Sunday, June 9, 2013
This Day in Goodlove History, June 9
“Every Day is Memorial Day at This Day in Goodlove History”
10,516 names…10,516 stories…10,516 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, June 9
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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 9, 68: The Emperor Nero died in Rome. Nero had appointed four governors of Judea each of whom was crueler and greedier than his predecessor. The Jewish Revolt in 66 was caused, in part, by this succession of disastrous appointments by Nero. Nero had ordered Vespasian to invade the Galilee and suppress the revolt of the Jews. The political unrest that followed Nero's death as various parties vied for the throne slowed down the final defeat of the Jews. In the end, Vespasian was made Emperor thanks to the support of his legions and he sent his son Titus to conquer Jerusalem.[1]
68 A.D.: Josephus was put in charge of the Jewish forces in Galilee but by 68 A.D. Vespasian had crushed all opposition and moved south into Judea to lay siege to Jerusalem. Josephus surrendered and ended up on intimate terms with Vespasian, even advising him in the war effort, having become convinced that Jewish opposition was futile and disastrous. When Nero committed suicide in 68 A.D. three successive Roman generals made a bid to become emperor. General Galva marched in from Spain, and the Senate accepted him as emperor, but Otho, an influential senator, had him assassinated by the palace guard and declared himself emperor. General Vitellius, recognizing the opportunity, immediately marched down from Germany to Rome with his legions, forcing Otho to commit suicide, and becoming emperor himself. In the Vespacian decided to act. He left the war in Judea and the siege of Jerusalem in the hads of his son Titus and traveled to Rome to challenge Vitellius. Vitellius tried to flee but was killed by troops loyal to Vespasian and the the Senate declated Vespasian emperor. [2]
68 A.D. Rome came and destroyed Qumran.[3] The death of James in 62 A.D. may have triggered the first Jewish/Roman war that led to the destruction of Qumran in 68. The J.C. bunch was in trouble. They lost their H.Q. in Qumran and Jerusalem was besieged by the Romans.[4]
The responsibility for the Jewish tragedy is laid on the Zealots, whose misguided patriotism began the revolt and then dragged the mass of more moderate and loyal Jews into war. It is possible that in portraying the majority of the Jews as the unwilling victims of the fanatixism of this minority, Josephus has to some degree idealized their leaders, passing over their pre-war anti-Roman activities and exaggerating their efforts to preserve peace.[5]
69 A.D.: When James was killed in 62 A.D., Based On Daniel’s prediuctions, the followers of Jesus had calculated a final seven year period. They evidently left the city halfway into that period, or in the year 66 A.D. calculating that the “end” would come three and a half years later in 69 A.D. [6]
69: Rebellion of the Batavii led by Civilis against the Roman Empire.[7]
June 9, 721: At the Battle of Toulouse, Odo of Aquitaine defeated the Moors led by Al-Samh ibn Malik al-Khawlani, the governor of Al-Andalus. Al-Andalus refers to that part of the Iberian Peninsula which was under the control of the Moslems. While the defeat at Toulouse (in modern day France) helped to confine the forces of Islam to territory south of the Pyrenees mountains, it served to reinforce the fact that Spain would not be ruled by Christians. For a limited period of time, this created what some called a Golden Age for the Jews of Spain. The reality is a little more complicated. It would more than seven centuries for the Christians to dislodge the Moslems from the Iberian Peninsula. Depending on the whims and needs of various rulers (both Christian and Moslem), Jewish fortunes waxed and waned. It would all end with the expulsion of 1492.[8]
722: Byzantine emperor Leo III forcibly converts all Jews and Montanists in the empire into mainstream Byzantine Christianity.[9]
723 A.D.: Thor’s Oak stood in Fritzlau, Germany until 723 A.D.,. That was the year everything changed, when the forces of another religion arrived from the south to convert all non believers. They set their sites on the the symbolic center of the pagan world, Thor’s Oak. During the conversion of the Norse St. Bonaface came “If Thor is so powerful then he will come down and strike me down if I cut down his great tree.” The Chris tian account says that a mighty wind came and knocked the tree down . People saw this and conferted on the spot. Thje fall of Thor’s Oak was a symbolic turning point in Nortrhern Europe. [10]
724:
Death of Yazid II. Accession of Hisham.[11]
725:
The Muslims occupy Nimes in France. [12]
729 A.D.: A comet was widely seen as the sign of the Saracin invasion of France.[13]
730 A.D.: Jarrow Englane, 730 A.D. Beed, a Benedictine monk in a monestary writes the history of England.[14] Bead writes a five volume history of England. Beads work is a link to the pre-Christian past. [15]
