Sunday, June 23, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, June 22


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

10,597 names…10,597 stories…10,597 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, June 22
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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

167-164 BCE: Construction of Acra at Jerusalem; the Temple is defiled by pagans.

167-141 BCE: Maccabean Revolt, 167-141 B.C. was the Jewish rebellion against the Seleucids. Judah Maccabee reconsecrates the Temple in 164 (an act celebrated as Hanukkah). [1]

166 BCE: In 166 B.C. open and organized revolt began. Under Judas Maccabeus the rebels won several battles.

The book of Daniel, which was written at the time of the Maccabean revolt, indicates the highly emotional, apocalyptic speculation that accompanied the conflict with the Syrian empire. [2]

166-63 BCE: The revolt spread rapidly, and, because of troubles within the Syrian Empire, the Maccabeans were able to gain recognition of Judea’s virtual independence, and the state that they established lasted for almost a century, until the Roman conquest of 63 B.C.[3]

165 BCE: The Hasmoniean family of priests in the Judean town of Modein leads a rebellion against the Hellenistic regime in Jerusalem. Jointed by the traditional religious group of Hasideans (pietists), the Hasmoneans seek to thwart Helleniszation of the national religion and remove oppressive taxation. According to 1 Maccabees the revolt begins when the Hasmonean patriarchy Mattathias slays a Jew making a sacrifice ordained by Antiochus IV.[4]

June 22, 209: Saint Alban

[5]










Saint Alban


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4d/StAlban.jpg/200px-StAlban.jpg
Saint Alban


Martyr


Born

unknown
Verulamium


Died

June 22, 209, c.251 or 304
Holywell Hill (formerly Holmhurst Hill), St Albans


Honored in

Roman Catholic Church; Anglican Communion; Eastern Orthodox Church


Major shrine

Cathedral and Abbey Church of St Alban


Feast

22 June


Attributes

Soldier with a very large cross and a sword; decapitated, with his head in a holly bush and the eyes of his executioner dropping out


Patronage

converts, refugees, torture victims


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f1/St_Alban_-_stained_glass_at_St_Albans%27_Cathedral.jpg/230px-St_Alban_-_stained_glass_at_St_Albans%27_Cathedral.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.20wmf1/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Stained glass in St Albans Cathedral showing death of Saint Alban

Saint Alban was the first British Christian martyr.[1][2] Along with his fellow saints Julius and Aaron, Alban is one of three martyrs remembered from Roman Britain. Alban is listed in the Church of England calendar for June 22, and he continues to be venerated in the Anglican, Catholic, and Orthodox Communions. St Alban is mentioned in "Acta Martyrum", and also by Constantius of Lyon in his Life of St Germanus of Auxerre, written about 480. He also appears in Gildas' 6th century polemic De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae and Bede's Historia Ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum.[3]


In 2006 some Church of England clergy suggested that Alban should replace St George as the patron saint of England.[4] There have also been claims that he should be patron saint of Britain as a whole.[citation needed][6]


June 22, 1276: year of the four popes – Gregory X dies, Pope Innocent V, Pope Hadrian V and Pope John XXI (end 1277). Death of Pope Gregory X, Innocent V the first Dominican becomes pope and dies after 5 months – Adrian V dies after five weeks but revokes conclave rules, Pope John XXI dies after eight months in office. January 21, Pope Innocent V (Pierre de Tarentaise) appointed, dies June 22, [7]

June 22, 1483: Edward V coronation was repeatedly postponed and then, on June 22, Ralph Shaa presented evidence in a sermon that Edward IV had already been contracted to marry Lady Eleanor Butler when he married Elizabeth Woodville, thereby rendering his marriage to Elizabeth invalid and their children together illegitimate. The children of Richard's older brother George, Duke of Clarence, were barred from the throne by their father's attainder, and therefore, on June 25, an assembly of Lords and Commons declared Richard to be the legitimate king (this was later confirmed by the act of parliament Titulus Regius). The following day he acceded to the throne as King Richard III.[8]

When his brother Edward IV died in April 1483, Richard was named Lord Protector of the realm for Edward's son and successor, the 12-year-old King Edward V. As the young king travelled to London from Ludlow, Richard met and escorted him to lodgings in the Tower of London where Edward V's brother Richard joined him shortly afterwards. Arrangements were made for Edward's coronation on June 22, 1483, but before the young king could be crowned, his father's marriage to his mother Elizabeth Woodville was declared invalid, making their children illegitimate and ineligible for the throne. [9]

A clergyman is said to have informed Richard that Edward IV's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville was invalid because of Edward's earlier union with Eleanor Butler, making Edward V and his siblings illegitimate. The identity of the informant is known only through the Mémoires of French diplomat Philippe de Commines as Robert Stillington, the bishop of Bath and Wells. On June 22, 1483, a sermon was preached outside Old St. Paul's Cathedral declaring Edward's children bastards and Richard the rightful king. After the citizens of London, nobles and commons, convened, a petition was drawn up asking Richard to assume the throne.[10]

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

June 22, 1559: Jewish quarter of Prague was burned and looted.[11]



1560

The Geneva Bible was dedicated to Elizabeth and went through sixty editions during her reign.[12]



AD 1560 - Branch of the Portuguese Inquisition is established in Goa

For centuries Goa was considered the Rome of the Orient. It was the headquarters of the Catholic Church in the Orient. Perhaps because of its Catholic fervor , the Portuguese Inquisition in Goa, became the most severe and cruel of all the Portuguese territories. The inquisitors in Goa became the most fanatic and violent of the Portuguese Catholic Church.

"The title of Mother of God was offensive to the Goans ears, and they measured with scrupulous avarice the honors of the Virgin Mary, whom the superstition of the Latins had almost exalted to the rank of a goddess. When her image was first presented to the disciples of St Thomas they indignantly exclaimed, "We are Christians not idolaters!" ("Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" ch. 47, p.31).

