Friday, June 28, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, June 27


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

10,593 names…10,593 stories…10,593 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, June 27
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Jeff Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com
Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove

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

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



June 25 to June 27, 1240: Disputation of Paris. Pope Gregory IX puts Talmud on trial on the charges that it contains blasphemy against Jesus and Mary and attacks on the Church.[1] It ended its deliberation after three days. The commission condemned the Talmud be burned. The sentence of condemnation was not executed. Apparently Archbishop Walter Cornutus of Sens, a prelate influential with the King, interceded on behalf of the Jews and succeeded in having many of the confiscated volumes of the Talmud returned to their rightful owners.[2]



1241: In England, first of a series of royal levies against Jewish finances, which forced the Jews to sell their debts to non-Jews at cut prices.[3] Lubeck and Hamburg form a Hansa (association) for trade and mutual protection, Snorri Sturluson the Icelandic poet and historian dies, Battle of Leignitz, Silesia – Mongols defeat Germans, invade Poland and Hungary, but death of leader Ughetai forces them to withdraw from Europe, Master of Naumburg sculpts at Meissen, Mainz and Naumburg, German Hanseatic League introduces rudder and bowsprit for sailing, Mongols withdraw from Europe following death of Ogadai Khan, Death of Ogedai Khan - the Mongol, Mongols ravage e Europe and annex Russian principalities, Lubeck and Hamburg form a Hansa (association) for trade and mutual protection. [4]

June 27, 1542

Spanish explorer, Juan Rodrigues Cabrillo, sails up the California coast, claiming the territory for Spain.[5] Some fifty years after Columbus first sets foot in the Americas find neither towns or people. No one stands in their way. Most of the people are dead and nature has reclaimed the land. Everything that they now find is pure wilderness, a garden of Eden without humans.

Smallpox was accidentally introduced to the Americas in the 16th century. In blankets used by smallpox victims the scabs can live for two weeks. Small pox can also exist on a transatlantic vessel going from host to host until it reaches the Americas. When smallpox reached the Americas it was introduced to millions of new human hosts, who had no acquired immunities to these diseases. Smallpox, together with measles and influenza had a devastating effect on the native American populations. Conservative estimates are a 50 percent mortality rate. Other estimates go to 90 percent or higher. Through trade between native peoples diseases spread throughout the entire continent. Many died of foreign diseases without ever seeing a European. Microbes move faster then the Conquistitors that brought them.[6]

June 27, 1629: John Winthrop leads the first settlers of the Massachusetts Bay Company into Salem Harbor.[7]

June 27, 1630: England, Scotland and Ireland were Christian countries, but worship was divided between different denominations such as Catholicism, Anglicanism, Presbyterianism, and Puritanism. Charles was baptised in the Chapel Royal on June 27, by the Anglican Bishop of London William Laud and brought up in the care of the Protestant Countess of Dorset, though his godparents included his maternal uncle and grandmother, Marie de' Medici, both of whom were Catholics.[2] At birth, Charles automatically became Duke of Cornwall and Duke of Rothesay, along with several other associated titles. At or around his eighth birthday, he was designated Prince of Wales, though he was never formally invested with the Honours of the Principality of Wales.[1][8]

June 27, 1709: Peter the Great defeats Charles XII of Sweden at the Battle of Poltava. The Russian victory marked the beginning of the end for Sweden as a major European military and political power. Charles XI, the father of Charles XII had banned Jews from living in Sweden. Charles XII did not adhere to his father’s wishes since he used Jewish merchants as court treasurers and royal paymaster for his armies when they were in the field. The father’s religious concerns were overridden by the son’s financial needs. Peter the Great did not want Jews living in his ever expanding kingdom. During the war with Sweden, when the fighting reached Poland, Russian soldiers were given in a free hand in looting and pillaging the Jewish property and taking whatever liberties they wished with the Jewish populace.[9]

June 27, 1710

Each man's proportion to a tax of œ10, to procure a stock of

ammunition, June 27, 1710.

