Saturday, June 22, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, June 20


“Every Day is Father’s Day at This Day in Goodlove History”

10,583 names…10,583 stories…10,583 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, June 20
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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

778-June 20, 840: Louis (778– June 20, 840), twin of Lothair, King of Aquitaine since 781, crowned King of the Franks/co-emperor in 813, senior Emperor from 814.[1]

June 20, 840: Louis the Pious, King of the Franks and the Holy Roman Emperor by virtue of being the son of Charlemagne. When it came to dealing with his Jewish subjects, Louis followed in the footsteps of his father. During his reign charters were issued giving “Jews permission ‘live according to their Law.’ They promised protection of body and property and permitted freedom of movement and trade including…the right to hire Christians to work in their homes. Some Jews were also exempted from the laws of trial by ‘ordeal of fire and water.’”[2]

Louis is the 36th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 20, 1338: Duke Otto and Duke Albert issued their “Jews’ Decree.”[3]

June 20, 1391 (17th of Tammuz): “The Christian population of Toledo rose against the largest Jewish community in Spain.” Four thousand Jews were killed.[4]

June 20, 1567: Jews were expelled from Brazil by order of Regent Don Henrique.[5]

1568:The Bishops’ Bible (1568) produced by Coverdale[6], had a large portrait of Queen Elizabeth on its title page. This action was an indication that she had lent strong support to their efforts.[7] Between 1568 and 1602, the Bishop’ Bible went through seventeen editions. The Geneva Bible remained the favorite for home and personal use and far outweighed the Bishops’ Bible both in popularity and longevity.[8]

Queen Elizabeth is the 9th cousin 13x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove

June 20, 1632:Cecilius Calvert is granted a charter for the settlement of Maryland.[9]

June 20, 1652: During the reign of Mehemed IV, Tarhoncu Ahmet Paşa was appointed grand vezir of the Ottoman Empire. During Pasa’s time of service, Mehmemed Jews fleeing the Chmielnitzki Uprising were encouraged to settle on the banks of the Danube in Morea, Kavala, Istanbul and Salonica.[10]

June 20th and 21st, 1755:

Description: http://www.thelittlelist.net/bearcampbraddockssixth.jpg

Bear Camp (Braddock's 6th Camp). US 40 in MD, one-half mile east of the PA state line. "Bear Camp. General Braddock's 6th camp on the march to Fort Duquesne Saturday and Sunday June 20th and 21st, 1755. Washington was forced to remain behind with a guard on account of 'violent fevers' until cured by 'Dr. James's Powders (one of the most excellent medicines in the world),' he wrote his brother Augustine. MD State Roads Commission.. Enlarged Bear Camp photo.[11]



June 20th 1756



FROM CAPTAIN ROBERT STEWART.[12]



MAIDSTONE June 20th 1756





Sir/

I last night night had the pleasure of receiving your favours of Yesterday and am glad you are safely return’d. The Spirrit of Desertion was of late so prevalent here, that I once dreaded no other expedient than Hanging or shooting could affectually crush it. One Rollins who keeps a little tippling House here is in some measure the cause of that infamous and pernicious practice when I first arrived here I sent a Serjeant to him desiring him at his Perril not to sell Liquor to the Soldiers, this he paid no regard to, I then went to him and told him the terrible consequences of hurting the Service by making the Soldiers Drunk especially at such a Juncture but he still parsevered, I then plac’d a Centary on at each of his Doors with orders not to suffer a man of the Detachment to go in the House, but most of the Centrys were corrupted by his giving them liquor for liberty to supply others. I applied to Capt Caton for redress the only Civil Magistrate in this Neighbourhood, he promised but put it off I renew’d my Application again and again at last I assured him that unless he would immediately take cognizance of this affair that I would complain of him to the Governor. Caton at length vouchsafed to have it tried, and when the allegations were plainly proven against Rollins by several of those who had been severely punished for Drunkeness and irregu­larity he granted a Supress Warrant to prevent his selling any more till the following Court, when he said his License would be taken from him however Rollins depended on the great Friendship Caton had for him and continued his Malicious Practices. We had daily Court Martials & constant punisments thro’ the means of this Scoundrel which made me almost mad I sometimes thought of confining Rollins in the Guard House, and taking all his Liquors from him, but to put it °,~ of their power to complain of illegal proceedings WC~ the generality of people are apt to do of our Officers when without any founda­tion I once more applied to Caton he then truly told me that the Supress Warrant he had granted against Rollins was of no use unless it was sign’d by two Magistrates. I then immediately wrote to Capt Swearingen informing him of the affair, but had no answer Ensign Crawford then went to his House. he came up here in a few days after but Caton was out of the way, thro’ Catons neglect of this affair to call it no worse Rollins and the Soldiers always found some new method of getting the better of every precaution I could think of to prevent their getting drunk notwithstanding of the severe punishments that were almost daily inflicted which and the want of Clothes & necessaries first gave rise to the Hellish Spirrit of Desertion.