It was inevitable then that the Church of Rome would find the simplicity of their faith and their independence of Rome offensive. Claudius Buchanan, D.D. tells of their early contacts and designs:

"'These Churches', said the Portuguese, 'belong to the Pope.' 'Who is the Pope?' said the natives, 'We never heard of him.... ‘ 'We', said they, ' are of the true faith, whatever you of the West may be; for we came from the place where the followers of Christ were first called Christians."' (Antioch] ("Christian Researches in Asia" p.60 (1813)).

It is said that power corrupts and absolutes power corrupts absolutely. No better examples of the truth of this statement can be found than in the conduct of the colonial Portuguese. Under the ecclesiastical banners of the cross and the images of the Virgin Mary, they availed themselves of the secular governments' instruments of war to force their will on a less sophisticated people whose lands they proceeded to plunder.

"Jerome Azavido, a soldier less distinguished by his prowess than infamous for his cruelties, was dispatched to Ceylon in 1594 to avenge the iniquities endured by his fellow countrymen ... In the height of his success there, he beheaded mothers after forcing them to cast their babes between millstones ... He caused soldiers to take up children on the points of spears ... He caused many men to be cast off the bridge at Malwane for the troops to see the crocodiles devour them, and these creatures grew so used to the food, that at a whistle they would lift their heads above the water!" (Furia Y Souza, Steven's Translation, Vol. 111, pt.lll, Ch. XV, p.279. Cited by James Tennant - "Ceylon" Vol. 2, p.33).

In recognition of what vestige of decency and justice may have lingered in this papal-led government of Portugal, it should here be recorded that as a result of the publicity accorded the conduct of Commander Azavido and his accomplices, the Portuguese government was shamed into punishing him. Incarcerated in a Lisbon dungeon, he was able to ponder his reverses and speculate upon the fickleness of a system that condoned similar behavior by a patriot such as Da Gama, yet used him as a scapegoat to appease public conscience!

The “Holy Office”, as it called itself, settled in the palace of the Sabaio Adil Khan. From 1510 onwards this palace in Old Goa had become the palace of the Governors and Viceroys who lived there until 1554, when viceroy D. Pedro de Mascarenhas, being 70 years old, and very frail, was unwilling to climb the stairs to two stories. Consequently this vacated palace was occupied by the Inquisition six years later. The palace was modified with a chapel, halls of entrance, the hall of audiences, house of despacho, residence of the first inquisitor, house of secret, house of doctrine, any number of cells, and other special ones: of secret, of penitence; of perpetual confinement; of the tortures, all this within a great building which had an outer wall of seven spans ( 1.5 mts).

The Palace of the Inquisition was pointed out in awe by Goans, who called it Orlem Goro. or Big House, with two hundred cells. The Inquisition in Goa, on account of its rigors, was reputed to be the worst of the existing inquisitions in the catholic orb of the five parts of the world, as felt unanimously by national and foreign writers.

“......The inquisition, this tribunal of fire, thrown on the surface of the globe for the scourge of humanity, this horrible institution, which will eternally cover with shame its authors, fixed its brutal domicile in the fertile plains of the Hindustan. On seeing the monster everyone fled and disappeared, Moguls, Arabs, Persians, Armenians, and Jews. The Indians even, more tolerant and pacific, were astounded to see the God of Christianity more cruel than that of Mohammed, deserted the territory of the Portuguese and went to the lands of the Muslims, with whom time had made peaceful living possible, in spite of the fact that they (Indians) had received from them enormous and incalculable evils. In this fashion the fields and cities became deserted as are today Diu and Goa “

“...There were days when seven or eight were submitted to torture. These scenes were reserved for the inquisitors after dinner. It was a post-prandial entertainment. Many a time during those acts, the inquisitors compared notes in the appreciation of the beauty of the human form. While the unlucky damsel twisted in the intolerable pains of torture, or fainted in the intensity of the agony, one inquisitor applauded the angelic touches of her face, another the brightness of her eyes, another, the voluptuous contours of her breast, another the shape of her hands. In this conjuncture, men of blood transformed themselves into real artists !!“

The crimes were of different kinds: blasphemies, impiety, sodomy, necromancy and witchcraft. For example if any of the newly converted took part of the “superstitious assemblies” (Jewish Sabbaths) or former idolatries ( Hindu gods) practiced of yore, were enough to cause a victim to be burnt at the stake. If he confessed at the last moment, and was truly sorry, he would be condemned to the garrote for capital punishment, and then burnt. Otherwise he would be burnt alive.

This was not the end. After confessing to the crimes he was accused of by his witnesses, the inquisitors twisted around, forcing the victim to accuse the witnesses; for instance, “ if you have been in the assemblies of the Sabbath, and your accusers were also there, as is probable, then to convince us of your sincere repentance, it is necessary that you indicate to us not only the names of your accuser, but of all who associated with you in such assemblies”... a catch-22 situation.

All the belongings and properties of the accused were confiscated, be it of those condemned to death, or of those who escape from it, by confessing, because in both cases they were reputed as guilty; and as the inquisition wanted the fortune rather than the life of the prisoner, according to their laws, they cynically only delivered to the secular arm ( for carrying out the burnings) the relapsed who refused to confess the accusations made against them.

Out of one hundred people condemned to the stake as Jews, maybe only four had continued with Jewish mores, whilst all the others cried out loud until their last pitiful gasp that they were Christians, and that they had been Christians all their lives, and adored Jesus Christ as their only and real God. Neither the tears nor the protests of those wretched ( as wretched were those who suffered for not confessing a lie ) were of any avail. Whereas on the other hand a great number of witnesses, for fear of being burnt to death, were obliged to accuse those innocents.