[N. B.--The reader will observe a line separating the names into two nearly equal divisions. It was probably intended to distinguish those who lived N. from those who lived S. of the river.] [10]



John Shers, 01 11

Tomptson Wood, 01 02

Benj. Neland, 01 02

Abiall Lamb, 02 02

Samuel Frisell, 01 00

Jos. Parker, 00 10

John Wood, 01 03

Samuel Winch, 02 03

David Winch, 00 09

Micell Pike, 01 03

Jerem. Pike, 02 00

William Pike, 01 02

Jeames Pike, 01 03

John Jones, 00 09

Abr. Bellknop, 01 11

Edward Wright, 01 02

John Town, 03 00

Isrell Town, 00 10

Ephrim Town, 00 09

John Brus, 01 04

Eccobod Hemenway 01 09

Amos Waite, 01 01

Daniel Mexter, 02 01

Benj. Willerd, 01 03

Benj. Provender, 00 09

Philip Gleason, 00 09

Caleb Jonson, 00 10

Nath. Willson, 01 08

Nath. Willson, Jr. 00 09

Thomas Frostt, Jr, 01 03

Dea. Josh. Hemenway, 02 00

Samuel How, 02 00

Matthew Gibbs, 01 03

John Frostt, [11]



Thursday June 27, 1754:

An Indian messenger brings news that a French army has been gathered at Fort Duquesne and soon will be moving south towards the British force. Washington decides to end the road building work and also to ask Captain Mackay to bring his South Carolina company from the Great Meadows to Gist's Plantation.[12]



Washington‘s last journal entry of the campaign was on June 27, 1754. It also mentions road

building:

June 27. Detached Captain Lewis, Lieutenant Waggoner and Ensign Mercer, two

Sergeants, two Corporals, one drummer and sixty men, in order to endeavor to clear a

road to the mouth of RedStone Creek, on Monongahela.[13]

“June 27, 1754 - At ten-thirty the entire army marched away from the left. The march was very strenuous again and the day unbearably hot, to which was added a shortage of beverages. Our regiment lost a man who was so worn out by the heat and the march that he dropped dead. [14] The British and Hessians withdrew in two columns to Rahway, where it
was protected by the Rahway River.[15]

June 27, 1776



LETTER TO VIRGINIA GAZETTE



To the Printers:

Gentlemen,

It is with great reluctance we are drawn into this publication. Had our enemies meditated their attacks against our person or property, we had been silent; but they have, in violation of truth, of duties of society, and of every principle of generosity, practiced very cruel and insidious arts to deprive us of much higher value . . . . our characters as men, and the esteem of our fellow citizens. They have reported us to our brethren as traitors to the American Cause and consequently inimical to their dearest invaluable rights. We are accused of holding connections with the avowed enemies to this greatly injured country.

It is therefore incumbent on us to challenge those wicked men into open light, that we may have the opportunity of evincing our innocence to the world in the most public manner. In the interim we set them at the utmost defiance, and are,

Yours Etc

William Crawford

John Stephenson.[16]



June 27, 1777 the Congress recorded:

That there be advanced to Colonel George Morgan, 20,000 dollars, for compleating the

payment of monies he has engaged for on contracts for provisions, which are directed to

be laid up in magazines at Fort Pitt, for the supply of the different garrisons in that

quarter; for the expenditure of which, the said Colonel George Morgan is to be

accountable.

Ordered, That the same be advanced.[17]

June 27, 1782

There was one council held at which I was not present. The warriors had sent for me as usual, but the squaw with whom I lived would not suffer me to go, but hid me under a large quantity of skins. It may have been from an unwillingness that I should hear in council the determination with respect to me, that I should be burnt.

About this time, twelve men were brought in from Kentucky, three of whom were burnt on this day; the remainder were distributed to other towns, and all, as the Indians informed me , were burnt. This was after the speech came from Detroit.[18]



June 27, 1787: After 25 years of work, Edward Gibbon completes the manuscript of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Gibbon had a very low opinion of the Jewish people describing them as the “disturbers of the religious harmony of the ancient world” who had emerged from the deserved obscurity resulting from the enslavement by the Assyrians and Babylonians to observe their “peculiar rites and unsocial manners” with “sullen obstinacy.” [Ed. Note: It only gets worse after this.][19]



June 27, 1789 - The Spanish Governor refused to grant any of the land marked out by Colonels George Harrison* and Benjamin Harrison, which they gave notice they reserved for themselves and their friends, extending 20 miles north of New Madrid and embracing 200 separate tracts, exclusive of lakes and marshes.

