Sunday, July 21, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, July 21


“Lest We Forget”

10,623 names…10,623 stories…10,623 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, July 21

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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

July 21, 285: Diocletian appoints Maximian as Caesar, co-ruler. This was part of an attempt to shore up the imperial authority. In another such step, Diocletian “ordered all the people …to accept his divinity and offer sacrifices to him. Fortunately for the Jewish people, they were excluded from this decree…” According to at least one source, “Diocletian’s regime was comparatively favorable to the Jewish people” which may not be saying all that much when you consider the behavior of most Roman rulers.[1]


http://www.jewishhistory.org.il/images2/280/diocletian.gif


Emperor Diocletian

286 EMPEROR DIOCLETIAN http://www.jewishhistory.org.il/images/camera.gif

The Roman emperor (284-305) visited Eretz Israel as part of his campaign against the Persians. His reign is viewed favorably in the Talmud. [2]

July 21, 1535: The Spaniards sacked Tunis. The Jewish community was destroyed.[3] All the local Jews are sold into slavery.[4]

July 21, 1565: Son of Matthew Stewart, Earl of Lennox, and Margaret Douglas, niece of King Henry VIII of England; was brought up in England and tutored by John Elder and Arthur Lallart; his high position in the succession to the English and Scottish thrones was impressed upon him at an early age by his ambitious parents; was sent to France (1559) secretly to visit Queen Mary I (Mary Stuart); attended the coronation of King François II of France at Mary's invitation (returned to England Oct 1559); visited France after the death of François II (5 Dec 1560) to present himself to Mary as a potential suitor; acknowledged as a significant possibility as King Consort of Scotland (Feb 1561); fled to relatives in France (1562) when Queen Elizabeth I of England expressed her displeasure at the suit; Elizabeth compiles 14 articles against Lord and Lady Lennox ( May 7, 1562), arrests and imprisons Lord Lennox and confines Lady Lennox to house arrest ( May 10, 1562); returned to England (1563) on Elizabeth's promise to consider him as an heir; attended at court until departing for Scotland ( February 3, 1565, arrived in Edinburgh February 12, 1565); met Mary's court at Weymess Castle, Fife (February 1565); rumours of a secret marriage with Mary reach English court (April 1565); was created Earl of Ross and Lord of Ardmannoch (May 15, 1565) and renounced English citizenship by swearing allegiance to Mary; created Duke of Albany (July 20, 1565); Mary issued royal warrant (July 28, 1565) announcing intention to marry and styling him King upon marriage (not recognized by Elizabeth); official marriage performed July 29, 1565 at Holyrood Castle (the banns published July 21, 1565); proclamation issued July 30, 1565 was signed by the King and Queen giving King precedence; papal dispensation issued September 25, 1565 (backdated to May 25,1565); signed a bond ( March 1, 1566) taking responsibility for the plot to murder David Rizzio, Mary's secretary; conspired to murder Rizzio in Mary's private chambers at Holyrood ( March 9, 1566); took control of Mary's person with the assistance of Lords Moray, Rothes, Ruthven, and Lennox; betrayed fellow conspirators and fled with Mary to Dunbar; announced intention to leave Scotland (September 1566) but was persuaded to return by French ambassador; visited Mary at Jedburgh ( October 28, 1566), withdrew to Stirling and refused to attend the baptism (December 17, 1566) of his son, James (future James VI of Scotland); moved to Kirk o' Field, Edinburgh (January 31, 1567), hoping for a reconciliation with Mary; died under mysterious circumstances ( February 10, 1567). [5]

July 21, 1644: Henrietta met her father, Charles I of England, for the first time. Prior to his arrival, the king had ordered that the princess would be baptised in accordance with the rites of the Church of England, and she was baptised Henrietta at Exeter Cathedral on July 21.[6] A canopy of state was erected in honour of her dignity as a Princess of England.[7] [6]

July 21, 1670: Henrietta was interred at the Royal Basilica of Saint Denis on July 4, another service was held on July 21. All chief public bodies including the Parliament, courts of Law, Assembly of the Clergy and the City Corporations were represented, as well as members of the nobility and general public. Queen Maria Theresa was present with the king of Poland, John II Casimir, and the English Ambassador, the Duke of Buckingham. French Princes of the blood were present as well as masses of the nobility.