Three kinds of torture were practiced: 1) the rope or the pulley, 2) water and 3) fire. The torture by rope consisted of the arms being tied backwards and then raised by a pulley, leaving the victim hanging for some time, and then let the victim drop down to half a foot above the floor, then raised again. These continued up-and-down movement dislocated the joints and made the prisoner emit horrible cries of pain. This torture went on for an hour.

The torture by water was as follows: the victim was made to lie across an iron bar, and was forced to imbibe water without stopping. The iron bar broke the vertebrae and caused horrible pains, whereas the water treatment provoked vomits and asphyxia.

The torture by fire was definitely the worst: the victim was hung above a fire, which warmed the soles of the feet, and the jailers rubbed bacon and other combustible materials on the feet. The feet were burned until the victim confessed. These last two tortures lasted for about an hour, and sometimes more.The house of torments was a subterranean grotto, so that other might not hear the cries of the wretched. Many a time, the victims died under torture; their bodies were interred within the compound, and the bones were exhumed for the “auto da fe” , and burnt in public.

The Archbishop living on the banks of the Ethora had said during one of his lecture series, "The post of Inquiry Commission in Goa is regarded as holy." The women who opposed the assistants of the commission were put behind the bars and were used by them to satisfy their animal instincts. Then they were burnt alive as opponents of the established tenets of the Catholic church. The victims of such inhuman laws of the Inquiry Commission included a French traveller named Delone. He was an eye witness to the atrocities, cruelty and reign of terror unleashed by priests. He published a book in 1687 describing the lot of helpless victims. While he was in jail he had heard the cries of tortured people beaten with instruments having sharp teeth. All these details are noted in Delone's book.[51] [13]

AD 1560 - Constantino Ponce de la Fuente dies in prison under the Spanish Inquisition .[14]

1561 Jews expelled from Prague.[15] Some rabbinic sources claim Davidic lineage can be traced from Rabbi Judah Lowe, the sixteenth-century creator of the legendary golem, the giant statue of clay that he fashioned to protect the Jews of Prague from persecution by Christian religious authorities.[6][16]

1561

In 1561 the monastery[17] of St. Columba was suppressed and Iona became abbotless and in ruin. We may suppose that from this time forth the “pennie” land of Kilmorie (MacKinnon’s country in Mull) was excepted from the penny rental which it had to pay to the “abbacie of Ecolmkill.”[18]



[19]

[20]



June 22, 1591

On June 22, 1591, the same Lauchlane receives, with Dowart, Barra, MacLeod of Dunvegan, Ardgour and MacQuarrie, a Remission for all slaughter committed against the Macdonalds of Kintyre and Islay. [21]

On April 26th, 16l5, Sir Lauchlan MacKinnon is appointed one of the commissioners of fire and sword against the Macdonalds of Kintyre and Islay.[22]



June 22, 1615: On June 22nd, he is appointed to concur with the MacLeans in keeping the country free from the incursions of the Macdonalds, between the Row of Ardnamurchan and the March of Lorn In the rebellion of Sir James Macdonald in the same year, the King gave orders, that amongst others the Laird of MacKinnon should be provided with 200 men for the defense of his coasts.[23]



June 22, 1633: The sentence of the Inquisition was delivered on June 22. It was in three essential parts:
•Galileo was found "vehemently suspect of heresy", namely of having held the opinions that the Sun lies motionless at the centre of the universe, that the Earth is not at its centre and moves, and that one may hold and defend an opinion as probable after it has been declared contrary to Holy Scripture. He was required to "abjure, curse and detest" those opinions.[59]
•He was sentenced to formal imprisonment at the pleasure of the Inquisition.[60] On the following day this was commuted to house arrest, which he remained under for the rest of his life.
•His offending Dialogue was banned; and in an action not announced at the trial, publication of any of his works was forbidden, including any he might write in the future.[61]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bd/Tomb_of_Galileo_Galilei.JPG/220px-Tomb_of_Galileo_Galilei.JPG

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.21wmf3/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Tomb of Galileo Galilei, Santa Croce

According to popular legend, after recanting his theory that the Earth moved around the Sun, Galileo allegedly muttered the rebellious phrase And yet it moves, but there is no evidence that he actually said this or anything similar. The first account of the legend dates to a century after his death.[62][24]

June 22, 1689: The Jewish quarter of Prague was destroyed by French troops who shelled the area. In one synagogue, the roof caved in killing the 100 people who had sought refuge there. Their Christian neighbors took in most of the population until new shelters were built.[25]

1690: Jerusalem population during early Turkish (Ottoman) Moslem rule, 10,000.[26]

“June 22, 1777:- Because the enemy’s positions were too advantage?ic and the operations in Jersey could not be continued, the Command General Lord [sic] Howe decided to leave the area. Therefore, at four o’clock this morning the army left the region of Brunswick and moved to Amboy with the intention of withdrawing the troops as soon as possible to Staten Island, where they are then to embark aboard ship for another destination.”[27]

June 22, 1777: Being well informed of everything that was happening, General Washington advanced with his army and occupied the exits of Bound
Brook, Quibbletown, and Samptown.[28]

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

“June 22 - The entire army marched back to Amboy. All the houses along the road were set on fire, We entered camp on Staten Island. It rained all night, so hard that no one had dry clothing on his body. [29]

June 22, 1782

To the honorable Brigadier General Irvine, commanding the troops in the western department.