730 A.D.: The Moors cross into France with 50,000 men. [16] The Moors cut through southern France.
c. 654-732: A second important Himyarite figure is Wahb ibn Munabbih (c. 54-732), a man of mixed Persian and Himyarite descent who was also a source on Jewish traditions but, more important , on Himyari history.[17]
June 9th, 1534 - Jacques Cartier 1st sails into mouth of St Lawrence River[18]
June 9, 1572: Henry IV of France
Henry IV
HenriIV.jpg
King of France
Reign
August 2, 1589 – May 14, 1610
Coronation
February 27, 1594
Predecessor
Henry III
Successor
Louis XIII
King of Navarre
Reign
June 9, 1572 – May 14, 1610
Predecessor
Jeanne III
Successor
Louis II
Spouse
Margaret of France
Marie de' Medici
Issue
Louis XIII of France
Elisabeth, Queen of Spain
Christine, Duchess of Savoy
Nicholas Henri, Duke of Orléans
Gaston, Duke of Orléans
Henrietta Maria, Queen of England and Scotland
House
House of Bourbon
Father
Antoine de Bourbon
Mother
Jeanne III of Navarre
Born
(1553-12-13)December 13, 1553
Pau, Kingdom of Navarre (Lower Navarre)
Died
May 14, 1610(1610-05-14) (aged 56)
Paris, France
Burial
Saint Denis Basilica, France
Religion
Roman Catholicism,
previously Huguenot
Henri de Bourbon was born in Pau, the capital of the French province of Béarn.[2] His parents were Queen Jeanne III (Jeanne d'Albret) and King Antoine of Navarre.[3] Although baptised as a Roman Catholic, Henry was raised as a Protestant by his mother, who had declared Calvinism the religion of Navarre. As a teenager, Henry joined the Huguenot forces in the French Wars of Religion. On June 9, 1572, upon Jeanne's death, he became King Henry III of Navarre.[4]
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c9/Henry_III_on_his_deathbed_designating_Henri_de_Navarre_as_his_successor.jpg/170px-Henry_III_on_his_deathbed_designating_Henri_de_Navarre_as_his_successor.jpg
http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf4/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png
Henry III on his deathbed designating Henri de Navarre as his successor in 1589.[19]
June 9, 1595: Birthdate of King Wladislaus IV who was King of Poland at the outbreak of The Khmelnitsky Uprising and failed to check it at its inception. This failure contributed to the worst massacre of Jews until the 20th century and the Holocaust.[20]
1597 Jews expelled from Cremona, Pavia & Lodi.[21]
1598: In A.D. 1598, the feud of 1587 was resumed. Sir James Macdonald (successor of the outlaw) encountered Sir Lauchlan MacLean in a tremendous battle at Lochgruinart, when MacLean, 80 of his kin and 200 common soldiers were killed. Hector MacLean, his son and successor, obtained a “commission of fire and sword” against Macdonald and invading Islay, accompanied by MacKinnon and his clan, encountered the Macdonalds at a place called Bern Bige, defeated them and ravaged the whole island.[22]
1598: Henry IV of France issued the Edict of Nantes, granting full religious freedom to his subjects[23] including the Huguenots in Catholic France. The edict did not cover Moslems or Jews living in France, including “New Christians” who had fled to France because of the Inquisition.[24]
Henry IV of France is the father in law of the 8th great granduncle of the husband of the 9th cousin
June 9 & 10, 1713
