under the great Mongol warrior who became Emperor of China. According to Marco Polo, Kubla Kahn celebrated the festivals of the Jews as well as those of the Muslims and Christians, indicating that a Jewish community existed that could make itself felt at the highest level of the Empire.[1]

June 1421: In June 1421, Henry V returned to France to continue his military campaigns.[2]

Henry V is the 4th cousin 18x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



June 1471: Edward V was born on November 2, 1470 in Westminster Abbey. His mother, Elizabeth Woodville, had sought sanctuary there from Lancastrians who had deposed his father, the Yorkist King Edward IV, during the course of the Wars of the Roses. Edward was created Prince of Wales in June 1471, following Edward IV's restoration to the throne, and in 1473 was established at Ludlow Castle on the Welsh Marches as nominal president of a newly-created Council of Wales and the Marches.

Prince Edward was placed under the supervision of the queen's brother Anthony, Earl Rivers, a noted scholar, and in a letter to Rivers, Edward IV set down precise conditions for the upbringing of his son and the management of his household.[1] The prince was to "arise every morning at a convenient hour, according to his age". His day would begin with matins and then mass, which he was to receive uninterrupted. After breakfast, the business of educating the prince began with "virtuous learning". Dinner was served from ten in the morning, and then the prince was to be read "noble stories ... of virtue, honour, cunning, wisdom, and of deeds of worship" but "of nothing that should move or stir him to vice". Perhaps aware of his own vices, the king was keen to safeguard his son's morals, and instructed Rivers to ensure that no one in the prince's household was a habitual "swearer, brawler, backbiter, common hazarder, adulterer, [or user of] words of ribaldry". After further study, in the afternoon the prince was to engage in sporting activities suitable for his class, before evensong. Supper was served from four, and curtains were to be drawn at eight. Following this, the prince's attendants were to "enforce themselves to make him merry and joyous towards his bed". They would then watch over him as he slept.

King Edward's diligence appeared to bear fruit, as Dominic Mancini reported of the young Edward V:

In word and deed he gave so many proofs of his liberal education, of polite nay rather scholarly, attainments far beyond his age; ... his special knowledge of literature ... enabled him to discourse elegantly, to understand fully, and to declaim most excellently from any work whether in verse or prose that came into his hands, unless it were from the more abstruse authors. He had such dignity in his whole person, and in his face such charm, that however much they might gaze, he never wearied the eyes of beholders.[2][3]



Edward V is the 6th cousin 16x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



June 1473, Richard III persuaded his mother-in-law to leave sanctuary and come to live under his protection at Middleham. Later in the year, under the terms of the 1473 Act of Resumption,[14] Clarence lost some of the property he held under royal grant, and made no secret of his displeasure.[4]



Richard III is the 5th cousin 17x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



June 14, 1514: Azemmour, a city in Morocco, offered privileges to Jews fleeing from Portugal.[5]

1515: After the forfeiture of the Lordship of the Isles the Mackinnons tended to follow the MacLeans of Duart, though occasionally the clan sided with the MacDonalds of Skye, in the MacDonald's battles with the MacLeods.[10] The name of the chief of the clan in 1493 is unknown..[10][6] [7]Neil Mackennon of Mishnish was the head of the tribe in 1515.[8]

Neil Mackennon is the 12th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 14, 1656: Directors of the Dutch West India Company sent a strong letter to Peter Stuyvesant in New Amsterdam ordering him to give "more respect" to the "Jews or Portuguese people" in his city. A principle shareholder in the company, a Jew named Joseph d'Acosta had assisted in obtaining this statement.[9]



Friday June 14, 1754:

Captain James Mackay with the Independent Company of South Carolina arrives at The Great Meadows with 100 men. These men are welcome reinforcements as they are regular, well trained British soldiers. Problems of rank almost arise between Mackay and Washington. Mackay's rank is lower, but, obtained from the Crown and it takes precedence over Washington's Colonial rank. However Washington will not agree to turn over command of his men. The two men agree to essentially share leadership through consensus.[10]



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



June 14, 1782



Next day, I made a due East course which I generally kept the rest of my journey. I often imagined my gun was only wood bound, and tried every method I could devise to unscrew the lock but never could effect it, having no knife nor anything fitting for the purpose,[11]