The petition of the frontier inhabitants of Brush creek most humbly showeth: That, since the commencement of the present war, the unabated fury of the savages hath been so particularly directed against us, that we are, at last, reduced to such a degree of despondency and distress that we are now ready to sink under the insupportable pressure of this very great calamity. That from our fortitude and perseverance in supporting the line of the frontrier and thereby resisting the incessant depredations of the enemy, our btravest and most active men have been cut off from time to time, by which our effective forsce is so greatly reduced that the idea of further resistance is now totally vanished. That the season of our harvest is now fast approaching, in which we must endeavor to gatrher in our scanty crops, or otherwise subject ourselves to another calamity equally terrible to that of the scalping knife, and from fatal experience, our fears suggest to us every misery that has usually accompanied that season. That we are greatly alarmed at the misfortune attending the late excursion to the enemy’s country [Crawfor’s expedition against Sandusky]; as we have every reason to believe that their triumphs upon that occasion will be attended with fresh and still more vigorous exwertions against us.

In this perilous situation, sir, we submit our case to your consideration and beg that it may be appoied to the feelings of humanity and benevolence, which we firmly believe you possess. Wherefore we humbly pray for such an augmentation of our guard through the course of the harvest season as will enagle them to render us some essential service. But, as we know from experience that no certain dependence can be placed on the militia upon these occasions, as some failure may probably happen on their part through the course of the season, and as we have hitherto been accustomed to theprotection of the continental troops during the harvest season, we further pray, that we may be favored with a guard of your soldiers, if it is not inconsistent with other duties enjoined on you. But particularly we pray, that whatever guard may be allotted for us in future, may be ordered into the inhavited stations along the frontier, where they can be of service, either in covering our working-parties in the fields, or protecting our defenseless families in our absence. And your petitioners as in duty bound shall pray. Brush Creek, June 22, 1782.

This petition, so unexceptionably elegant in diction, as well as powerfully strong and clear in the points stated, is signed by ninteteen borderers, mostly Germans. The document itself is in a bold and beautiful hand. It would be hard to fine in all the revolutionary records of the west a more forcible statement of border troubles, in a few words, than this.[30]

1791 - June 22 - Benjamin Harrison of Bourbon County, Va. conveyed to Jonathan Morton of Fayette County, Va., 200 acres in Bourbon County on Stoner's fork of Licking, part of a 1,000 acre tract granted to Benjamin Harrison on preemption warrant entry. Consideration £60. Mary Harrison, wife of Benjamin, relinquished her dower. Witnesses - Horatio Hall, Thos. Hughs, Rob. Harrison. Acknowledged Bourbon Court June 1791 by Benjamin Harrison. [31]

Benjamin Harrison is the 5th great granduncle of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

Joseph R. McKinnon born, Isle of Sky, Inverness-Shire, Scotland. (Died June 22, 1809.)[32]



Joseph R. McKinnon is the 5th great granduncle of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



June 22, 1822: Andrew Jackson returned from a visit to Alabama.[33]

June 22, 1824: Andrew Jackson hosted a dinner at the Hermitage for friends and neighbors. [34]

Andrew Jackson is the 2nd cousin 8x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 22, 1839 – John Ridge, Elias Boudinot, and Major Ridge were assassinated by Ross supporters for ceding Cherokee lands. A fourth party attacked Stand Watie, but he fought and escaped to Missouri Territory. With their deaths, the Cherokee Civil War began, with violence lasting for decades.[35]

Wed. June 22, 1864

Sined the pay rolls got a letter from

Springville answered it on fatigue duty[36]



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



June 22, 1871: Charles O. Powell (b. December 13, 1856 in GA / d. June 22, 1871).



Charles O. Powell is the 6th cousin 5x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



Queen Victoria, Golden Jubilee: June 22, 1887, at Windsor Castle

Very fine and hazy. Breakfasted in the Chinese room (at Buckingham Palace),

but such a change from yesterday. No crowd or noise. The illuminations last

night are said to have been splendid. Thousands thronged the streets, but

there was no disorder. They shouted and sang till quite late, and passed the

Palace singing God Save the Queen and Rule Britannia. Went into the garden

for a little while, and on coming home rested. Quantities of telegrams still

continued coming in ...

Again a big luncheon in the Dining-room ... Gave Jubilee medals to the Kings

and most of the Princes. I then went with Beatrice (her youngest daughter),

preceded by the Lord Chamberlain, to the Ball-room, where were assembled

all my Household, and a great number of those who had served me from the

beginning of my reign. Lord Mt Edgcumbe, as Lord Steward, presented their

gift, a magnificent piece of plate, splendidly worked and executed,

representing music and painting. I went round and spoke to as many as I

could ... (The Queen then received a jewelled pendant from the Prince of

Wales's Household, a portrait of himself from the Prime Minister, a

watercolour from the other royal Households.)

This over, I went though the Blue Drawing Room and Bow Room, full of

ladies, to the White Drawing-room, equally full. This was a Deputation from

the 'Women of England', who brought me the signatures of the millions who

have subscribed to a gift, contained in a splendid gold coffer ... and Lady

Londonderry presented me with that of another very fine coffer, containing the

signatures of the Women of Ireland ... From her I passed into the Picture

Gallery, where were assembled all the people who came with other presents,

which extended down the whole length of the Gallery. Was really touched and

gratified.

Rested on the sofa for some time, and took a cup of tea before leaving

Buckingham Palace at half-past five. Bertie and Alex could not leave London

on account of looking after the guests. Had an escort and an Indian escort.

Enormous and enthusiastic crowds on Constitution Hill and in Hyde Park ...

We drove right on to the grass in the middle of the park, where 30,000 poor

children with their schoolmasters and mistresses, were assembled. Tents had

been pitched for them to dine in, and all sorts of amusements had been

provided for them. Each received an earthenware pot with my portrait on it ...