By the Inclosed Letter you have an instance of the part Caton Acted (before I came here) notwith­standing of his pretended regard to his Country’s welfare I would be extreemly glad you would apply to My Lord to have Rollin’s License taken from him and to the Governor that he would order Caton’s Conduct as a Justice of the peace to be enquired into If Rollins goes on with impunity it will be an encouragement to other such Scoundrels to fol­low his example and the Soldiery will at last begin to believe that their Officers can• never effectually suppress -such disturbers of orders and discipline to maintain which in the strictest sense you will at meeting see by the orders I have given and the care I have taken to see them executed that nothing in my power has been wanting I have 6 Deserters now in Irons & will be glad of your orders about them. One of them repented and help’d to dis­cover and apprehend the others Inclosed you have a return of the Detachment I had many Sick but I have got an Hospital made and has a nurse by which means several are got well & the rest recovering

Its two weeks to Morrow since Governor Sharpe came up here, he Honour’d us with a short Visit but did not offer to give any orders or so much as view our Intrenchment, he set out immediately for the North Mountain where he now is & preposes to remain for some Weeks, to expedite the construction of a Fort which they say is to be a strong regular & to Mount a quantity of Ordinance the Ground mark’d out for it is 14 Miles distant from the mouth of the Creek1 I can’t learn that Maryland is to Build any other and they are to have but two Companys Com­manded by Capt Dagworthy[13] & Bell for the defence of the Province to be supported till next December. they have only a Corperal and 6 Men at the Mouth of the Creek nor do I understand that they are to have any Garrison there

Yesterday one Morgan from Pennsylvania inform’d us that on Munday last one of the Forts on the Fronteer of that Province had surrender’d to a large Body of the Enemy — As the Axes &c. you order’d did not arrive and as I was oblig’d to return the few I had borrowed, and was uncertain of remaining here any time did not attempt adding anything to the Strength of the place since you went down the Country. However I think I can do pretty. well for double our Number of the Enemy if they only bring Musquetry against me — Inclosed is return of all the

provision now on hand theres about 12000 Flower in a House of Col Cressop’s which his Wife has posi­tively denied delivering. I hope for your Orders soon & am with great respect

Sir

Your Most Obedt.

Humb Servt

ROBERT STEWART[14]



June 20, 1757: In a June 20, 1757 letter to Colonel Stanwix, written from Fort Loudon, George Washington wrote ―To any person, in the least degree acquainted with the mountainous country about our settlements, it is clear, that the French can bring artillery along no other road, than that from Fort Duquesne to Fort Cumberland, without spending immense time in mending one.‖

· To facilitate Braddock‘s expedition, Lieutenant Spendelow had to scout out a feasible

route, and construct a last minute road up the east side of Wills Creek through the

Narrows. This means that there was no suitable existing wagon road up along either side of Wills Creek at the time, even though a recent trail of some sort already existed. No

evidence has surfaced to suggest that the route along Wills Creek and Jennings Run was

anything more than a packer‘s trail in the pre-1755 time period.[15]



June 20, 1757: The Indians‘ concept of a ―road‖ was different from that of the Europeans. What the

Indians might call a ―road‖ was what Europeans would call a ―trail‖ or a ―path‖. In a

June 20, 1757 letter to Colonel Stanwix, written from Fort Loudon, George Washington

wrote ―…a blazed path in the eyes of an Indian is a large road; for he does not

distinguish, without a close inspection, between a track which will admit of carriages,

and a road sufficient for Indians to march in.‖[16]



June 20, 1757: In Kameiek (Podolia), the Frankists, calling themselves Zoharists, decided to wage war against the Talmud. They contacted the local bishop, Dembovsky, and convinced him to arrange a disputation. Naturally, the Talmud was condemned and thousands of copies were burned. The Frankists then became practicing Christians. The Frankists were Jews who were followers of Jacob Frank who had proclaimed himself the Messiah.[17]



June 20, 1768: The third of the Haidamack uprisings called Koliyivschyna began. During the uprising an estimated 50,000 Ukrainian Jews were murdered by the Cossacks. “The Haidmamaks were gangs of Cossacks, who along with their peasant allies robbed traveling merchants and plundered the towns and villages in the Ukraine. They saw themselves as heirs to Khmelnitski. The Khmelnitski were the Cossacks who slaughtered Jews and Poles in wholesale lots in the middle of the 17th century. Both of these murderous slaughters were part of the drift into degradation that became the lot of increasing numbers of Eastern European Jews. This drift into degradation brought about numerous responses on the part of the Jews ranging from mysticism and messianicism to the Haskalah and immigration to Western Europe and eventually to the New World.[18]