"Last of all came the members of Monsieur and Madame's household, bearing torches in their hands. A mausoleum, surrounded with altars and silver urns, and adorned with a crowd of mourning allegorical statues, among which Youth, Poetry and Music were conspicuous, had been erected in the centre of the choir. There the coffin rested, covered with cloth of gold, edged with ermine, and embroidered with the arms of France and England in gold and silver. Everyone having taken their places hundreds of candles burst into flame giving a cloud of incense; and the Archbishop of Reims assisted by other bishops, began the mass, which was chanted by the King's musicians organized by Lully."[36][7]

July 21, 1767



Bywhat stages Charles Harrison went from. St. Thomas Parish, Orange County, Virginia, to Pennsylvania, has not been discovered by this compiler. It is known that his brother, Lawrence Harrison, to sold his lands in the same county July 21, 1767, went first to Frederick County, Virginia, acquired lands; said them and settled in what is now Fayette County, Pennsylvania, which at.that time was considered part olY the Olde Dominion of Virginia. Following the year 1768, Virginia offered large inducements to settlers to cairn to its newly erected Virginia County of Augusta, also known as West Augusta (now Western Pennsylvania and part al West Virginia). It may be concluded that Charles Harrison was similarly influenced and (?) lend in the new county, [8]



July 21, 1774: In the afternoon of the following day, the 24th of September, John Roberts and his wife and several children were killed, and the eldest child, James, a boy ten years of age, was made a captive by a band of Shawnees and Mingo’s under the leadership of Logan, the noted Mingo chief. This massacre occurred on Reedy Creek, an affluent of the North Fork of Holston, and the place was then supposed to be within the bounds of Fincastle County, Virginia; and it was, but afterwards it was found that it had been given to Tennessee through carelessness of the Virginia commissioners when the boundary line was run between North Carolina and Virginia in 1802. Logan left in the Roberts cabin a war club, with a letter tied to the club and addressed to Captain Cresap. The original, when found, was sent to Major Arthur Campbell, and by him forwarded to Colonel William Preston on the October 12, 1774. The letter was written on a piece of birch bark and with ink made from gunpowder. It had been prepared before Logan left Ohio with his scalping party; and was written, at his dictation, by a white man named William Robinson, who was captured on the Monongahela River, July 12th, carried to the Indians towns, saved from the stake by Logan, and adopted into an Indian family. Before he sent the letter to Captain Cresap, Colonel Preston made a copy on the back of the letter Major Campbell had written him when he forwarded the Indian chief's letter from Royal Oak. This copy was found among the Preston papers and is as follows:

"To Captain Cressap—What did you kill my people on Yellow Creek for. The white People Killed my Kin at Conestoga a great while ago, & I thought nothing of that. But you Killed my Kin again on Yellow Creek; and took my cousin prisoner, then I thought I must Kill too; and I have been three times to war since but the Indians is not Angry only myself.

Captain John Logan July 21st. Day."

In his mention of the killing of his kin at Conestoga, Logan refers to what was called the Paxton riot, which occurred in 1763 in Pennsylvania, when twenty inoffensive, friendly Conestoga Indians were brutally murdered by a mob of border desperadoes. [9]

July 21, 1775 Much worse, a most excruciating pain. Took decotin of roots prescribed by Mrs. Crawford’s housekeeper who uses me with the greatest care and tenderness.[10]

July 21 & 22, 1777— The wind was contrary and the fleet could not depart. [11]





July 21, 1778

The von Mirbach Order Book also contains references to incidents of interest durng 1778 within the New York garrison, and gives detail on the organization o the chasseur company formed under the command of Captain George Hanger, Lord Coleraine. “21 July – General Schmidt’s Brigade will supply the following men to a chasseur company which Captain Hanger of the Hessian Jaeger Corps is to command and which is to be formed from the Hessian infantry regiments at this place.