This massacre was bitterly repaid in the defeat of Col. William Crawford's force of 480 mounted men in June, 1782. They started from the old Mingo town on the west side of the Ohio with the object of attacking the Moravian Indians, as well as the Wyandots, in the same neighborhood. The Indian towns were found deserted, and the force pushed on after the retreating foe. Col. Williamson was second in command. The whites were fiercely attacked on the Sandusky plains (now Wyandot County), forced to retreat, and suffered a humiliating defeat. The Indians killed or captured the majority of the force, and among the latter were Col. Crawford and his son-in-law, Maj. Harrison; but, by some decree of Providence, Williamson was allowed to escape, and the innocent left to suffer the penalty of his cruel murder of the Moravian Indians. Col. Crawford and Maj. Harrison were put to death. The latter was squibbed to death with powder at Wapatomika (Logan County), while Crawford was burned at the stake in what is now Wyandot County. The burning of Col. Crawford, as related by Dr. Knight, was one of the most horrible scenes in the annals of Indian warfare. It took place in a low bottom west of Upper Sandusky, and eight miles from the mouth of Tymochtee Creek, on the east bank of that stream. His hands were fastened together behind his back, a rope tied to the ligature binding his wrists and then made fast to a stake close to the ground, giving him sufficient length of rope to walk around the stake twice and back again. His ears were cut off, seventy charges of powder fired into his body from the neck down, his blistering skin punched with burning poles, and as he walked around over a bed of fire, the inhuman devils would throw hot coals and ashes upon him. Thus for three hours this awful scene went on, ending by scalping him and throwing coals of fire upon his bleeding head as he lay dying upon the ground. His body was then thrown into the fire and burnt to ashes.

Col. Crawford was the great-grandfather of Theophilus McKinnon, who died at London, Ohio, in April, 1882. Mr. McKinnon's parents settled in Clark County in 1803, whence he removed to Madison. His mother was the daughter of Maj. Harrison, who was squibbed to death with powder at Wapatomika. Soon after settling in Clark County, four Indians called at her house one day for dinner, and, while eating, informed her, in answer to some questions, the manner and place in which her father suffered death ; also that two of the party had been present at the execution of her grandfather. Throughout the campaign, this was the fate of nearly all captured males, few escaping death in some form peculiar to the devilish ingenuity of the savages. Dr. Knight and the guide, Slover, who were also captured with Crawford and Harrison, were intended to be put to death in a similar manner. The former escaped from a young Indian into whose care he was given to be taken to a town forty miles distant from Sandusky. Slover was brought to Grenadier Squaw town, stripped for execution, tied to the stake, and the fire kindled, but a terrible storm arose and put out the fire, when the Indians, looking upon this as the manifestation of an angry God, postponed the horrid deed, and that night Slover escaped. [12]

William Harrison was William Crawford's son-in-law. He was killed by Indians on the disastrous Sandusky campaign in 1782, which also claimed the life of his father-in-law.[13]









1782

Tuesday, October 18, 2005 (2)

Colonel William Crawford 1732-1782

Seventh Regiment of the Virginia Battalion

By Professor Bobert D. Chadeayue

Wednesday, October 19, 2005 (2)

At the Museum in Wyondat county is a model reenacting the battle and William Crawfords sword. This sword was found in a field nearby. [14]

In the Grace Goulder “This is Ohio” are many interesting facts of interest. She says,

“All through this county (Wyondat) are Crawford statues and markers, and lore about martyrdom, the tragedy that happened in 1782 and has been the subject of many novels, including one by Ohioan Zane Grey.”

Wednesday, October 19, 2005 (3)

“In memory of Col. Crawford who was Burned by the Indians in this valley June 11, 1782”. Photo Gary and Mary Goodlove 2/19/02

Wednesday, October 19, 2005 (4)

Gary Goodlove by the Crawford Monument . 2/19/02. The base of the monument says “Erected by Wyandot Country Patriotic Citizens, 1994. [15]

I have to visit Wyondat County some day. I have located the book entitled, “Betty Zane” which tells the story of witnesses to the massacre of William Crawford and others involved in the Sandusky Campaign. Betty Zane is an ancestor of Zane Grey. Zane Grey was named after his mother whose last name was Zane of the Zanesfield, Ohio, Zanes. This book was the first novel of 54 which he authored and many were made into motion pictures. I am told most libraries carry them in a section marked “Westerns.” Zanesfield, Ohio in Logan County , a little S.W. of Bellefontaine on Highway #33. Near there are the “Zane’s Caverns” and there’s a Zanesville on Interstate #70 East of Columbus.