Essex County, Virginia, Wills and Deeds, 1711-1714, p. 125. Lease and Release. 9 and June 9 and 10, 1713. Nathaniel Vickers, planter, of St. Marys Par., Essex Co., sells Andrew2 Harrison the younger, planter, of the same Par. and Co., 100 acres in St. Marys Par., adj. land of Richard Long where he now lives, Edward Evans corn field, etc. Signed Nathaniel Vickers. Wit: Richard x Long, Edward x Evans, Augt Smith. Rec. June 11,
1713.[25]
Essex County, Virginia, Wills and Deeds, 1711-1714, p. 127. Lease and Release. June 9 and June 10, 1713. Andrew2 Harrison the younger, planter, of St. Marys Par., Essex Co., sells Nath'll Vickers of same Par., 200 acres, adj. land of Mr. Buckner and that of Richard Long. Signed Andrew2 Harrison. Wit: Richard x Long, Edward x Evans, Augt Smith. Rec. June 11, 1713.[26]
Andrew Harrison is the 7th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.
June 9, 1732: James Oglethorpe was granted a charter to establish the colony of Georgia. The colony was settled in June of 1733. In July of 1733, “forty Sephardic Jews arrived in Savannah” marking the beginning of the Jewish community in Georgia.[27]
June 9, 1752
The major council of the tribes that had been scheduled by George Croghabn was held at Logstown on June 9, 1752, and it ended up satisfying no one. For many of the Indians on hand, it was the first time they truly learned the details of the Lancaster Treaty of 1744, in which the Iroquois had blandly sold to the British for 600 pounds the entire Ohio River drainage. [28]
June 9, 1754
On the 9th , Major Muse arrived from Wills’ Creek with the remainder of the regiment, and nine small swivel guns, with ammunition fr them. But although the last of the regiment had now arrived, the total force under Washington was but little more than tree hundred men, isn six companies, commanded respectively by Captains Stephen, Jacob Van Braam, Robert Stobo[29], Peter Hogg, Andrew Lewis,[30] Polson, and George Mercer. Amn the subalterns were Lieutenants John Mercer and Waggoner, and Ensigns Peyrnie and Tower. Major Muse, as a man military experience, was detailed as quartermaster, and Captain Stephen was made acting major.[31]
Sunday June 9, 1754
Two more Virginian companies arrive at the Great Meadows with a total of 110 men and five officers. Washington is now promoted to full Colonel in charge of the Virginia Regiment. The original commander, Colonel Fry, had been coming with the reinforcements but had fallen off his horse and died. [32]
“June 9, 1777: - At ten o’clock we could see Port Amboy, the capital city of Jersey. At one o’clock we dropped anchor and prepared at once to debark, which happened.”[33]
The Platte Grenadier Battalion Journal fills in some of the details of the army’s movements beginning on June 12. “The Commanding General-in-Chief Sir William Howe and Lieutenant General von Heister with many English regiments and Major General von Stint’s Brigade, consisting of the Leib Regiment, the Donop and Mirbach Regiments, and the Combined Battalion, arrived at Brunswick. As soon as the regiments entered camp, many defensive positions were thrown up on both sides of the Raritan River. [34]
June 9, 1779
Spain declares war on England, without making any alliances with the United States.[35]
*To COLONEL WILLIAM CRAWFORD
New Windsor, June 9, 1781.
Dear Sir: Mr. Randolph [36] delivered me your letter of the 23rd. Ulto. and some time ago I was favoured with another from you. give me leave to thank you most sincerely for yr. kind attention to my Interest, and to assure you that I shall ever hold in grateful recollection your friendly endeavors to serve me.