“ Prince Charles Regiment will provide one non-commissioned officer, one drummer, and eleven privates. “Truembach Regiment will provide one non-commissioned officer and ten privates. Mirbach Regiment will provide one none-commissioned officer and ten privates. “Health and robust men are to be taken for this duty and men who are sure not to desert; therefore dependable men must be assigned. They are to be prepared to march on the shortest notice

“The colonel orders that the soldiers chosen to fill the order are to be kept separate and assigned no duties outside of camp…[12]

July 21, 1791

William Crawford: Vol. 2, No. 266. 500 a. Bourbon Cop., Flat Run. 7/21/1791. Bk. 1, 168-169. Same and Heirs. 6-1-1793, Bk. 3, p. 264.[13]

July 21, 1833: Susannah Preston (b. October 7, 1772 / d. July 21, 1833).[14]

July 21, 1851: James Bryant Smith12 [Gabriel D. Smith11 , Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. March 14, 1843 in Carroll Co. GA / d. January 1, 1936 in Haralson Co. GA) married Elizabeth Margaret King (b. July 22, 1849 in GA / d. December 6, 1866 in Carroll Co. GA) on December 28, 1865 in Carroll Co. GA. He also married Nancy Ann Nichols (b. July 21, 1851 / d. February 17, 1908 in Carroll Co. GA) on September 2, 1868 in Carroll Co. GA. [15]



July 21, 1851: Paltiel Zamashtshin



Born on July 21, 1851 in Odessa, Ukraine, to well-to-do parents. He attended the business school and at the same time for five years learned Hebrew with Peretz Smolenski At age seventeen, he went away to Berlin to study architecture in a politechnicum, but due to his uncle's bad business, he couldn't complete his studies, and in 1870 he returned to Odessa, where he took up commerce and dedicated his free time to literature.

Z. had in Sholem Aleichem's "Yidishe folksbibliotek", published a comedy device in one act "Nor a doktor", and as such Sholem Aleichem had also a one-acter with the same name, and because of this there was a literary conflict.

In M. Spektor's "Der familien-fraynd", Warsaw, 1887, Z. printed "Der medalion, an operetta in one act in two scenes (freely adapted from the "Khutm-shdi" [a Hebrew poem] by A. B. Gotlober)."

Z. had -- according to Jacob Mestel -- left two handwritten poems.

Z. in 1909 passed away in Vienna detailed literature and almost an entire presentation, although he had -- according to Zalmen Reyzen -- in the beginning of the new epoch of Yiddish literature, performed in it a certain role as one of her honest and productive representatives.


M. E. from Jacob Mestel.
•Z. Reyzen -- "Lexicon of Yiddish Literature", Vol. I, pp. 1035-6.
•"Sholem Aleichem Book", N. Y., pp. 225-6.
•R. Granovsky -- Yitzhak yoel linetsky, "Pinkas", N. Y, 1-2, p. 146.






July 21, 1859: Sarah Rebecca Cavander13 [Emily H. Smith12, Gideon Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. March 3, 1842) married James Jink Thomason on July 21, 1859.

A. Children of Sarah Cavender and James Thomason:
. i. Emily Thomason (b. September 11, 1860)
. ii. Oscar Thomason
. iii. Glen Thomason
. iv. Henry David Thomason (b. June 5, 1865)[16]

July 21, 1861: Battle of Manassas.[17]



August 21, to July 21, 1863: Siege of Charleston, SC.[18]



Thurs. July 21[19], 1864

Got orders to be ready to move

Wrote a letter to M.F. Davis[20] and home

W. Winans[21] went Orleans hospital

Boys on a spree at night[22][23]



July 21, 1917: Chalice’s success in building up the membership of his parish through his unusual combination of Country Life progressivism and traditional Methodist revivalism had won national attention for Buck Creek and national visibility for him in the new field of religious sociology. His success in forging a coalition between farmers and businessmen to effect higher agricultural production and the more widespread adoption of food conservation measures also won him regional and statewide attention in rural sociology.[24]



July 21, 1918: In Russia, the revolutionary government that had overthrown the Czar, removed the ban on Hebrew and Yiddish periodicals. [25]



Mid Summer 1918: By midsummer 1918, the Buck Creek Parish was again searching for a new pastor.