We stopped in the middle ... and a little girl gave me a beautiful bouquet, on

the ribbons of which were embroidered: "God bless our Queen, not Queen

alone, but Mother, Queen and Friend" ... The children sang God Save the

Queen somewhat out of tune, and then we drove on to Paddington station.

The train stopped at Slough, and we got out there ... Different ladies and

gentlemen were presented and bouquets were given. Then drove off with an

escort to Windsor. All along the road there were decorations and crowds of

people. Before coming to Eton, there was a beautiful triumphal arch, made to

look exactly like part of the old College, and boys dressed like old Templars

stood on the top of it, playing a regular fanfare. The whole effect was

beautiful, lit up by the sun of a bright summer's evening ... The town was one

mass of flags and decorations. We went under the Castle walls up the hill,

slowly, amidst great cheering, and stopped at the bottom of Castle Hill, where

there was a stand crowded with people and every window and balcony were

full of people, Chinese lanterns and preparations for illuminations making a

very pretty effect. Those of the family who had not come with me were in the

front row of the stand ... An Address was read, to which I read an Answer ...

After this my statue was unveiled ... Amidst cheering, the ringing of bells, and

bands playing, we drove up to the Castle. This completed the pretty and

gratifying welcome to good old Windsor.

We had a large family dinner ... Just as we were beginning dessert, we heard

that the torchlight procession of Eton boys was coming into the Quadrangle,

and off we hurried, as fast as we could, to the Corridor, from whence we could

see it beautifully. They performed all sorts of figures, the band playing

marches etc, and they sang an Eton Boat song, a Jubilee song specially

composed for the occasion ... They did it so well and it had a most charming

effect. The Head Master came up, and I thanked him, and sent for the Captain

of the school. They cheered tremendously. Then we all went down to the

Quadrangle, and I said, in as loud a voice as I could, "I thank you very much",

which elicited more cheering, after which they all marched past and out at the

gate. The Round Tower was illuminated with electric light, and so were parts

of the Castle. The town was also illuminated, but I was too tired to go and see

it, and went to my room.

These two days will ever remain indelibly impressed in my mind, with great

gratitude to that all-merciful Providence, Who has protected me so long, and

to my devoted and loyal people. But how painfully do I miss the dear ones I

have lost![37]





June 22, 1893

Oscar Goodlove, while driving a herd of horses from the pasture to the barn yard last Saturday was thrown from his pony, it is supposed, and badly shaken up. He came to the house in a dazed condition, going directly to his room, where his wife found him a few minutes later in a dead faint. When he came to later conciousness he could not remember of being thrown or hurt in any way, but he had a tiny bruise on his face and his hat and clothes were wet, as though he had been thrown into water. He was so stunned that he had no recollection of opening and closing three gates through which he must have gone in order to reach the house. He escaped a serous accident, as it is thought that he struck on his head, and might easily have been killed instantly.[38]



Oscar Goodlove is the great granduncle of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 22, 1893: George V: Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Wendish Crown with gems (Mecklenburg) - June 22, 1893.[39]

George V is the 21st cousin 1x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 22, 1897, Queen Victoria at Buckingham Palace

A never-to-be-forgotten day ... The night had been very hot, and I was rather

restless. There was such a noise going on the whole time, but it did not keep

me from getting some sleep. Dull early and close. Breakfasted ... in the

Chinese luncheon room. The head of the procession, including the Colonial

troops, had unfortunately already passed the Palace before I got to breakfast,

but there were still a great many, chiefly British, passing. I watched them for a

little while.

At quarter-past eleven, the others being seated in their carriages long before,

and having preceded me a short distance, I started from the State entrance in

an open State landau, drawn by eight creams, dear Alix (Princess of Wales),

looking very pretty in lilac ... sitting opposite me. I felt a good deal agitated,

and had been so all these days, for fear anything might be forgotten or go

wrong ... My escort was formed from the 2nd Life Guards and officers of the

native Indian regiments, these latter riding immediately in front of my carriage.

Guard of Honour of Bluejackets, the Guards and the 2nd West Surrey

Regiment (Queen's) were mounted in the Quadrangle and outside the Palace.

Before leaving I touched an electric button, by which I started a message

which was telegraphed throughout the whole Empire. It was the following:

"From my heart I thank my beloved people, May God bless them!" At this time

the sun burst out ...

We went up Constitution Hill and Piccadilly, and there were seats right along

the former, where my own servants and personal attendants, and members of

the other Royal Households, the Chelsea Pensioners, and the children of the

Duke of York's and Greenwich schools had seats. St James's Street was

beautifully decorated with festoons of flowers across the road and many loyal

inscriptions. Trafalgar Square was very striking, and outside the National

Gallery stands were erected for the House of Lords. The denseness of the

crowds was immense, but the order maintained wonderful. The streets in the

Strand are now quite wide ... Here the Lord Mayor received me and presented

the sword, which I touched. He then immediately mounted his horse in his

robes, and galloped past bare-headed, carrying the sword, preceding my

carriage, accompanied by his Sheriffs. As we neared St Paul's the procession

was often stopped, and the crowds broke out into singing God Save the

Queen. In one house were assembled the survivors of the Charge of

Balaclava [a Crimean War campaign].

In front of the Cathedral the scene was most impressive. All the Colonial

troops, on foot, were drawn up round the Square. My carriage, surrounded by

all the Royal Princes, was drawn up close to the steps, where the Clergy were

assembled, the Bishops in rich copes, with their croziers, the Archbishop of

Canterbury and the Bishop of London each holding a very fine one. A Te

Deum was sung; the Lord's Prayer, most beautifully chanted, a special Jubilee

prayer, and the benediction concluded the short service, preceded by the

singing of the old 100th, in which everyone joined. God Save the Queen was

also sung. I then spoke to the Archbishop and the Bishop of London. As I

drove off, the former gave out, "Three cheers for the Queen".