My whole time is, and has been since I came into the Service, so much engrossed by the public duties of my station, that I have totally neglected all my private concerns, which are declining every day, and may, possibly, end in capital losses, if not absolute ruin, before I am at liberty to look after them.
With respect to the round bottom, I can give little or no information; as far as a bad Memory serves me (for I have no papers by me to refer to), I located it in the Office of Mr. Thorns. Lewis, Surveyor of Augusta, and laid some rights, which I had purchased, upon it, to the amount of the contents of your Survey but what has been done in the matter since, I know not, nor am I quite certain that all I have hear said was actually done. If without giving yourself much trouble you could enquire into this matter, and pursue the necessary measures to secure this Land for me I shall acknowledge it as an act of kindness; will repay any expence you may be run to in the prosecution of the business; and make grateful returns when it is in my power to do so. I could wish to obtain a Patent for it, after obviating other claims; for I have heard, I think, that there is a caveat to prevent my obtaining a Patent.
Can you tell me how matters stand with respect to my Racoon Tract? Are the People who live on it still unconvinced of my havg. a Patent for it? If on the contrary they know, or believe, that I have such a Patent, what do they propose to do in that case? It is hard upon me, to have property which has been fairly obtained, disputed and withheld; on the other hand, if the Settlers on the Land, either through ignorance or disbelief of its being mine, have made improvements of value thereon and wish to live on and enjoy them, I would agree that they should remain Seven years longer upon their respective Plantns. on terms which should in their own eyes appear moderate and easy, even if it amounted to nothing more than a bear acknowledgt. subject nevertheless at the expiration of that term to such reasonable Rents as the Land and Improvernts. are worth; and shall be adjudged just for both Landlord and Tenant. Upon these terms I would give Leases for lives, or a great length of years; provided also (in the latter case especially) some mode can be adopted to let the value of the Rents every Seven or ten years, be so raised as to bear some proportion to the increased value of the Land.
I shall thank you for giving me information respecting this matter, and the round bottom; in general, what situation my landed affairs in that Country are in; it not being impossible nor yet very unlikely (as I can give no attention to them myself) that my other Patented Lands may be settled upon and claimed in the same way as that is on Racoon. I pray you also to be so kind as to let me know how Simpson8° employs his time, his force, and my Mill. He has not that I can hear of rendered any acct. or paid one farthing for the profits of my Mill or share of the Plantation since he has been on the Land, which is poor encouragement for me to leave my property in his hands. Does the boundary as it is settled between Virginia and Pensylvania affect the property of those Lands which were surveyed and Patented in Virginia, but which by the late line are thrown into Pensylvania? This, I believe, is the case with respect to my Tract on Racoon Creek if no more of it.
I shall hope to receive a long and full Acct. from you on the several matters contained in this letter by the first safe opportunity. Should Genl. Clark be able to prosecute his intended expedition and you accompany him I sincerely wish you success in the enterprize and health to encounter the fatigues of it. My best wishes attend you, Mrs. Crawford and family; and I am etc.[37]
June 9, 1781: The 1782 replacement recruits included detactments from all six of the German states supplying troops (Hesse-Cassel, Hesse-Hanau, Brunswick, Anspach-Bayreuth, Waldeck, and Anhalt-Zerbst). The detachment comprised 2018 officers and men, 112 women, and 33 children. They embarked at Bremerlehe on June 1, 1781 and sailed on June 9 I do not have a copy of the embarkation list but the citation is: "Liste von der Einschiffung der nach Amerika bestimmten Troupen zu BremerLehe den 31ten May 1782," Bestand 13, A. 6. (accession 1930/5), Nr. 198, 9. 108, Hessisches Staatsarchiv Marburg. Also "Return of the German Recruits, destin'd for America, after their Embarkation, Bremer Lehe, June 1, 1782" signed by Major General William Fawcett, UK/TNA/PRO, SP 81/195. The fleet comprising two frigates and 14 transports arrived at Halifax on August 13, 14 1782. The Frigates were HMS Emerald, 32-guns, Captain William Knell, and HMS Cyclops, 28-guns, Captain Brabazon Christian. The transports were the Rebecca, Ocean, Littledale, Chudleigh, Hesperus, Berwick, Diana, Elizabeth & Molly, Montagu, Enterprise, Soverign, Neptune, Apollo, and Jupiter."[38]