Summer and fall, 1918

1.5 million Americans crossed the Atlantic for war. Some of those doughboys came from Kansas. And they brought something with them. A tiny silent companion. Almost immediately the Kansas sickness resurfaced in Europe. American soldiers got sick, English soldiers, German. As it spread the microbe mutated. Day by day becoming more deadly. By the time the microbe came back to America it had become a relentless killer. [26]



July 21, 1923: Rev. John GUTLEBEN was born on June 29, 1847 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace and died July 21, 1923 in Oakland,Alameda,CA.



John married Madeleine Frederique HELMSTADER, daughter of JEAN JACQUES HELMSTADER and Catharina Salome GERST, on October 26, 1871 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace. Madeleine was born on July, 19, 1841 in ,,Pfaffenhoffen and died on December 17, 1908 at age 67.

[27]



July 21, 1937: Though Italy did offer substantial aid, some German assistance also trickled through. After asking the new German Consul-General, Hans Döhle on 21 July 1937 for support, the Abwehr briefly made an exception to its policy and gave some limited aid. But this was aimed to exert pressure on Britain over Czechoslovakia. Promised arms shipments never eventuated.[109] This was not the only diplomatic front on which al-Husseini was active.[28]



July 21, 1939: The Jewish Agency for Palestine issued today a statement rejecting Colonial Secretary Malcolm MacDonald's appeal for cooperation with the British Government's new policy for Palestine. The Jewish leadership rejected the White Paper with its limits on immigration and land ownership as being “devoid of moral and legal basis and…calculated to destroy the las and holiest possession of the Jewish people – the national home. [29]



July 21, 1941: 1941: In Minsk, 45 Jews were ordered to dig a pit. They were then thrown in and Russian prisoners were ordered to bury them alive. The Russians refused. The Germans then shot the Russians and the Jews in the pit. [30]



July 21, 1941: Jews of Upina, Lithuania, were killed by the Nazis. [31]



July 21, 1941: A concentration camp opens at Majdanek, Poland.[32]



• July 21, 1941: Hermann Goring signs an order giving Heydrich the authority to prepare a “total solution” to the “Jewish question” in Europe. Romanian forces occupy Bessarabia.[33]



July 21, 1942: For the moment, it is planned that Public Assistance agencies will take charge of children under 15 taken to the Vel d’Hiv, before turning them over to the UGIF. Jewish women who are mothers of infants under two years of age will not be arrested, but stateless Jewish spouses of Aryans will be arrested. The first deportatrion convoy after the police raids will leave for the East on July 21 and 22 and others will follow at a contemplated rate of three times per week.



Dannecker telexes Eichmann that the raids will be carried out gby the French police from July 16 to July 18 and it is expected that about 4,000 children will be among those arrested.

Dannecker sets out the main arguments in favor of deportation of these 4,000 children: to prevent promiscuity between them and non-Jewish children under Public Assitance care; and the impossibility that the ‘U

GIF can care for more than 400 of them. Dannecker requests an urgent response to the question of whether, beginning with the tenth convoy (July 24), the 4,000 children can also be deported. These will be children ages 2 to 16, whose fate Premier Laval has said does not interest him. The minimum age for children to be deported is set at two because the Special Commission has exembpted from arrest mothers with children under two and the children themelves. Dannecker further requests an urgent response to a question posed in his July 6 telex; whether beginning with convoy 15, he can deport children under 16 whom Vichy will deliver from the Unoccupied Zone and whom Laval had asked Knochen to deport with their parents.[34]



July 21, 1942: The Jews of Nieswiez organized a resistance movement and a planned an escape using kerosene and old guns as their weapons. A desperate battle ensued. Jews set fire to their own homes as a diversionary tactic. Some of those who made it to the woods found other Jews from Kleck and Niewswiez. They set up an underground unit. [35]



July 21, 1942: On the eve of Tisha b’AB, the commemoration of the destruction of the Temple at Jerusalem-20,000 people crowded Madison Square Garden, while thousands more stood outside, to protest the Nazi atrocities. [36]



President Roosevelt sent a message in which he expressed the sorrow of all Americans and declared that the American people “will hold the perpetrators of these crimes to strict accountability in a day of reckoning which will surely come.” [37]



A message from Prime Minister Winston Churchill noted that “the Jews were Hitler’s first victims.” Churchill reminded listeners that he and Roosevelt had spoken out on Nazi atrocities nine months earlier and had then resolved “to place retribution for these crimes among major purposes of this war.”[38]



July 21, 1942: : Mania Gottlib, born geb. Gottlib, August 4, 1870 in Wojnicz, Resided, Berlin. Deportation: from Berlin, July 21, 1942. September 21, 1942, Treblinka.