In a short biographical sketch of the Harrisons , I noticed under John Harrison...”His friends included the ailing George Rogers Clark and the scout Lewis Wetzel who became Zane Grey’s fictional Indian Hunter called “Death Wind.”

In the “Betty Zane” novel on pages 195-200 of Chapter Ten it tells of his ancestor, Jonathan Zane, who had returned from the Sandusky Expedition with his explanation of the Crawford death. (Jonathan Zane is listed on the official roster of the Sandusky Expedition which I obtained from the Mesa Arizona Mormon Library.) According to Zane Grey’s writing Jonathan Zane survived the battle by hiding in a log and later during his escape, he “saw Crawford tied to a stake and a fire started at his feet. I was not 500 yards from the camp. I saw the war chiefs, Pipe and Wingenund; I saw Simon Girty and a uniformed British Officer. The chiefs and Girty were once Crawford’s friends. They stood calmly by and watched the poor victim slowly burn to death.” This novel tells that all the prisoners taken by the Indians were killed, no doubt, in revenge for the Indians killed in the Moravian Massacre, Jonathan Zane reported. Zane Grey writes that Jonathan Zane shot a white horse from under Simon Girty.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Jonathan Zane watched William Crawford burned to death from this ridge near the cemetery not far from Upper Sandusky, Ohio. See chapter 10 of Betty Zane by Zane Grey-his first book. [16]

Allan Eckert writes a much more convincing account that Simon Girty made a serious attempt to save the life of William Crawford Eckert claims that Girty enlisted Chief Wingenund, who had been a good friend of Crawford before the Moravian Massacre, to spare Crawford’s life.[17]




6-19-2007-23[18]

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



Official roster of the Sandusky Expedition



Associated Battalions and Militia of the Revolution



Wednesday, October 19, 2005 (5)

Painting of Wyandot County Museum where many artifacts remain. 2/19/02 Photo by Gary and Mary Goodlove

Wednesday, October 19, 2005 (6)

Interesting piece of woodwork at the Wyandot Museum. [19]



June 14, 1796

On June 14, 1796, Warrant no 21, entry no. 2681, John Crawford (heir) was nonresident, transferred 50 acres to William Winship, for $3.29 Recorded 1805. (on the Ohio River.[20]

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

June 14, 1796: French forces attacked Frankfurt. An artillery barrage aimed at the Austrian arsenal next to the ghetto struck the Judengasse instead. The subsequent fired burned so much of the ghetto that 2,000 of its inhabitants were left homeless. This forced the city’s senate to suspend the decree forbidding Jews from living elsewhere in the city. The fire effectively marked the end of the Jewish Ghetto in Frankfurt.[21]

June 14, 1800: mQuestion by Bill LeClere: Can anyone help me find the name of the cavalry (horse) regiment which was bodyguard to Napoleon in 1799 in Austria? My ancestor Joseph was one of the few to survive the defeat of this regiment when it was sent forward and cut off by the Austrians in December 1799. The name of the regiment is needed if I am to locate his military records. All help is appreciated.[22]



Answer by Jeff Hannan: In November 1799 Napoleon was in Paris leading the coup d’etat from which he became Consul. Christmas 1799 he became 1st Consul.

As for his bodyguard, there was his personal one “the Guides a cheval”, [Company of mounted guides] formed in May 1796 following a raid by Austrian Hussars at [disputed depends what you read] from which he only just evaded capture.

Once he became 1st Consul he merged the Guides with the Gard du Directoire [Guard of the Directory] and others to become a single unit consisting of infantry and cavalry the Gards des Consuls [Guard of the Consulates] that would later became the foundation of the Imperial Guard. Following the merger the Guides were renamed as the Escadron de Chasseurs-a-Cheval de La Gard Consulair [Company of light cavalrymen of the Consular Guard] then later the Chasseurs a Cheval de la Garde Imperiale [light cavalrymen of Imperial Guard], one of several cavalry units of the Imperial Guard. Early in 1800 Napoleon started his Italian campaign and the Gardes des Consuls would be involved [infantry and cavalry] in the Battle of Marengo(June 14, 1800) from which the Guard became famous and it appears it was the renamed “the Guides a cheval” company that was present during the battle and led one of the final cavalry charges that contributed so much to Napolean’s victory. Perhaps that is the battle your ancestor was involved in. [23]