I stopped in front of the Mansion House, where the Lady Mayoress presented

me with a beautiful silver basket full of orchids. Here I took leave of the Lord

Mayor. Both he and the Lady Mayoress were quite émus. We proceeded over

London Bridge, where no spectators were allowed, only troops, and then

along the Borough Road, where there is a very poor population, but just as

enthusiastic and orderly as elsewhere. The decorations there were very

pretty, consisting chiefly of festoons of flowers on either side of the street.

Crossed the river again over Westminster Bridge, past the Houses of

XIII

HISTORIC ROYAL SPEECHES AND WRITINGS

The British Monarchy web site [http://www.royal.gov.uk]

Parliament, through Whitehall, Parliament Street, which has been much

enlarged, through the Horse Guards and down the Mall. The heat during the

last hour was very great, and poor Lord Howe, who was riding as Gold Stick,

fainted and had a bad fall, but was not seriously hurt.

Got home at a quarter to two. All the carriages that had preceded mine were

drawn up in the courtyard as I drove in. Had a quiet luncheon with Vicky,

Beatrice [her youngest daughter], and her three children. Troops continually

passing by. Then rested and later had tea in the garden ...

There was a large dinner in the supper-room, the same as yesterday. Bertie

[the Prince of Wales], who sat at my table, gave out the health of the Empress

Frederick [the Queen's eldest daughter] and my distinguished guests. I

walked into the Ball-room afterwards, and sat down in front of the dais. Felt

very tired, but tried to speak to most of the Princes and Princesses; the suites

also came in, but no one else. I wore a black and silver dress with my Jubilee

necklace and the beautiful brooch given me by my Household. In the morning

I wore a dress of black silk, trimmed with panels of grey satin veiled with black

net and steel embroideries, and some black lace, my lovely diamond chain,

given me by my younger children, round my neck. My bonnet was trimmed

with creamy white flowers, and white aigrette and some black lace. I left the

Ball-room at eleven. There were illuminations, which we did not see, but could

hear a great deal of cheering and singing. Gave souvenirs to my children and

grandchildren.[40]



June 22, 1898

(Pleasant Valley) Dr. Nettie Gray, of Anamosa, visited with her parents, Mr. and Mrs W. H. Goodlove, the first of the week.[41]



Dr. Nettie Gray is the great grandaunt of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.



June 22, 1911: George V

This is a featured article. Click here for more information.


George V


Full-length portrait in oils of George V


Coronation portrait by Sir Luke Fildes, 1911


King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions, Emperor of India (more ...)


Reign

May 6, 1910 – January 20, 1936


Coronation

June 22, 1911


Predecessor

Edward VII


Successor

Edward VIII







Imperial Durbar

December 12, 1911



Spouse

Mary of Teck


Detail

Issue


Edward VIII
George VI
Mary, Princess Royal, Countess of Harewood
Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester
Prince George, Duke of Kent
Prince John


Full name


George Frederick Ernest Albert


House

House of Windsor
House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha


Father

Edward VII


Mother

Alexandra of Denmark


Born

(1865-06-03)June 3, 1865
Marlborough House, London


Died

January 20, 1936(1936-01-20) (aged 70)
Sandringham House, Norfolk, United Kingdom


Burial

January 28, 1936
St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle


Signature

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ac/George_V_Signature.svg/125px-George_V_Signature.svg.png


[42]

George and Mary's coronation took place at Westminster Abbey on June 22, 1911,[14] and was celebrated by the Festival of Empire in London.[43]

June 22, 1913: There are two J. Bundy’s. Bundy, Joel. Age 23. Residence Springville, nativity Ohio. Enlisted August 11, 1862. Mustered September 3, 1862. Taken prisoner May 16, 1863 Champion’s Hill, Miss. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga.

http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logan/mil508.htm

Birth, February 12, 1839 in Ohio, Death: June 22, 1913. Occupation, ditcher. Burial Barclay, Osage County, Kansas. According to his grave stone, Joel Bundy was a member of Company h, 24th [44]

June 22, 1921: Political turmoil in Ireland continued as the Nationalists fought for independence; George expressed his horror at government-sanctioned killings and reprisals to Prime Minister David Lloyd George.[72] At the opening session of the Parliament of Northern Ireland on June 22, 1921, the King, in a speech part drafted by Lloyd George and General Jan Smuts, appealed for conciliation. A few days later, a truce was agreed. Negotiations between Britain and the Irish secessionists led to the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty. By the end of 1922, Ireland was partitioned, the Irish Free State was established, and Lloyd George was out of office.[45]

Prince John had his first epileptic seizure at age four. He did not attend his father's coronation on June 22, 1911.[46]

George V is the 21st cousin 1x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 22, 1939: Alexander Fain Rowell (b. November 6, 1917 in AL / d. June 22, 1939 in AL).[47]

Alexander Fain Rowell is the 8th cousin 3x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 22, 1940: Germany and France sign an armistice.[48]

June 22, 1941

The German Army launches Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union, during World War II.[49] On their heals were operation units called Einsatzgruppen, ordered to execute entire Jewish communities.[50]



• June 22, 1941: Zagreb Jews are arrested and sent to the Pag and Jadovno concentration camps.[51]



• June 22, 1942

• The first transport from the Drancy camp in France leaves for Auschwitz.[52]



On Convoy 3 list of Deportees, is Moise Gotlib, born September 11, 1918 in Varsovie (Warsaw, Poland). Code F is indicated but its meaning is unknown as of this writing.



• “Monday June 22



• The 930 departing persons were called to the courtyard at 5”:45 AM. The officer and ther German detachment arrived a little after 6 AM



• “Captain Dannecker asked me for another inmate for departure on the sopt; the Police for Jewish Questions asked me to eliminate 2 or 3 people whose place I was able to fill from the designated reserve, as I explained above. The exit from the camp began at 6:15 AM and was compoleted without incident at 8:15 AM.