July 21, 1943: Himmler orders the liquidation of the Reichskommissariat Ostland ghettos by sending the Jewsih workers to labor camps and killing the rest of the Jews.[39]

July 21-25, 2002: Neil Bradman, Dror Rosengarten, and Karl L. Skorecki. "The Origins of Ashkenazic Levites: Many Ashkenazic Levites Probably Have a Paternal Descent from East Europeans or West Asians." Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Ancient DNA and Associated Biomolecules, July 21-25, 2002. Abstract excerpt:

"...Levite haplotype distributions were compared with distributions in Israelite Jews and candidate source populations (north Germans and two groups of Slavonic language speakers). The Ashkenazic Levites were most similar to the Sorbians, the most westerly Slavonic speaking group... Comparisons of the Ashkenazic Levite dataset with the other groups studied suggest that Y chromosome haplotypes, present at high frequency in Ashkenazic Levites, are most likely to have an east European or west Asian origin and not to have originated in the Middle East."


July 21, 2012: Genes Tell Intricate Tale of Jewish Diaspora

Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer

Date: August 6, 2012 Time: 03:00 PM ET






Aben Danan Synagogue in Morocco


The Aben Danan Synagogue in Fez, Morocco, brings a North African flare to the Jewish faith.
CREDIT: Anibal Trejo, Shutterstock


A new genetic map paints a comprehensive picture of the 2,000 or so years in which different Jewish groups migrated across the globe, with some becoming genetically isolated units while others seemed to mix and mingle more.

The new findings allow researchers to trace the diaspora, or the historical migration, of the Jews, which began in the sixth century B.C. when the Babylonians conquered the Kingdom of Judah. Some Jews remained in Judah under Babylonian rule, while others fled to Egypt and other parts of the Middle East. Jewish migrations have continued into the present day.

The study researchers found that the genomes of Jewish North African groups are distinct from one another, but that they show linkages to each other absent from their non-Jewish North African neighbors. The findings reveal a history of close-knit communities prone to intermarriage, said study leader Harry Ostrer of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

"Virtually all the Jewish groups we've studied tend to be quite closely related to one another," Ostrer said. "It would seem for most Jewish groups, there is a biological basis for their Jewishness which is based on their sharing of DNA segments."

Tracing Jewish genetics

Ostrer and his colleagues have been studying the genetics of Jewish groups throughout Europe and the Middle East, both to reconstruct the history of the religion and to investigate diseases such as the genetic disorder Tay-Sachs that disproportionately affect this population. In 2010, the group reported on the genetics of seven European and Middle Eastern populations. The new study, published today (August 6) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, expands the findings to a total of 15 groups, with the newest additions from Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya and the island of Djerba. [Photos: Ancient Jewish Treasure]

The researchers worked with local communities to get volunteers to offer blood samples for genetic analysis. The current study analyzed the genes of 509 unrelated North African individuals, comparing them across groups. Similar work has been done linking ancient Israeli and Syrian people to Ethiopia.

The results revealed close relations between North African and European Jews, Ostrer said. The researchers also found two distinct groups of North African Jews, one comprised of Libyan and Tunisian Jews and the other of Moroccan and Algerian Jews. These groups were more likely to share DNA segments than other Jewish groups, indicating more shared genetic history.

"I like to think of Jewishness as a tapestry with these DNA segments representing the threads that weave the tapestry together," Ostrer said. Non-Jews can convert to Judaism, but membership in the group is also passed down along a matrilineal line, meaning Jewishness straddles the line between religion, ethnicity and culture.

A history of migration

The findings tended to track with what is known of the history of the Jewish Diaspora, or spread of the Jewish people, through North Africa. For example, there was evidence of gene-sharing between North African Jews and non-Jews, but generally not recently, the researchers found.

"This tends to fit the historical observation that during Islamic times from roughly the eighth century to roughly the 20th century, there was limited intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews," Ostrer said.