June 9th.—A party of about 30 joined us this morning before we march’d besides single Men, who came up with us constantly: and we observed in different places signs of encampments of our people of about 40 or 50 along the road— At 10 this morning we left this long ridge (12 or 14 miles long full of fallen timber, thickets, & in some places stony) near to where Bouquets & the Wheeling path intersect one another. the latter one crosses the river 10 Miles below the Towns and the distance from there to Wheeling our pilots assert to be 50 miles. the Country they say is level & dry. Sixteen men our pilots included left us here to go to Wheeling.— We proceeded 2 miles farther on our old Trail, when we struck off E. through the Woods for the L. Moray. Town. After passing the first ridge, intervening Swamps obliged us to lean to our old Trail and encamped about 6 miles from Muskingham. We gained very little headway in this day’s march.[39]
The Chippewa war party with Michael Walters and Christopher Coffman in tow reached the Sandusky River in the late afternoon today, crossed to the west side at a fording place and moved downstream from there on the main trail. The earlier fears of the captives that they were eventually to be executed had been diminished by their stop at Wingenund’s Town, and by the Ottawas refusal to let the two men run the gauntlet there because they wanted the captives in good shape to run the gauntlet when they reached the Chippewa Towns. That, Walters reasoned, had been only a ploy to get them away from the Delawares quickly. Since then, during this day’s journey toward Monakaduto’s Town, he had been able to gather that the Chippewas planned to take them to Detroit and turn them over to the British for the ransom they would receive.
Having crossed the Sandusky River, it was only a matter of a few more miles downstream to the mouth of Tymochtee Creek and the Wyandot village. Before sunset they arrived there, and the residents of Monakaduto’s Town greeted the Chippewas with greater warmth than had the Delawares. Nevertheless, they too were disappointed when the Chippewas would not permit their captives to run the gauntlet. The Wyandots fed their guests, including the captives, and they exchanged news and experiences of the recent battle into the evening.
Coffman and Walters were more than surprised to see, among the prisoners on hand here, their earlier companion, Joshua Collins. As with Col. Crawford in Wingenund’s Town, however, they did not get close enough to speak to Collins and ask how he had come to be captured after making his escape from the Chippewa party. The bruises and swellings on his head and upper body were clear evidence he had been forced to run a gauntlet upon arriving here. They were glad to see that he had survived it.
While the Chippewas were being entertained, Coffman and Walters, tied to a post nearby, were approached by several British Rangers who stared at them with such loathing that Walters was sure they would have killed them had they thought they could get away with it. Despite this, Coffman asked the men if they would help them escape.
“Help you escape?” said one of them incredulously. He spat on the ground at their feet. “You two ought to be hanged for fighting against King George.”
Even though the Chippewas were being treated cordially, they remained apprehensive that their hosts might try to confiscate the two captives and, at last, with the twilight deepening, the Chippewas returned to Walters and Coffman and led them northward out of the town to an isolated hut that had been offered them for the night. Here, with the two whites tied back to back, they settled down to await the morning, leaving one of their number on guard should the Wyandots come during the darkness to steal their prisoners.[40]
June 9, 1782
The next day the bodies of these men were dragged to the outside of the town and their carcasses being given to the dogs, their limbs and heads were stuck upon poles.
My surviving companion shortly after we had reached the council house was sent to another town, and I presume, he was burnt or executed in the same manner.