*Was George Morgan intended? – ISG [20]

June 27, 1829



Private Cemetery: NATHANIEL KING FARM, formerly the WADE FARM, and

originally known as the MOSES VANCE FARM. Located in Upper Tyrone

Township, Fayette County, Pennsylvania.



July 1949, Inscriptions of graves copied and compiled. The following

statement is made about the cemetery: "This cemetery was destroyed by the

Pittsburg 7 West Virginia Railroad Company when they constructed their

branch through this section, about the year 1935. There are only two stones

remaining, and they are large flat table stones, in excellent condition,

with inscriptions that are very legible, and as follows:"



VANCE "In memory of ELIZABETH VANCE, consort of MOSES VANCE, who departed

this life, September 8, 1849, age 76 years."



MOSES VANCE, who departed this life, June 27, 1829, age 56 years.

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



Postscript and History:



"A descendant of the MOSES VANCE Family, who retained a copy of their

original family bible, states several of the

MOSES VANCE descendants were buried in this same cemetery, but no doubt

their stones were destroyed when the

Railroad constructed their branch, or they could have been moved elsewhere,

but the above two stones remain under a

group of trees.



We shall add here the bible records as follows:



MOSES VANCE, b. May 23, 1773; died January 27, 1829; married ELIZABETH, daughter of

JACOB & ELIZABETH STRICKLER, settlers in Tyrone Township in 1797.



ELIZABETH STRICKLER, b. 1773; died September 8, 1849, and both (husband and wife)

are buried on the NATHANIEL KING Farm.



Their Children:

JOHN VANCE, b. January 11, 1797; d. March 12, 1886; married MARY STRICKLER, daughter

of ABRAHAM STRICKLER.



JACOB VANCE, b. November 7, 1798; d. November 4, 1883; married CHARLOTTE HARDY



SAMUEL VANCE, b. July 30, 1800



FRANCES VANCE, b. Mary 27, 1802



WILLIAM VANCE, b. December 6, 1804



CRAWFORD VANCE, b. March 13, 1806; married SUSAN CLAYTON



MARGARET VANCE, b. March 29, 1808



ALFRED VANCE, b. April 22, 1810



ELISA VANCE, b. September 22, 1813; single



GEORGE VANCE, b. January 12, 1815; single"

[Reference, MOSES VANCE FAMILY, found in the book "History of Fayette

County, Pennsylvania, pages 401, 784, 787", by author Franklin Ellis;

information transcribed for PA Archives, November 1997.]



End of Vance index[21]



June 27, 1844: The religion rapidly gained converts, and Smith set up Mormon communities in Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois. However, the Christian sect was also heavily criticized for its unorthodox practices, such as polygamy, and on June 27, 1844, Smith and his brother were murdered in a jail cell by an anti-Mormon mob in Carthage, Illinois. [22] Brigham Young becomes head of the Mormon Church after its leader, Joseph Smith, is killed by a mob in Nauvoo, Illinois.[23]

June 27, 1862: Battle of Gaines’ Mill, VA.[24]



June 27, 1874: Frieda Gottlieb, born Eisenstein, June 27, 1874 in Wangerin, Pommern. Prenzlauer Berg, Lothriger Str. 16; 25. Alterstransport. Resided Berlin. Deportation: from Berlin, July 20, 1942, Theresienstadt. Date of death: October 12, 1942, Theresienstadt. [25]



June 27, 1864: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry: Assault on Kenesaw.[26]

Mon. June 27, 1864

Started at sunrise for town of Thibodaux

For breakfast nice town of 1600 inhabitants land level town on byo lafouch[27]