June 20 to July 3, 1782

There are a great many white oaks, ash and hickory trees that grow among the beech timber; there are likewise some places on the ridge, perhaps for three or four continued miles where there is little or no beech, and in such spots, black, whiteoak, ash, and hickory abournd. Sugar trees grow there also to avery great bulk- the soil is remarkably good, the gourne a little ascending and descending with some small rivulets and a few springs. When I got out of the beech ridge and nearer the river Muskingum, the lands were more broken but equally rich with those before mentioned, and bouaning with brooks and springs of water; there are also several small creeks that empy into that river, the bed of which is more than a mile wide in many laces; the woods consist of white and black oad, walnut, hickory and suar trees in the greates abundance. In all parts of the country through which I came the game was very plenty, that is to day, deer, turkeys and pheasants; I likewise saw a great many vestiges of bears and some elks.

I crossed he river Muskingum about three or four miles below Fort Lawrence, and crossing all paths aimed for the Ohio river. All this time my food was gooseberries, young nettles, the juice of herbs, a few service berries, and some May apples, likewise two yound blackbirds and a terrapin, which I devoured raw. When my food sat heavy on my stomach, I used to eat a little wild ginger which put all to rights.

I came upon the Ohio river about five miles below Fort McIntosh, in the evening of the 21st day after I had made my escape….[19]

June 20, 1808: Birthdate of Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, leading founder of what some call Modern Orthodox Judaism.[20]

June 20, 1823: In Germany, the government issued a decree “ordaining that Jewish services should be conducted exclusively in the German language and that the reading in Hebrew of sections of the Bible should be followed by their translation into the vernacular.”[21]

May 24, 1819 – June 20, 1837: Her Royal Highness Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent


British royalty


Heir to the throne
as heiress presumptive
June 26, 1830 – June 20, 1837[22]


June 20, 1837 – January 22, 1901: Her Majesty The Queen[23]

June 20, 1837: William IV died at the age of 71, and Victoria became Queen of the United Kingdom. In her diary she wrote, "I was awoke at 6 o'clock by Mamma, who told me the Archbishop of Canterbury and Lord Conyngham were here and wished to see me. I got out of bed and went into my sitting-room (only in my dressing gown) and alone, and saw them. Lord Conyngham then acquainted me that my poor Uncle, the King, was no more, and had expired at 12 minutes past 2 this morning, and consequently that I am Queen."[33] Official documents prepared on the first day of her reign described her as Alexandrina Victoria, but the first name was withdrawn at her own wish and not used again.[34][24]

Victoria came to the throne aged just eighteen on June 20, 1837. Her letters of the time show interest in Albert's education for the role he would have to play, although she resisted attempts to rush her into marriage.[18][25]

June 20, 1837:



Queen Victoria



Victoria


Photograph of Queen Victoria, 1882


Victoria wearing her small diamond crown
Photograph by Alexander Bassano, 1882


Queen of the United Kingdom


Reign

June 20, 1837

January 22, 1901


Coronation

June 28, 1838


Predecessor

William IV


Successor

Edward VII


Prime Ministers

See list


Empress of India


Reign

May 1, 1876 –

January 22, 1901


Imperial Durbar

January 1, 1877


Predecessor

Title created


Successor

Edward VII


Viceroys

See list



Spouse

Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha


Detail

Issue


· Victoria, Princess Royal, German Empress

· Edward VII

· Princess Alice, Grand Duchess of Hesse

· Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

· Helena, Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein

· Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll

· Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught

· Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany

· Beatrice, Princess Henry of Battenberg


Full name


Alexandrina Victoria


House

House of Hanover


Father

Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn


Mother

Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld


Born

(1819-05-24)May 24, 1819
Kensington Palace, London


Died

January 22, 1901(1901-01-22) (aged 81)
Osborne House, Isle of Wight


Burial

February 4, 1901
Frogmore, Windsor


Signature

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5d/Queen_Victoria_Signature.svg/125px-Queen_Victoria_Signature.svg.png


Queen Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria; May 24, 1819 – January 22, 1901) was the monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from June 20, 1837 until her death. From May 1, 1876, she used the additional title of Empress of India.

Victoria was the daughter of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, the fourth son of King George III.[26]

Queen of the United Kingdom
June 20, 1837 – January 22, 1901[27]

Queen Victoria is the 19th cousin 3x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 20, 1863: West Virginia joins the Union as the thirty fifth state.[28]





June 20, 1863: 18th Virginia Cavalry, ORGANIZATION
FIELD & STAFF






Field and staff officers of the regiment as
originally assigned were:

Colonel: George W. Imboden;
Lieutenant Colonel: David E. Beall;
Major: Alexander W. Monroe; Adjutant
John Cameron; A.C.S.
William Lock; Surgeon
George M. King; Assistant Surgeon
Charles A. Ware.