In the evening the men assembled in the council house; this is a large building about fifty yards in length, and about twenty-five yards wide, and about sixteen feet in height, built of split poles covered with bark; their first object was to examine me, which they could do in their own language, inasmuch as I could speak the Miami, Shawanese and Delaware languages, which I had learned during my early captivity in the last war; I found I had not forgotten these languages, especially the two former, as well as my native tongue.
They began with interrogating me, concerning the situation of our country, what were our provisions? Our numbers? The state of the war between us and Britain? I informed them Cornwallis had been taken, which next day, when Mathew Elliot with James Girty[41] came, he affirmed to be a lie, and the Indians seemed to give full credit to his declaration.
Hitherto I had been treated with some appearance of kindness, but now the enemy began to alter their behavior towards me. Girty had informed them, that when he asked me how I liked to live there, I had said that I intended to take the first opportunity to take a scalp and run off. It was, to be sure, very probable that if I had such intention, I would communicate it to him. Another man came to me and told me a story of his having lived on the south branch of Potomac in Virginia, and having three brothers there, he pretended he wanted to get away, but I suspected his design; nevertheless he reported that I had consented to go. In the meantime I was not tied, and could have escaped, but having nothing to put on my feet, I waited some time longer to provide for this.
I was invited every night to the war dance, which they usually continued until almost day. I could not comply with their desire, believing these things to be the service of the devil.[42]
June 9, 1815: Pendleton County, VA
Court Term 1815
At a court held for Pendleton County the 9th day of June (June 9) 1815. This last will and testament of John Mullinax deceased was presented in court and proved by the oaths of Jacob Gall and Thomas Roby, Sr. two of the witnesses thereto and ordered to be recorded.
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In the name of God, amen I John Mullinnix of the County of Pendleton and State of Virginia being frail in body but of sound and perfect mind and memory, blessed by almighty God for the same, do make and publish my last will and testament in manner and form Following to Wit first I desire that all just debts shall be paid. I desire that my wife Mary Mullinix shall have nothing more than she has got. Item I leave and bequeath to my daughter Jane Cartright one english Shilling and no more also to my son James Mullenix one english shilling and no more to my son Archibald one english shilling and no more also to my daughter Mary Cullip one enghlish shilling and no more. Item I leave and bequeath to my son Samuel Mullenix all my land at my decease to be at his own disposal for him and his heirs forever also all my personal estate not otherwise disposed of to be generally divided among my son James Mullinex children. I also nominate and appoint Stuart Slaven and Samuel Mullinix my Executors of this my last will & testament hereby revoking all former wills by me made in witness whereof, I hereby acknowledge this to be my last will & testament. Signed sealed in presence of us this 3rd day of June (June 3) 1809 who at his request and at his presence have hereunto subscribed our names as witnesses to the same.
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Jacob Gall } his
Zachariah Barnard } John X Mollinix (seal)
Thomas Roby Senior } mark[43]
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John Mollinix (born 1730 died before 1815) was father-in-law of George Cutlip.
John's daughter, Mary Mollinex, married George Cutlip on 04 Nov 1785 in Greenbrier Co., VA (now: WV) with John McCue officiating.
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1815
The eruption of the volcano Tamborah led to 1816 in being the year without a summer.
In Europe the summer temperatures were 5 degrees lower than normal. Wheat crops failed, and thousands of people died of famine. Even the USA was affected. Ohio had snow in July and no crops were produced.[44]
June 9, 1821: James G. Forbes arrived from Cuba carrying orders authorizing Jose M. Callava to arrange the transfer of West Florida to the United States.[45]
June 9, 1862: Battle of Port Republic, VA.[46]
June 9, 1863: Battle of Brandy[47] Station, VA.[48]
June 9, 1863: Samuel Godlove of the Iowa 24th Infantry Regiment, D C. Battle at Vicksburg, Mississippi. [49]
Thurs. June 9, 1864
Quite hot and thunder showers
Got a lame ankle didn’t drill any
Boys are fixing up their tents
Wrote a letter home[50]
William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove
June 9-30: 1864: Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, GA.[51]
June 9, 1923:
The Princess Helena
May 23 or 25, 1846
June 9, 1923
married 1866, Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein; had issue
[52]
Princess Helena is the 20th cousin 2x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.