“P.S. The 150 war veterans designated to depart can be broken down as follows:

--14 are veterans of the 1914-1918 war, one of whom was decorated with the Legion d’Honneur, but was designated imperatively by Captain Dannecker (Dr. Rene Bloch, surgeon at the Hospital for Sick Children);

--114 fought in 1939-1940, but without citation or special distinction, except for three of them;

--6 fought in the colonies, one with honor;

--2 war orphans adopted by the State;

--14 who had served in foreign armies.

Total: 150.



“Out of these 150, 65 were Frenchmen; 47 were recently naturalized, and 38 were foreigners.”



In another note for the same recipients, the Captain of Drancy added:



“The occupying authorities were represented by Dannecker and his assistant, Heinrichson… Three or four inmates appearing ill, or whose physical condition was not the best, could not make it to the bus and had to be helped, one of them on a stretcher, even after medical examination and upon Captain Dannecker’s specific order totake them in an case.



Documents in the anti-Jewish section of the Gestapo concerning the convoy of June 22, 1942, are numbered XXVB-34 and 36, And XXVI-31. The latter, dated June 16, contains under Point 4 an important instruction: the lists were to be typed in four copies. Two were for the head of the convoy, who would turn them over to the Commandant of the camp (Auschwitz); the other two copies would remain at the anti-Jewish section of the Gestapo. The lists which we have at the CDJC come from the archives of that section.



The document bearing the number XXVb indicates that the first five deportation convoys (March 27, June 5, 22, 25 and 28, 1942) represented anti-Jewish reprisal measures and therefore include French citizens. In the future, thanks to an agreement with Vichy, convoys of thousands of stateless, Polish, Czech, and Russan Jews would leave from the unoccupied zone.



Other documents concerning this convoy and the two subsequent convoys are:



XXVb-37 and XXVb-38: Eichmann cabled Knochen that a decision pertaing to those three convoys was made. One would leave on June 22 at 8:55 AM from Le Bourget/Drancy. On June 25, the second would depart at 6:15 AM from Pithiviers and on June 28, the third from Beaune-la-Roland at 5:20 AM. The hours were decided upon after consulting M. Niklas, of the department for rail traffic.

--XXVb-39, a document from the Hauptverkehrsdirektion (German office of rail transport), signed “Never”, giving the itinerary and time schedule of the French part of the trip of the special convoy of workers for Auschwitz: Le Borget, 8:55 AM; Bobigny, 9:20 AM; Noisy-le-Sec, 9:30 AM; Epernay, 1:14/1:47 PM; Chalons-sur-Marne, 2:36/2:42 PM: Bar-le-Duic 5:05/5:17 PM; Lerinville 6:39/ 6:44 PM; Neuburg (Mosel) 7:57/8:20 PM.



A non-Jewish French woman named Alice Courouble was arrested for having worn the yellow star in defiance of German ordinances. She was interned in the camp of “Les Toruelles.” In her book “Amie des Juifs” she bears witness to the conditions of the departure from Les Tourelles of the first 66 women to be deported from France (pp.-41):



“We were eating in the cafeteria. A brief command: ‘Everyone outside.’ Under the chestnut trees, we spied three German officers.

“Another order: ‘All Jews ages 18 to 42 in one line!’ Then a moment later: ‘Turn around, face the courtyard! The others, get back inside!’

]”It all happened so quickly, I was so taken aback that I cannot even tell which voice gave the order and who was repeating them.

“Go up to your rooms immediately,’ whispers Gaby/. Very moved, but still courageous, whe walks around trying to maintain order.

“Once upstairs, the police lieutenant enters.

“The women are going to cross this dormitory. Not one cry, not one word, not a single sign, not a move! The first one to move will have to join them and leave with them. Understood?’

“A scraping of steps, the door opens. One policeman, two policemen, still others. They form a line from one door to the other. The first one opens the back door. A large empty room appears. Not a bed, not a chair.

“The sacrificial coluimn passes. Our silence makes for a wall between us. They are all calm: Sonia, Raya, blond Helene, a mother, a daughter… We cry, stifling our sighs; we dare not even wipe our tears.

“The door closes, the policeman remains in front.

“For three days and three nights, we will have a policeman guarding our dormitory, and another one at the door.

For dressing and undressing it’;s quite embarrassing.

“The first night, it was a whole patrol of policemen who spoke loudly and carried electric lamps, breaking up the floor with their naliled shoes.

“During the day, the mothers, the friends all came carrying plates of biscuits, bread and butter, begging to policeman: ‘Sir, Sir, be kind… Sir, you are a good man…’

“Madame, I am not allowed, the orders are very strict, you are going to have me punished…’

“He was pale, he was beginning to think that they had given him a strange job. Altogether, the policemen didn’t seem so proud!

“The mothers, on their knees, their lips to the lock or the wood of the door called to their enclosed daughters: ‘My daughter, my little girl, my Helen…’ From the other side came the sharp or hoarse voices: Mother, my dear little mother…’ Young women, still almost girls, cried for their mothers, who , still young, were part of the large group. On a bed, near the door, a small and very fat woman fell into nervous hysteria. She groaned rehythmically, with a voice like a man, serious and husky with pain. She lay like a rag and no one succeeded in comforting her.

“Her daughter was blond, very pretty, with long white earrings. When the door opened, one could see the young girl and her long earrings.

“In the narrow cleft of light, a multitude of faces, of brunettes, or blonds, open mouths, cried, called, held out their hands imploring. Impossible to tell which hand belonged to which face. A human entanglement, a chorus of begging calls. ‘Water!’ ‘Call my mother! ‘Tell Ginette to come!’ ‘Give me my handbag, quickly! Oh, hurry up!’ The worried policeman pulled the door closed. The Dante like vision faded away.