This staff remained, with only minor changes,
until near the very end of the war when
Colonel Imboden was wounded and
Surgeon King resigned.



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


The choice was clear: submit to the
Union or fight it was under these conditions that
Colonel, later General John D. Imboden organized
the ten companies of the 18th Virginia Cavalry.
The regiment was formed primarily by transferring
existing companies from the 1st Regiment Virginia
Partisan Rangers to the 18th Virginia Cavalry
as follows:


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


1st Regiment Virginia Partisan Rangers
became..18th Virginia Cavalry
•Company F.. became.. Company.. A
•Company G.. became.. Company.. B
•Company H.. became.. Company.. C
•Company M.. became.. Company.. D
•Company L.. became.. Company.. E
•Company N.. became.. Company.. F
•Company P.. became.. Company.. G
•Company Q.. became.. Company.. H
•Company D.. became.. Company.. I
•Company O.. became.. Company.. K



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

•Primary Counties of Origin...Company....Captain
•Randolph and Pendleton...A....William H. Taylor
•Hampshire and Hardy...B....George W. Stump
•Hampshire...C....Mathias Ginevan
•Warren and Shenandoah...D....Wesley Makely
•Hardy and Pendleton...E....Abel S. Scott
•Frederick and Hampshire...F....Robert B. Muse
•Bath, Highland, and Pocahontas...G....William D. Ervin
•Hardy and Hampshire...H....Francis M. Imboden
•Hampshire and Lewis...I....Jacob Warden
•Hampshire...K....John H. Piles

In addition to these primary counties of origin,
representatives from Jefferson, Upshur, Augusta,
Braxton, Rockingham, Albemarle, Webster,Tucker,
Barbour,Alexander,Rockbridge,and Alleghany
counties also served in the regiment.



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


BELOW YOU WILL FIND A MAP OF
THE AREA WERE THE
18TH. VRIGNIA CAVALRY WAS RECUITED FROM.
Description: MAP


Mon. June 20, 1864

Nothing of importance got orders to

move camp from Greenville [29]between Carrolton

and Orleans a pretty place[30]



June 20, 1864: Winans, David C. Age 19. Residence Springville, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Aug. 7, 1862. Mustered Sept. 3, 1862. Promoted Sixth Corporal June 20, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga.[31]



June 20, 1864: Gregg, Eligah W. Age 30. Residence Springville, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Aug 9, 1862. Mustered Sept. 3, 1862. Promoted Seventh Corporal June 20, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga. [32]



June 20, 1864: Bundy, Josiah. Age 31. Residence Springville, nativity Ohio. Enlisted August 11, 1862. Mustered September 3, 1862. Promoted Fifth Corporal June 20, 1864. Taken prisoner October 19, 1864, Cedar Creek, Va. Mustered out May 25, 1865, Davenport, Iowa.



June 20, 1865: To Savannah June 20.[33]



June 20, 1866: After his discharge at Davenport, Iowa, he returned to his former home until he married Sarah Catherine Pyle, June 20,

1866, in Hastings, Minnesota. Sarah was born May 15, 1844, in Moorefield Township, Clark County, Ohio, daughter of John Ingraham Pyle and Catherine (Myers) Pyle. Sarah died Jan­uary 6, 1929 and is buried at Jordan’s Grove. Prior to her mar­riage, Sarah was a school teacher. To their union was born seven children: Nettie, Willis, Oscar, Cora, Earl, and Jessie, whose twin died at birth.

In 1867, William and Sarah moved to their new farm in Sec­tions 27 and 28 of Maine Township, Linn County, Iowa. It is located three miles southwest of Central City at what is now known as 3974 Pleasant Valley Road. This farm embraced 240 acres, which they farmed until retirement four years prior to William’s death. They moved to their new home in Central City, Iowa, November 7, 1912.

Their retirement home at what is now #53, 5th St., was built by Paul Sigmund, a respected carpenter of those years, at a cost of $2,800. That house stands today with few alterations, as does the house on their farm.

The family was of Methodist faith, having been members of the Prairie Chapel Church and then transferring to the Meth­odist Church in Central City, upon retirement.

William and Sarah’s children were:

1. Nettie Illini, was born July 18, 1867, married Richard H.

Gray, September 13, 1893, at her parents home. Nettie died

September 15, 1911. Nettie and Richard were both doctors in

Anamosa, Iowa before moving to Texas, where their daughter,

Ruth Johnson lives today. They had a son, Richard, who died

at the age of 6 in July 1908, while the family was visiting

Nettie’s parents. The boy is buried at Jordan’s Grove.

2. Willis Ralph (March 22, 1869-April 8, 1953) married

Myrtle Isabelle Andrews, March 4, 1896. She died August 29,

1962, at age 86 years. Both are buried at Jordan’s Grove Cem­etery (Bk. II, F-87). Their children were: Wallace Harold (Bk.