June 14, 1810



Ordered That Samuel McCord be allowed Eleven Dollars in part for his annul Services as Sheriff for the 1809.[24] Samuel McCord was Sheriff from 1810 to 1813 in Champaign County, Ohio.[25]



June 14, 1839: DR. BENJAMIN T. McKINNON, physician and farmer; Lewistown; was born in Clark Co., O., October 24, 1834; was the youngest son of Judge McKinnon, of Clark Co., O.; moved to Bloomfield Tp. when a boy, and has spent his life in Washington and Bloomfield Tps.; on February 29th 1860, he married Charlotte, youngest daughter of Maj. Hanford, the first white settler of the tillage of Lewistown. Mrs. McKinnon, was born at the same place they now live, June 14, 1839. The doctor has attended to the two-fold duty of physician and farmer, and here the many friends and relations of the family meet and renew old friend ships. Among the relatives is a brother-in-law, Dr. McWorkman, principal of the St. Louis School for the Blind, and an old resident of the county, who is a regular visitor. Dr. and Mrs. McKinnon have two children-Hattie Pearl and Willard L. The center building of the house now occupied by Dr. McKinnon was built before the war of 1812, and was occupied by a noted friendly Indian, named Lewis, from whom the town of Lewistown was named. The house was also used as a " council chamber" by the Red men, and many are the tales of blood its old walls could relate, were they gifted with speech. Lewis lived there at the time of the cruel murder of Thompson and his son, but he was away at. the time. The murderers were hid there during the day and night succeeding that affair by Lewis' squaw, who was hostile to the whites, and when a party in pursuit of the redskins asked her if she had seen any hostile Indians, declared she had not. But, after the war, the whites were told by Polly Kaiser, a little white girl, a captive from Kentucky, who was living with Lewis' squaw at the time, that five of the red devils were in the upper room when the white pursuers were there. Mrs. McKinnon has in her possession a plaster cast, or "false face," as it is called, supposed to have been taken from a famous Indian named Babtista. A gentleman of good authority says he has seen Babtista, and that it is not ugly enough for that savage: he thinks it is a likeness of the famous "Big Turtle." Note: On Babtista, see comments of Theophilus McKinnon. [26]



Dr. Benjamin Franklin McKinnon is the 1st cousin 4x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.





June 14, 1861

At this writing the tombstone of Conrad and Cordelia are in fairly good shape on Lot #13 of the original lot at Oakshade Cemetery in Marion, Iowa.

Burial next to them is Conrad’s son, Joseph, and Mrs. Pyle.

Copy of the receipt for the headstone (Ref #29) reveals that Conrad died June 14, 186l.[27]

1793-June 14, 1861


Conrad Goodlove



Birth:

1793


Death:

June 14, 1861
Marion
Linn County
Iowa, USA


http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
Conrad Goodlove was born in 1793 and died June 14, 1861, at his home in the Wilcat Grove area of rural north Marion Township, Linn County, Iowa. He is buried in the Pioneer section of Oak Shade Cemetery, Marion, Iowa.
Conrad married Catherine McKinnon, June 10, 1818, in Clark County, Ohio. She was born in 1795, daughter of Judge Daniel McKinnon. Her mother's maiden name was Harrison. Catherine died September 5, 1849 and is buried in Old Moorefield Cemetery, Clark County, Ohio.

She was the mother of Conrad's first six children. They were all born in Clark County, Ohio and are: Matilda L.; John W.; Nancy Jane; Mary Ann; Joseph V.; and William Harrison.

Conrad and Catherine were early settlers of Ohio. At the time of the War of 1812, Conrad enlisted and served as a sergeant in the Calvary under Captain Sam McCord.

Conrad's second wife was Cordelia Pyle. She was born in 1811 and died October 21, 1872. They were married in Clark County, Ohio, October 28, 1852. They had one son, Morris Goodlove. She is buried in Oak Shade Cemetery beside Conrad.

The Goodlove family spent their first year in Iowa in the West Union area. In the year 1854, the family came to Linn County and settled at Wildcat Grove (sometimes referred to only as "Wildcat") at the north edge of Marion Township, just south of the Maine township boundary, where Conrad had purchased a rather large tract of land. He became a prosperous farmer in the area.