June 27, 1893

The New York Stock Market crashes, beginning four years of deep depression in the United States.[28]



June 27, 1893

Silver hits an all time low of $.77 per ounce, prompting Colorado producers to shut down their mines.[29]



June 27, 1940

The British ask for help in standing up to Japan at a secret meeting with United States Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, during World War II.[30]



June 27, 1942: When they arrived in Auschwitz, on June 27, the 1,000 deportees received numbers 41773 to 42772. On August 15, seven weeks later, 557 were still alive. Forty-Five percent had died, as compared to ythe 80% for the preceding convoy. Two factors expolain this considerable differencd. First, the average age on this convoy was five years less than the preceding two. Second, more than 90% of the deportees were of Polish origin and better able to resist the terrible conditions in the Polish camp of Auschwitz than, for example, were the 435 French Jews of Convoy #3, which had left just three days earlier.



To the best of our knowledge, 59 survivors returned in 1945.[31]



June 27, 1942: The New York Times devoted two inches to the Bunde report on June 27. It had picked up the information from CBS in New York, which had recorded Zygielbojm’s BBC broadcast the preceding day. The Times’s brief account noted that 700,000 Polish Jews had been slain, and igt quoted the broadcast’s disclosure that “to accomplish this, probably the greatest mass slaughter in history, every death-dealing method was employed-machine-gun bullets, hand grenades, gas chambers, concentration camps, whipping, torture instruments and starvation.”[32]



June 27, 1944

Cherbourg falls to United States forces, the first major French port to come under Allied control, during World War II.[33]



June 27, 2012: 2 million years ago…Ancient Human Ancestors Had Unique Diet

ScienceDaily (June 27, 2012) — When it came to eating, an upright, 2 million-year-old African hominid had a diet unlike virtually all other known human ancestors, says a study led by the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany and involving the University of Colorado Boulder.

The study indicated that Australopithecus sediba -- a short, gangly hominid that lived in South Africa -- ate harder foods than other early hominids, targeting trees, bushes and fruits. In contrast, virtually all other ancient human ancestors tested from Africa -- including Paranthropus boisei, dubbed "Nutcracker Man" because of its massive jaws and teeth -- focused more on grasses and sedges, said CU-Boulder doctoral student Paul Sandberg, a co-author on the new study.

The A. sediba diet was analyzed using a technique that involved zapping fossilized teeth with a laser, said Sandberg. The laser frees telltale carbon from the enamel of teeth, allowing scientists to pinpoint the types of plants that were consumed and the environments in which the hominids lived. The carbon signals from the teeth are split into two groups: C3 plants like trees, shrubs and bushes preferred by A. sediba, and C4 plants like grasses and sedges consumed by many other early hominids.

The teeth from the two A. sediba individuals analyzed in the study had carbon isotope values outside the range of all 81 previously tested hominids. "The lack of any C4 evidence, and the evidence for the consumption of hard objects, are what make the inferred diet of these individuals compelling," said Sandberg.

"It is an important finding, because diet is one of the fundamental aspects of an animal, one that drives its behavior and ecological niche. As environments change over time because of shifting climates, animals are generally forced to either move or to adapt to their new surroundings," said Sandberg of CU-Boulder's anthropology department.

The researchers concluded from their scientific tests that bark and other fracture-resistant foods were at least a seasonal part of the A. sediba diet. While bark and woody tissues had not been previously documented as a dietary component of any other ancient African hominids, such foods are consumed by many contemporary primates and contain both protein and soluble sugars. The diet of A. sediba may have been similar to that of today's African savanna chimpanzees, Sandberg said.

One unique aspect of the project was the analysis of microscopic, fossilized particles of plant tissue known as phytoliths trapped in ancient tooth tarter, a hardened form of dental plaque, said corresponding study author Amanda Henry of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.

"The fact that these phytoliths are preserved in the teeth of 2 million-year-old hominids is remarkable and speaks to the amazing preservation at the site," said Sandberg. "The phytolith data suggest the A. sediba individuals were avoiding the grasses growing in open grasslands that were abundant in the region at the time."