II, F-88), Ethel Vinetta, Bessie Marie, Wilma Laura, Mary lone,

William Paul, Gladys Lavona, and Kenneth Ivan.

3. Oscar Sherman was born October 28, 1871 and married Margie Jenkins on November 16, 1892, at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Jenkins. To this union were born a son, Ralph, December 14, 1893, and a daughter, Rachel, born March 1, 1896.

4. Cora Alice (November 1, 1876-December 14, 1960) mar­riedThomas Wilkinson, April 4, 1907, at the home of the bride’s parents. Thomas died February 1968. Both are buried at Jordan’s Grove. They had three daughters, Nelevene Illini, Kathryn, Dor­othy, and one son, Thomas E. "Wendell", who farmed south of Springville for several years.

5. Earl L. (September 27, 1878-December 14, 1954) mar­ried Fannie Vesta McAtee, daughter of Frank McAtee (Bk. I, F-il), who lived east of the old Kearns later Pleasant Valley (Bk. II, Schools).

6. Jessie Pearl (July 15, 1882-August 24, 1967) married Ri­chard Allen "Dick" Bowdish, September 17, 1908, at the home of the bride’s parents. Richard died in 1967. They had a daugh­ter, Mary Catherine, born October 13, 1915, and a son Albert, born May 1, 1918. Dick and Jessie lived on the home farm of her parents, which they bought in 1913, until their retirement to Colorado. They wanted to be near the home of their daugh­ter and husband, Merrill Jordan (Bk. I, F-32). Albert married Pearl Engstrom and both were missionaries in India until re­tirement. They now live in Oklahoma (Bk. II, F-18).

It is interesting to note here that William’s son, Willis, mar­ried the granddaughter of Levi Brown Andrews who had also served in the Civil War. (Bk. IL, F-3). Also to note that George B. Aikin (Bk. II, F-I) had also served in the Civil War and to wonder if the paths of these three men had ever crossed or had they ever met during their enlistments. George B. Aikin and William FL. Goodlove were great grandfathers, respectively, of Winton Goodlove, and Levi B. Andrews was his great, great, grandfather.[34]

June 20, 1887: The British Empire celebrated Victoria's Golden Jubilee. Victoria marked the fiftieth 29, anniversary of her accession on June 20, with a banquet to which 50 kings and princes were invited.[35]

On June 20, 1915 was now in Würzburg, a 'Association to enable the ritual food of like nerve and insane in the Regierungsbezirke of Lower Franconia and Aschaffenburg' founded and decided the registration of the Association in the register of associations. Purpose of the Association is the welfare of the Jewish nerve and mentally ill, which are under Gerben eight into the district institutions existing in the region of Lower Franconia and Aschaffenburg, within the meaning of the ritual food supply and allowing them through the necessary steps of the Royal authority, by providing the necessary resources, and by order of institutions to the appropriate execution pursuant to section 1 of the statutes. Food and beverages must be in strict respect for the rules of the Shulkhan Arukh . Members of the Association can be $2 of the statutes of individuals, associations and communities. The membership fee is at least 2 mark for the year for a single person. The contribution of associations and communities is in the discretion of same, is at least 10 communities. Were elected in the Cullen: District Rabbi Dr. Breuer in Aschaffenburg as Chairman, district Rabbi Dr. Stein in Schweinfurt Vice-Chairman, teacher Israel Wahler in Hörstein as Secretary, businessman Bernhard Hirsch in Lohr as Treasurer, businessman Samuel Gundersheimer in Würzburg as assessors, factory owner Nathan Mayer in Aschaffenburg and businessman Hermann Weichselbaum in Dettelbach as replacements. "-If the Jewish charity in claim is also in this difficult time, so is yet to accept that the establishment in Lohr in terms of their importance would be sure of benevolent interest of next circles, especially so in the area of the welfare of the war falls, as the war - like this from expert page is confirmed - will be to do a growing number of Nervenkranken unfortunately."

June 20, 1942: “Captain Dannecker arrives at the camp Saturday morning at 8:45 AM. He tells my adjunct, Mr. Thibaudat, that 930 internees must be chosen within one hour and immediately prepared for departure on Monday.

“This choice, in the absence of the Doctor and in such a limited time, b eing almost impossible, I went to the German officer and explained the reasons for which it was impossible to meet his demand. I ask him to trust me, permitting me to hold ready the 930 internees needed for this Monday morning at 6:00 AM.

“Only one means remained at my disposal to obtain the required number and I informed you of this immediately when I saw you, explaining the situation, which was to take the least important war veterans. After a careful study of the situation, I was thus obliged to have Dr. Tisne designate others temporarily unfit and to add 150 war veterans, and thus was able to reach the number of 930, as requested by the occupying authorities.