Family links:
Spouses:
Catherine McKinnon Goodlove (____ - 1849)
Cordelia Pyle Goodlove (1811 - 1872)*

*Calculated relationship


Burial:
Oak Shade Cemetery
Marion
Linn County
Iowa, USA



Created by: AK Gray
Record added: Jun 04, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 91358579


Conrad Goodlove
Added by: AK Gray


Conrad Goodlove
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Hiesela


[28]

Conrad Goodlove is the 3rd great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



June 14, 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.

On the morning of May 27, and again on June 14, the Union army launched ferocious assaults against the 4 ½ mile-long string of earthworks protecting Port Hudson. These actions constituted some of the bloodiest and most severe fighting in the entire Civil War.

As the siege continued, the Confederates nearly exhausted their ammunition and were reduced to eating mules, horses and rats. When word reached Gardner that Vicksburg had surrendered, he realized that his situation was hopeless and nothing could be gained by continuing the defense of Port Hudson. Surrender terms were negotiated, and on July 9, 1863, after 48 days and thousands of casualties, the Union army entered Port Hudson. The siege became the longest in American military history.[29]



Tues. June 14, 1864

Arrived at carlton at 6 am

Went into camp between carollton and

Greenville[30] nice camp[31]



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

June 14, 1865: Sim Whitsett’s daughter Minnie May was born on February 27, 1882 on the family farm in Jackson County, Missouri north of Lee's Summit. She trained at Warrensburg Normal School and taught school in southern Jackson County until Sim moved the family to Texas. Her future husband Ernest B. Pearce remained in Missouri and their courtship continued by mail until they were married in Hereford, Texas. The couple returned to Missouri and built a home in Pleasant Hill. They lived there until failing health forced them to give up housekeeping in 1964. Minnie died on February 7, 1968. Ernest died on June 14, 1965. They are buried in the family plot in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. [32]

June 14, 1906

W. H. Goodlove was in town Saturday. He has been housed up all winter with sciatic rheumatism, but is some better. (Winton Goodlove’s note: W. H. Goodlove would have been 70 years, 8 months, 25 days of age at that time.)

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



June 14, 1915: On June 14, 1915, Joseph delivered his address in Hopkinton describing the consolidate school movement in Iowa and explaining how the people of the Hopkintron area should go about forming a sonsolidated school. It did not have the desired effect. In commenting on it in her weekly Hopkinton column in the Manchester Press, Mrs. F. C. Reeve simpy noted with out further comment that Joseph and Walker had been in town and that Joseph had given “an address upon school matters, consolidation, etc.” She devoted far more attention to the economic woes of Lenox College: Would it close or be consolidated with Coe, Dubuque, or Parsons College? Or could some way be found for it to continue on its own in Hopkinton? She reported that the college’s local board of trustees was strongly opposed to any such takeover and wanted Lenox and Hopkinton “to continue together as they had done in the past.[33]

June 14, 1917

Wilma, Paul and Gladys Goodlove are entertaining the flu.[34]



June 14, 1917

Mrs. Sarah Goodlove is listed as an annual member of the local Red Cross. $1.00 per year.[35]

June 26, 1917



Mrs. Sarah Pyle Goodlove is the 2nd great grandmother of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



June 14, 1917: The first United States troops arrive in Europe during World War I, landing at St. Nazaire, France.[36]



June 14, 1917: Rural school consolidation had been dislodged from its position atop the reform agenda of Chalice and his Buck Creek followers by the seductive combination of progress, profits, and patriotism. The issue remained alive but dormant. The annual p[icnic at the Buck Creek country school in June 1917 brought it back into the consciousness of at least one of its frustrated proponents in the Buck Creek Church. In commenting on the loss of the school’s popular teacher who found the “work too heavy,” the Buck Creek columnist for the Hopkinton Leader (probably Mrs. Chalice) noted:



How long before the people of this community will wake up. Its hard to tell, but seeing there is no race suicide in this community the time is coming when it will be positively impossible to house and educated the children in a dinky one reoom school. We shall waken up some of these days to find that whilst other children are making progress intellecturally our children are lagging behind. You may be surprised to hear that teaching a one room school with eight grades and twenty children is hard work, but al you have to do is to try it and you will be convinced. Well, if you want cheap and inadepuate education held on to your litte school.[37]