A third, independent line of study -- analyzing microscopic pits and scratches on A. sediba teeth, which reveal what they were eating at the time just prior to death -- also confirmed that at least one of the hominids was eating harder foods, said Sandberg.

A paper on the subject was published online by Nature on June 27. Other paper authors included Professor Matt Sponheimer of CU-Boulder, Peter Ungar of the University of Arkansas, Benjamin Passey of Johns Hopkins University, Lloyd Rossouw of the Bloemfontein National Museum in Bloemfontein, South Africa, Lee Berger and Marion Bamford of the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa and Darryl de Ruiter of Texas A&M University.

A. sediba is particularly intriguing to anthropologists. The first two individuals discovered -- a juvenile male and an adult female from the Malapa Cave site roughly 30 miles north of Johannesburg in 2008 --apparently had fallen into a hidden pit in the cave and died. With an upright posture and long arms, the curious creature appears to have characteristics of both primitive and modern hominids, including a human-like ankle, short fingers and a long thumb for possible precision gripping and a relatively complex brain compared to earlier hominids, according to researchers.

The jury is still out on exactly where these hominids land on the family tree. A. sediba may have been a descendant of A. africanus, which was spawned by A. afarensis, a hominid represented by "Lucy" who lived about three million years ago and is considered by many to be the matriarch of the human family.

The A. sediba remains at Malapa were dated to 2 million years by scientists, a precise number obtained by measuring the decay of isotopes of uranium into lead that occurred in a type of mineral deposit known as flowstone that capped the fossil-bearing layer.

Paleontological evidence, including pollen and phytoliths, shows that the region around Malapa likely was a mix of abundant grassland and woody vegetation about 2 million years ago, said Sandberg. The team's carbon isotope research on the ancient teeth of rodents and hooved mammals that inhabited the region at the time indicated they had a strong affinity for C4 grasses and sedges.

"What fascinates me is that these individuals are oddballs," said CU-Boulder's Sponheimer. "I had pretty much convinced myself that after four million years ago most of our hominid kin had diets that were different from living apes, but now I am not so sure. And while our sample is too small to be conclusive, the rate at which Malapa is spewing hominid fossils makes me reasonably certain we won't have to wait another two million years to augment our data set. "

The study was funded in part by the National Science Foundation, the Smithsonian Institution, the Malapa Project at the Institute for Human Evolution at the University of Witwatersrand and the Max Planck Society.

http://images.sciencedaily.com/2012/06/120627132047.jpg

A high-tech dental analysis of a 2-million-year-old hominid from South Africa involving CU-Boulder researchers indicates it had a unique diet that included trees, bushes and fruits. (Credit: Photo courtesy Paul Sandberg, University of Colorado)[34]





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[1] www.wikipedia.org


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


[3] Stephen Inwood, A History of London, London; Macmilan, 1998 p. 70

www.wikipedia.org


[4] mike@abcomputers.com


[5] On This Day in America by John Wagman.+


[6] America before Columbus, NTGEO, 11/22/2009.


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


[8] Wikipedia


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


[10] A History of Framington, Massachusetts GenealogyLibrary.com Main Page 163




[11] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/_glc_/3256/3256_163.html


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


[13] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 79.


[14] The Platte Grenadier Battalion Journal:Enemy
View by Bruce Burgoyne, pg 151

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


[16] The Virginia Gazette, January 27, 1776 Front Page, Center Column


[17] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 103.


[18] Narrative of John Slover.


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


[20] (Houck, v. 2, p. 125) Chronology of Benjamin Harrison compiled by Isobel Stebbins Giuvezan. Afton, Missouri, 1973 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html


[21] http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/fayette/cemeteries/scems0001.txt


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


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


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


[25] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

{2}Gedenkbuch Berlins . Der judishchen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus

“Ihre Namen mogen nie versessen werden!”


[26] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[27] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeffery lee Goodlove


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


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


[30] On this Day in America, John Wagman.


[31] Memorial to the Jews Deprted from France 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 35.


[32] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 22-23.




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


[34] http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/06/120627132047.htm

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