“I was even able to designate a small reserve of 15 internees who were also temporarily unfit, which have permitte me to face any last minute changes, which, I could be sure, would be requested of me.

“On the 20th in the evening, I gave 5 copies of the list of 930 to Mr. Schweblin in person. [36]



June 20-October 9, 1942 : From Vienna, 13,776 Jews are deported to Theresienstadt.[37]



June 20, 1943: Except for a handful of workers, the Ternopol ghetto is liquidated and Jews are killed in and around the city.[38]



June 20, 1944

The Japanese lose 400 planes and 3 aircraft carriers as the Battle of the Philippine Sea ends, during World War II.[39]



June 20, 1944: The attack groups didn't return to Task Force 16 until after nightfall. Much has been said of Marc Mitscher's decision to "turn on the lights" late June 20, 1944, the end of the Battle of the Philippine Sea. Mitscher commanded Hornet at Midway, and he may have later been inspired by Spruance's actions on June 5, 1942. Normally, warships operated in complete darkness at night: the glow of a cigarette was enough to alert a submarine to a ship's presence. But on this night, Spruance endeared himself to his aviators by ordering TF-16 to illuminate the ships, so the Dauntlesses could land. Enterprise recovered four more SBDs than it had launched. Five from Hornet landed on the Big E, while Hornet took in one Scouting Six bomber. There was not a single accident, though many of the pilots were not qualified for night landings.

Uncle Howard Snell was on board the Enterprise.

June 20, 1986: Bernice Nix15 [James W. Nix14, James Nix13, John A. Nix12, Grace Louisa Francis Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. unk) married Plemer Fetner (b. December 20, 1912 in Randolph Co. AL / d. June 20, 1986 in La Grange, GA)/

A. Children of Bernice Nix and Plemer Fetner:
. i. Living Fetner (married Living Lawson)[40]



8th cousin 3x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove


scan0094



• “Today we are learning the language in which God created life.”

• President Bill Clinton, June 2000 with my sister, Jennifer Goodlove.



June 2002: A scapula (shoulder blade), believed to be a relic of St Alban, was presented to St Albans Cathedral and placed inside the saint’s restored 13th century shrine. The bone was given by the Church of St. Pantaleon in Cologne, Germany [1]. St Pantaleon's, like St Albans Cathedral a former Benedictine abbey church that had a shrine dedicated to St Alban, has possessed remains believed to be those of St Alban since the 10th century. It is entirely possible that further relics were acquired by the church in the 16th century at the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries in England, when many such relics were smuggled abroad to prevent their destruction. St Albans Abbey was dissolved in 1539.

The largest relic of St Alban in England is the thigh of the protomartyr preserved at St Michael's Benedictine Abbey, Farnborough, Hampshire, which was removed from the St Pantaleon's reliquary in the 1950s.[41][42]

June 2002: An asteroid the size of football passed between the earth and the moon. About a third of the way to the moon. We didn’t even know it was there until it was already past us. If it would have landed in the Pacific it could have wiped out Southern California with a Tsunami.[43]

2004

In June 2004, the Holy See announced that the Spanish Inquisition was really not as bad as it has been portrayed. Fewer witches were burned at the stake, its pronouncement read, and fewer heretics were tortured into conversion than had been previously thought. “Vatican Downsizes the Inquisition” was the headline in the New York Times. Burifying in 1998 turned to sanitizing in 2004.[44]



June 20, 2010:



3 million to 2.6 million years ago…

Fossil Forest

Fossil Forest Credit: Alexandre Guertin-Pasquier. A fossilized forest, one that lived between 2.6 million and 3 million years ago, in the Canadian Arctic, could thrive again, say scientists who suggest by 2100 the climate there would be warm enough to allow such growth. Here, Alexandre Guertin-Pasquier, of the University of Montreal, at the study site on Bylot Island in Nunavut, Canada, at the beginning of the fieldwork in June 2010.[45]

June 20, 2012:

47 million years ago…Earliest Record of Mating Fossil Vertebrates: Nine Pairs of Fossilized Turtles Died While Mating 47 Million Years Ago

ScienceDaily (June 20, 2012) — The fossil record consists mostly of the fragmentary remains of ancient animals and plants. But some finds can provide spectacular insights into the life and environment of ancient organisms. The Messel Fossil Pit, a UNESCO world heritage site south of Frankfurt in western Germany, is well known for yielding fossils of unusual quality, including early horses complete with embryos and insects and birds with fossilized colors.

In the latest edition of Biology Letters, a group of scientists lead by Dr. Walter Joyce of the University of Tübingen announces the discovery at Messel of nine pairs of fossilized turtles that perished in the act of mating. Dr. Joyce, a geoscientist from the University of Tübingen, heads the discovery team which includes researchers from the Senckenberg Research Institute Frankfurt and the Hessische Landesmuseum Darmstadt.