Among Moroccan and Algerian Jews, there was evidence of some mixing with the Sephardic Jews who trace their roots to the Iberian Peninsula. Again, the genetic results back up the known history of Sephardic Jews leaving Spain and Portugal, with some settling in Morocco and Algeria.

The findings help create a "comprehensive view of what the Jewish Diaspora was like," Ostrer said. Major times of movement included the classic period of Greek and Roman dominance, when Jewish groups migrated out of the Middle East and into Europe and North Africa, converting locals and intermarrying along the way. A second major migration occurred after the Spanish Inquisition in the late 1400s and early 1500s, a time when Jews and Muslims were ordered to convert to Catholicism or leave Spain. [10 Myths of Medieval Torture]

The most recent movement began in the late 1800s and continues today, with immigration to the United States, Israel, Canada, Australia and South Africa, Ostrer said.

The United States and Latin America tend to be a "melting pot" of genetics, Ostrer said — 50 percent to 60 percent of American Jews marry someone of a different religion or ethnicity — but the "Old World" genetics of European and North African Jews are helpful in understanding certain diseases.

In these populations, people married within their communities and even within their own families for centuries, allowing studies on relatively few people to be extrapolated more widely throughout the population. In a similar example, researchers recently found a gene that protects against Alzheimer's disease in Icelandic populations. Those results were reported July 21 in the journal Nature. The same sort of research is possible in Jewish populations, Ostrer said.

"It represents an extraordinary resource that is much harder to do, for instance, in the European-American population, because there has been such a melting pot occurring there," he said.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+. [40]

















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


[2] http://www.jewishhistory.org.il/history.php?startyear=210&endyear=219


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


[4] www.wikipidia.org


[5] http://www.archontology.org/nations/uk/scotland/stuart1/darnley.php


[6] Wikipedia


[7] Wikipedia


[8] Source Unknown


[9] http://genealogytrails.com/vir/fincastle/county_history_3.html


[10] The Brothers Crawford, by A. W. Scholl, 1995


[11] Journal kept by the Distinguished Hessian Field Jaeger Corps during the Campaigns of the Royal Army of Great Britain in North America, Translated by Bruce E. Burgoyne 1986






[12] Enemy Views by Bruce Burgoyne pgs. 270-271


[13] Index for Old Kentucky Surveys and Grants in Old State House, Fkt. KY. (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 454.50.)


[14] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[15] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[16] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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


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


[19] By July 21, after weeks of tense waiting at Algiers, Rigby notified those at home that "it has been settled definitely that we are to go to the east.... It is understood that Baltimore is our destination but of course that will depend much upon the turn affairs take during the next week." Although he realized that bloody work lay ahead, the young captain was anxious to leave Louisiana and was pleased by the prospects of an ocean voyage. "At any rate we are bidding goodbye to this Dept.," he wrote, and upon reflection added, "I am glad of it." [60] [ 60] Letter, WTR to brother July 20,1864. (Although the letter was dated on July 20, he did not finish writing it until July 21, 1864.)


[20] Mary Ann Goodlove, born January 7, 1829, in Moorefield Twp. Clark County, Ohio.She died April 29, 1926 in Columbus Ohio. She was the daughter of Conrad Goodlove and Catherine “Katie” McKinnon. She married Peter T. Davis October 7, 1852. She is the sister of William Harrison Goodlove. (Conrad Goodlove Family Bible)




[21] Winans, William B. Age 25. Residence Cedar Rapids, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Dec. 6, 1863. Mustered Jan 9, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga.

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




[22] Most of the men had already spent their last greenback on photographs and delicacies at the French Market. (A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry 1862-1865 by Harvey H. Kimble Jr. August 1974. page 156.)


[23] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove


[24] There Goes the Neighborhood by David R. Reynolds, page 174.


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


[26] American Experience, Influenza 1918, 10/29/2009


[27] Descendents of Elias Gotleben, Email from Alice, May 2010.


[28] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini#World_War_I


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


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


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


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


• [33] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1766.


[34] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial by Serge Klarsfeld, page 39.


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


[36] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 24.


[37] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 24.


[38] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 24.




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


[40] http://www.livescience.com/22137-genetics-jewish-diaspora.html

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