“An unbearable infection overtook the isolation chamber. They had been closed in with large pots and tubs of water. There were 70 of them.

“in THE MORNING, I STOOD ON LINE IN THE VILLAGE,’ AND SAW TWO MEN PASS, PRISONERS FROM ACROSS, WITH THE POLICEMEN. They came down a little later, carrying on two sticks three awful pots, smelling, overflowing, in which paper was swimming. I stood against the wall forbidding myself to be disgusted as their instruments of hiumiliation went by. I can still see our beautiful ‘countess.’ She was there, too. She made no sign, but she was looking, her eyes wide open and her face swimming with tears.

“In order to permit them to wash, they were brought down, well guarded, to the taps on the ground floor. Just before, a heavy whistle sent us upstairs to the first floor dormitory. When we were all inside, we heard an enormous key turn in the lock; heavy bars fell against the doors; we were locked in. The cursed cattle could go through, they would not find a sympathetic soul on their way. This ban on seeing them made us feel as if they were already dead.

“Sunday morning, aqt 5:00 AM, the droning of the bus motors awakened us. My friends rushed to the windows. It was the departure for the first step, Drancy. The bus headlights swept the ceiling and gave off an intermittent light.

“I did not go to look. I was too saddened.

“Suddenly, outside, two or three voices sang the ‘Marseillaise.’ Little by little, others followed. In our room, sobs replied.”



When they arrived in Auschwitz on June 24, the deportees received numbers 40681 to 41613 for 933 men, and 7961 to 8026 for the 66 women. On August 15, only 186 remained alive. In seven and a half weeks, the mortality rate was 80%.



As far as we know, only 23 survivors returned in 1945 from this convoy, five of them women.



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

“ Annette Zelman, Jew, born in Nancy on October 6, 1921. Arrested on May 23, 1942. Imprisoned by the Police Prefecture from May 23 to June 10; sent to the Tourelle camp from June 10 to June 21; transferred to Germany on June 22. Reason for arrest: intention to marry an Aryan, Jean Jausion. The two declared their written intention to give up the project to marry, according to Dr. Jausion’s desire, who had hoped that they would be dissuaded and the young Zelman girl would simply be returned to her family without any further trouble.” Continued but missing. [53]



On Convoy 3, June 22, 1942 from Drancy, Children were excluded, as deportations in convoys of a thousand continued for adult men. Convoy 3 carried 1000 adults, 934 men and , for the first time, women, 66 of them, of whom 16 were between the ages of 19 and 21.[54]









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


[1] National Geographic December 2008, map insert.


[2] Antiquity, From the Birth of Sumerian Civilization to the the Fall the Roman Empire, by Norman F. Cantor, page 82.


[3] Antiquity, From the Birth of Sumerian Civilization to the the Fall the Roman Empire, by Norman F. Cantor, page 82.


[4] Timetables of Jewish History by Judah Gribetz, page 44.


[5] Trinity Episcopal Church, Highland Park, IL Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[6] Wikipedia


[7] mike@abcomputers.com


[8] Wikipedia.


[9] Wikipedia.


[10] Wikipedia


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


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


[13] The Portuguese Inquisition in Goa (1560-1812)Retrieved October 20,2006 from http://www.apol.net/dightonrock/inquisition_goa.htm, http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/


[14] http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/


[15] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm


[16] [6] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, page 96


[17]Of all the Celtic saints in Scotland, Columba’s life is much the best documented, because manuscripts of his life, written by St. Adamnan, one of his early successors as abbot of Iona, have survived. Iona itself remains a place of the greatest beauty, a serene island set in seas that take on brilliant colors in the suinshine, recalling the life and background of this remarkable man whose mission led to the conversion of Scotland and of the north of England, and indeed carried its influence far further afield. It later became the site of a Benedictine Abbey and of a little cathedral. These were dismantled bgy the Scottiswh reformers in 1561, and part of Columb’s prophecy was fulfilled: In Iona of my heart, Iona of my love, Instead of monks; voices shall be lowing of cattle, But ere the world come to an end Iona shall be as it was. Rc.net/Washington/stcolumba/history


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


[19] Mexic Arte Museum, Austin, Texas, February 10, 2012


[20] Mexic Arte Museum, Austin, Texas, February 10, 2012




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


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


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


[24] Wikipedia


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


[26] Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr. page 200.


[27] Bardeleben, Enemy Views by Bruce Burgoyne, pgs. 155-157


[28] http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/AMREV-HESSIANS/1999-03/0922729801


[29] Bardeleben, Enemy Views by Bruce Burgoyne, pgs. 155-157


[30] Washinton-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield pages 300-301.


[31] (Bourbon County Deed Bk. B, p. 113) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html


[32]http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/m/y/e/Dale-E-Myers/COL.1-0013.html.


[33] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824


[34] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824


[35] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


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


[37] XHISTORIC ROYAL SPEECHES AND WRITINGS

The British Monarchy web site [http://www.royal.gov.uk]


[38] Winton Goodlove papers.


[39] Wikipedia


[40] XIV

HISTORIC ROYAL SPEECHES AND WRITINGS

The British Monarchy web site [http://www




[41] Winton Goodlove papers.


[42] Wikipedia


[43] Wikipedia.


[44] http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=treadway&id=I8804


[45] Wikipedia.


[46] Wikipedia


[47] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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


[49] On This in American History by John Wagman.


[50] Adolf Eichmann: Hitler’s Master of Death. 1998. HISTI Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1765


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


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




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


[54] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial by Serge Klarsfeld, page 379.

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