"Scientists have collected tens of thousands of fossils at this site in recent decades," notes co-author Dr. Stephan Schaal of the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt, "but only these turtles are known to occur in pairs, a total of nine so far." Detailed analysis of the fossil material revealed that each pair consists of a female and male individual. More importantly, even though the males typically face away from the females, the tail of some male individuals can be found wrapped under the shell of the female. "There is no doubt in my mind," says Dr. Joyce, "These animals died some 47 million years ago in the act of mating. No other vertebrates are known to have died during this important biological process and then been fossilized."

Most scientists agree that the Messel Pit Fossil Site originated as a deep volcanic crater lake that preserved animals and plants that sank to its bottom, but some questions remain, such as whether the lake had poisonous surface or only subsurface waters. Modern relatives of the fossil turtles found at Messel have permeable skin that allows them to breathe and stay under water for a long time. However, this adaptation can become lethal if these turtles enter poisonous waters. The very fact that turtles were seeking to reproduce at Messel reveals that the surface waters of the volcanic lake supported a thriving biotope. Numerous turtles apparently died, however, when they accidentally sank into poisonous sub-surface waters while mating.

http://images.sciencedaily.com/2012/06/120620113141.jpg

A pair of allaeochelyscrassesculpta from the Messel fossil pit. The turtles died 47 million years ago while mating. (Credit: Senckenberg Gesellschaft[46]

June 20, 2012: Once-Green Sahara Hosted Early African Dairy Farms[47]
•Colorful rock art of domesticated cattle decorates a wall at Wadi Imha in the Tadrart Acacus Mountains in the Libyan Sahara. Images like this reveal the importance of cattle to Neolithic African people.

Colorful rock art of domesticated …
•A closer look at Saharan rock art depicting domesticated cattle.

A closer look at Saharan rock art …

The sandy dunes of the Sahara may seem an unlikely place for a dairy farm, but about 7,000 years ago, herders tended and milked cattle in what is now desolate desert, new research shows.

About 10,000 years ago, the Sahara desert went through a phase called the Holocene African Humid Period. Fossilized bones show that by the sixth millennium B.C. (or about 7,000 years ago), cattle, sheep and goats roamed over green savanna, and rock art depicts cows with full udders. The occasional image even shows milking, said study researcher Julie Dunne, a doctoral student at the University of Bristol. But it's difficult to get a firm date for those images.

By analyzing pottery fragments, Dunne and her colleagues have now shown that these early herders were not only milking their livestock, but also processing that milk into products like yogurt, cheese and butter.

"The most exciting thing about this is that milk is one of the only foodstuffs that gives us carbohydrates, protein and fat," all in one substance, Dunne told LiveScience. "So it was incredibly beneficial for prehistoric people to use milk." [Top 10 Mysteries of the First Humans]

Saharan dairies

Dunne and her colleagues analyzed tiny fragments of pottery taken from the Takarkori rock shelter, a prehistoric dwelling in the Libyan Sahara. They ground up small pieces of the pottery, conducting chemical analyses to investigate the proteins and fats embedded in the shards. By doing so, the researchers could see what the pots once held.

They found evidence of a varied diet, with signs found for plant oils and animal fat. The most common fats were of animal origin, Dunne said, with some deriving from flesh and others from milk. The most dairy-fat rich pottery shards came from the same time periods when more cattle bones are found in the cave layers, the researchers reported today (June 20) in the journal Nature.

By looking at variations in the carbon molecules in these preserved fats, the researchers were able to get an idea of what kind of plants the cattle were eating. They found their diets varied between so-called C3, or woody plants, and C4 plants, which include grasses grains and dry-weather plants. (C3 and C4 refer to the type of photosynthesis these plants use.)

That fits with the archaeological understanding of this early herding civilization as moving between seasonal camps, Dunne said. [Album: Faces of a Threatened Tribe]

"It suggests that they were moving between summer and winter camps and eating different plants at one place than another, so this all ties together very nicely," she said.

Spread of milk and butter

No one has ever before looked for evidence of dairy farming in these herding tribes, Dunne said, but the new findings help explain how humans got their taste for milk. People first settled down to an agricultural lifestyle in the Near East about 8,000 or 9,000 years ago, she said. Soon after, they took up dairy farming. The milk habit then spread across Europe in fits and starts.

At the same time, though, people were also migrating from the Near East into what is now Egypt and other parts of Africa, Dunne said. This movement spread dairying to north Africans, who were previously settled hunter-gatherers and fishermen. As new immigrants moved in with cattle, these native people would have quickly seen the benefits of "marvelous big hunks of food on the hoof," Dunne said.

Humans had to evolve to match their new source of protein, however. Originally, mankind was lactose intolerant, meaning that milk drinking was an invitation for an upset stomach. Processing milk into yogurt and cheese would have helped, Dunne said, but humans also adapted: As dairying spread, so did genes that confer lactose tolerance.