June 9, 1942
The Germans murder of 2,000 people in the village of Lidice in Czechoslovakia, during World War II.[53]
June 9, 1942: On 9 June 1942, Adolf Hitler issued a decree for the reorganization of the RFR as a separate legal entity under the Reichsministerium für Bewaffnung und Munition (RMBM, Reich Ministry for Armament and Ammunition, after autumn 1943 the Reich Ministry for Armament and War Production); the decree appointed Reich Marshal Hermann Göring as the president.[23] The reorganization was done under the initiative of Minister Albert Speer of the RMBM; it was necessary as the RFR under Minister Bernhard Rust was ineffective and not achieving its purpose.[24] It was the hope that Göring would manage the RFR with the same discipline and efficiency as he had in the aviation sector.[54]
June 9, 1961: Emory Eli Smith (b. March 16, 1874 / d. June 9, 1961).[55]
Emory Eli Smith is the 6th cousin 5x removed of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.
June 9, 2007:
[56]
6-19-2007-22[57]
6-19-2007-25[58]
6-19-2007-23[59]
June 9, 2012
Ian, June 9 2012
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[1] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[2] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor. Page 294.
[3] Who Wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/16/2006
[4] The Naked Archeologist, The JC. Bunch 8/8/2008.
[5] Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 31.
[6] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor, page 299.
[7] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/germany.htm
[8] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[9] www.wikipedia.org
[10] Clash of the Gods, H2, 10/12/2009
[11] http://barkati.net/english/chronology.htm
[12] http://barkati.net/english/chronology.htm
[13] Comets, Prophets of Doom, 3/13/2005. H2.
[14] The Dark Ages, HISTI, 3/4/2007
[15] The Dark Ages, History International, 3-4-2007
[16] The Dark Ages, HISTI, 3/4/2007
[17] The Ten Lost Tribes, A world History by Zvi Ben-Dor Benite
[18] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1534
[19] Wikipedia
[20] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com
[21] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm
[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] The Northern Light, Vol. No. 3 September 1979 page 4. “Persecuted by the Inquisition” by Louis L. Williams.
[24] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[25]. [Beverley Fleet, Virginia Colonial Abstracts, The Original 34 Volumes Reprinted in 3, (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1988) 2: 20.] Chronological Listing of Events In the Lives of Andrew Harrison, Sr. of Essex County, Virginia, Andrew Harrison, Jr. of Essex and Orange Counties, Virginia, Lawrence Harrison, Sr. of Virginia and Pennsylvania Compiled from Secondary Sources Covering the time period of 1640 through 1772 by Daniel Robert Harrison, Milford, Ohio, November, 1998.
[26] [Beverley Fleet, Virginia Colonial Abstracts, The Original 34 Volumes Reprinted in 3, (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1988) 2: 20.] Chronological Listing of Events In the Lives of Andrew Harrison, Sr. of Essex County, Virginia, Andrew Harrison, Jr. of Essex and Orange Counties, Virginia, Lawrence Harrison, Sr. of Virginia and Pennsylvania Compiled from Secondary Sources Covering the time period of 1640 through 1772 by Daniel Robert Harrison, Milford, Ohio, November, 1998.
[27] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com
[28] That Dark and Bloody river, by Allan W. Eckert, page l
[29] The history of the wooden barrel can be traced back more than 2,000 years. Some believed it began as a hollowed-out log with the ends covered with animal skins. However, the barrel proved to be a primary container for transporting dried meat, flour, butter, salt, water, wine, gunpowder, and a myriad of other items. Barrels for holding liquids would likely be formed from white oak, while pine might hold grain. A gunpowder barrel might have wooden hoops to avoid bumping into another metal object and setting-off a spark. The form of the barrel makes it possible for a single person to tip it or lay it on its side and roll hundreds of pounds of goods to the desired location. The natural handling ability of the barrel made it the all-purpose container of choice and the journeyman cooper a valuable member of the community.