June 14, 1921: Ottilie set June 14 as the date for the appeal, and this time he notified all the objectors by registered mail.[38] Maintaining that the whole process was a sham, none of the objectors attended the appeal. Instead they retained a lawyer, hoping he could identify grounds to contest the legality of the district should it be approved by the voters. The county bard minutes indicate simply that “the matter of establishing the boundaries of the Buck Creek Consolidated School District in Delaware Co. was brought up gfor discussion and the objections read, the appellants not being present nor represented.” The county board unanimously overruled the objections.[39]



June 14, 1940

The German army marches into Paris.[40] France surrenders to the Germany Army, during World War II.[41]



June 14, 1940: German forces occupy Paris. A double victory for Hitler. Revenge for the hated post war treaty of Versaise in 1919. [42]




June 16, 1940: The head of the French government resigns and is replaced by Maréchal Pétain, a World War I hero.[43]



[44]

Hitler meets…


[45]

Petain, the leader of the French Vichy Government in 1940.



June 14, 1941

The United States freezes the assets of Germany and Italy, during World War II.[46]



June 14, 2009:


June 22, 2009 159

Catharine LeClere Belea wife of George Frederick LeClere, born July 26, 1789 died November 27, 1871 and buried at the French Cemetery in Dubuque, Iowa, Photo by Jef Goodlove, June 14, 2009.


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

Louise Catherine Laude is the 3rd great grandmother of Jeffery Lee Goodlove





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


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


[2] Wikipedia


[3] Wikipedia


[4] Wikipedia


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


[6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_Mackinnon


[7] Gregory, pp. 80–81.


[8] Torrence, page 477.


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


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


[11] Narrative of Dr. Knight.


[12] History of Clark County Ohio


[13] (WHi: Draper Papers, E-11, 44




[14] Photo Gary and Mary Goodlove 2/19/02




[15]


[16] Gary Goodlove; 2/19/2002


[17] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003




[18] William Crawford Intermediate and Hanna Crawford Elementary School. Photo by Gerol Lee Goodlove, June 9, 2007.


[19] Photo Gary and Mary Goodlove 2/19/02


[20] Several questions may require answers at this point, concerning Lt. John Crawford, as well as his estate; for both becomes enshrouded in a veil of mystery. When the warrants and the land involved, are studied, one must conclude that Lt. John Crawford (son of Col. William Crawford). Met an obscure and perhaps a very forceful ending, sometime during the year of 1796.

Needless to state, Lt. Jon Crawford was alive at the time of this transfer in 1796, although this is the last available record of him, in his life upon this earth. Yet it may be clearly assumed, that he was not living when the settlement of his estate occurred, or when his land was transferred into other hands. Records in the Ohio State Auditor’s office in Columbus, show this did happen; and without price. Thus, our Lt. John Crawford was neither made a grantor or grantee in the county records. (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969. pp. 185-186.)


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


[22] Bill LeClere, Genforum.genialogy.com/napoleonicw…


[23] Bill LeClere, Genforum.genialogy.com/napoleonicw…


[24] Clerk of Court, Champaign County, Ohio.


[25] Ohio Source Records From the Ohio Genealogical Quarterly, page 512,


[26] (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett pg. 56.12) History of Logan County, 1880, Chicago, pages 736,737.




[27] Conrad and Katie, by Gary Goodlove


[28] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSiman=1&GRid=91358579&


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


[30] Their camp was located at Greenville Station on the New Orleans and Carrollton Railroad. (A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry 1862-1865 by Harvey H. Kimble Jr. August 1974. page 155.)


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


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


[33] There Goes the Neighborhoo, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 162.


[34] Winton Goodlove papers.


[35] Winton Goodlove papers.


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


[37] There Goes the Neighborhood by David R. Reynolds, page 172-173.


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


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


[40] (Based on Ian Ousby, Occupation: The Ordeal of France, 1940-1944 (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1998)


[41] On This Day in American History, by John Wagman.


[42] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1763.

• Hitlers War, The Western Front: The Battle for Paris, 5/6/2005


[43] (Based on Ian Ousby, Occupation: The Ordeal of France, 1940-1944 (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1998)




[44] History International


[45] History International.


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

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