"You're really seeing evolution in action over a very short timescale, just 1,000 to 2,000 years," Dunne said.

The researchers now plan to analyze more pottery samples from more northern African dwellings. The goal, Dunne said, is to get a better picture of how dairy — and cows — spread among the people of the continent.

Cattle "really played an enormous part in their ideology and their general day-to-day life," she said.[48]





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[7] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 89.


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


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[12] 1 Captain Robert Stewart, afterwards promoted Major, was engaged in the action on the Monongahela, and in August, 1755, was voted by the Virginia Assembly thanks, and a gratuity of £zoo for his gallant behavior. — BROCK. –






[13] Dagworthy. Captain John Dagworthy. A Maryland soldier holding a royal commission. In 1756 at Wills Creek (Fort Cumberland), Dagworthy refused to take orders from Colonel George Washington in that Washington’s commission was an appointment from Governor Dinwiddie of VA and therefore inferior to Dagworthy’s rank. In an effort to settle the dispute, George Washington asked Governor Dinwiddie to adjudicate the argument. Dinwiddie refused—he said Fort Cumberland was in MD and therefore out of his jurisdiction. Washington, along with Captains George Mercer and Robert Stewart, rode all the way to Boston to get approval from Governor Shirley; the ranking British authority in North America. Washington had previously been rebuked on the royal commission vs. militia commission back at Fort Necessity with Captain Mackay from South Carolina. Governor Horatio Sharpe of Maryland was appointed command of all forces from PA to SC by Governor Shirley. Sharpe appointed Dagworth as his aide-de-camp stationed at Annapolis. Colonel Stanwix in June 1757 wrote "the reason for my moving is the hearing of intelligence from Capt. Dagworthy, who commands at Fort Cumberland." Some sources cite the date of Dagworthy’s royal commission as 1758.

A letter from General Forbes to Lieutenant Colonel Bouquet dated August 28, 1758 reads, “Governor Sharp (Maryland) asked me to allow him to make Captain Dagworthy a Lt. Colonel of the Maryland troops—and he is accordingly appointed.”(VS)

Dagworthy served with distinction in the French and Indian War, but when the Revolutionary War came, George Washington failed to give him an important field assignment. The Continental Congress appointed Dagworthy as a brigadier general and gave him command of the Sussex County Militia (MD).

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


[14] Letters to Washington and Accompanyng Papers by Stanislaus Murry Hamilton Vol. 1 pgs. 280-283






[15] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, pages 95-96.


[16] IN Search of Turkey Foot Road, 96


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[19] Narrative of Dr. Knight.


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


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[22] Wikipedia


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[27] Wikipedia


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


[29] Cavalry stables and water tank for the Union at Greenville Louisiana during Civil War

http://louisdl.louislibraries.org/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=%2FLHP&CISOPTR=1295&DMSCALE=100&DMWIDTH=600&DMHEIGHT=600&DMMODE=viewer&DMFULL=1&DMX=233&DMY=0&DMTEXT=&DMTHUMB=1&REC=10&DMROTATE=0&x=441&y=183


[30]
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[31] http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logn/mil508.htm




[32] http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logn/mil508.htm


[33] UNION IOWA VOLUNTEERS, 24th Regiment, Iowa Infantry: http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/template.cfm?unitname=24th%20Regiment%2C%20Iowa%20Infantry&unitcode=UIA0024RI




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




[35] wikipedia


[36] Memorial des enfants deportes de France” de Serge Klarsfeld


[37] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1771.


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




[39] On this Day in America, by John Wagman.


[40] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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6. ^ "St. Alban the Martyr", Orthodoxy’s Western Heritage, http://www.roca.org/OA/35/35e.htm .

7. ^ Niblett 2001, p. 139.

8. ^ "Online Sightseeing - Copenhagen". Copenhagen Portal. http://www.copenhagenet.dk/CPH-Map/CPH-Eng-Church.asp. Retrieved 2010-02-22.

9. ^ Abrams, Lesley (1996), "The Anglo-Saxons and the Christianization of Scandinavia", in Lapidge, Michael; Godden, Malcolm; Keynes, Simon, Anglo-Saxon England, 24, Cambridge University Press, pp. 240–241, ISBN 9780521558457, http://books.google.com/?id=_ko9AYu0W7UC, retrieved 2 March 2010

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[42] Wikipedia


[43] Civilization Lost, H2/12/11/2011.


[44] Dogs of God, Columbus, the Inquisition, and the Defeat of the Moors, pg xix.


[45] http://www.livescience.com/23373-fossil-forest-arctic.html


[46] http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/06/120620113141.htm


[47] By Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer | LiveScience.com – Wed, Jun 20, 2012


[48] http://news.yahoo.com/once-green-sahara-hosted-early-african-dairy-farms-171900354.html

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