Barrels of various sizes were referred to as tuns, butts, casks, hogsheads, kilderkins, firkins, rundlets, kiers, tanks, et cetera. When George Washington came west in April 1754—leading to the battle at Fort Necessity, Captain Robert Stobo brought a 125 gallon tun/butt of Madeira wine with him.
http://www.thelittlelist.net/bactoblu.htm
[30] Afterwards General Lewis, who fought the battle of Point Pleasant in Dunmore’s war of 1774. He was a relative of Washington, and it is said that in 1775 the latterr recommended him for the appointment which he himself soon after received, that f commander in chief of the American armies.
[31] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, with Biographical Sketches of many of its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Edited by Franklin Ellis Vol. 1 Philadelphia; L. H. Everts & Co. 1882
[32] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm
[33] Rueffer: Enemy View, Bruce Burgoyne, pg. 159
[34] Enemy Views, Bruce Burgoyne pg. 151
[35] On This Day in American History, by John Wagman.
[36] Capt. David Meade Randolph, of the Virginia State regiment.
[37] The Writings of George Washington form the Original Manuscript Sources 1745-1799, John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor, Volume 22.
[38] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/ts/ships.htm
[39] Journal of a Volunteer Expedition to Sandusky, Baron Rosenthal, “John Rose”.
[40] That Dark and Bloody River, Allan W. Eckert
[41] These men, Elliot and Girty, were inhabitants of the western country, and since the commencement of the war, for some time professed an attachment to America, went off to the Indians. They are of that horrid brood called Refugees, and whom the devil has long since marked for his own property.
[42] Narrative of John Slover.
[43] Copyright © 1999 by the Cutlip Connection, 4648 East Saint Catherine Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 85040-5369 Phone: 602-438-9202 / FAX: 602-965-9073
E-Mail: Rod.Bias@asu.edu http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cutlip/wills/will1809.html
[44] Big Freeze. NTGEO, 3/29/2006
[45] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824
[46] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012
[47] Brandy. A liquor of choice in trade between the Indians of North America and the European traders. Several Indian sachems recognized the detrimental effect of alcohol on their warriors—especially during trade negotiations. The sachems preached abstinence from alcohol and a return to traditional values and customs. When European traders attempted withholding alcohol from the trading cycle, other Indians grew upset and were insulted by the white man’s arrogance. Brandy is distilled from the fermented juice of fruit; normally apples, plums, grapes, peaches, et cetera. Brandy from the Cognac region of France is referred to as cognac. When reading of traders filling Indians with alcohol, a good assumption is that the drink was brandy—or rum.
http://www.thelittlelist.net/boatobye.htm
[48] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012
[49] http://freepages.books.rootsweb.com/~cooverfamily/album_78.html
[50] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove
[51] (State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.)
[52] Wikipedia
[53] On This Day in American History, by John Wagman.
[54] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_energy_project
[55] Proposed Descendants of William Smyth.
[56] Attended by Gerol Goodlove and Carol Goodlove Vanderpool. Photo by Gerol Lee Goodlove, June 9, 2007.
[57] Attended by Gerol Goodlove and Carol Goodlove Vanderpool. Photo by Gerol Lee Goodlove, June 9, 2007.
[58] Reenactor dressed for the “225th Anniversary of the Battle of Olentangy, at the William and Hannah Crawford Schools, June 9-10, 2007. Photo by Gerol Goodlovel.
[59] William Crawford Intermediate and Hanna Crawford Elementary School. Photo by Gerol Lee Goodlove, June 9, 2007.
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