Tuesday, July 23, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, July 23


“Lest We Forget”

10,623 names…10,623 stories…10,623 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, July 23

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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 23, 636: Arabs took control of most of Eretz Yisrael from the Byzantine Empire.[1]

637 A.D. A victory at Kadesiah in 637 gave the Arabs control of Iraq.[2] Conquest of Syria. Fall of Jerusalem. Battle of Jalula. [3]

638 A.D.:A victory at Nekhavend gave the Arabs the Iranian plateau. [4] Conquest of Jazirah. [5]

638 A.D.: Jerusalem population during Christian rule under the Bysantines, 60,000.[6]

638: Jerusalem, which had briefly fallen into Persian hands, was overrun by the Christian Byzantines and then retaken in 638 by (Muslim) Arabs (under Caliph Umar), would rule Palestine until the Crusades.0020[7]

The Muslims dismantled the Church of Nea, reusing the massive stones to build the Muslim palace on the Temple mount. It is believed that the Temple treasure was brought here and hidden.[8]

July 23, 1253: The Jews were expelled from Vienne France by order of Pope Innocent III.[4][9]

1254

(Eleanor of Castile), daughter of Ferdinand III, king of Castile and Len. In 1254 she married Prince Edward, later Edward I of England, the eldest son of King Henry III.[10] Louis IX expels the Jews from France, their property and synagogues confiscated. Most move to Germany and further east, however, after a couple of years, some were readmitted back. [11] Marco Polo born in Venice, death of Pope Innocent IV – Pope Alexander IV elected, Louis IX returns to France from Palestine, Conrad IV dies, court chaplain Robert de Sorbon founds the Paris School of Theology (later the Sorbonne), Great Interregnum in Germany (struggle for crown) to 1273, death of Conrad IV HRE, End of Hohenstaufens rule of HRE, End 7th crusade, Marco Polo born, Pope Innocent IV dies December 7, Pope Alexander IV (Rinaldo de Conti di Segni) appointed 12 Dec, Interregnum in Germany inauguratesperiod of political chaos. [12]

1255: Henry III of England sells his rights to the Jews (regarded as royal “chattles”) to his brother Richard for 5,000 marks.[13] Henry III of England accepts Sicily for his son Edmund, Ulrich von Lichtenstein writes “Frauendienst” a poem about chivalry, death of author Thomas of Celano – author of “Dies irae”, Prague and Stockholm become towns, End of Sundiata Keita King of Mali. [14]

July 23, 1298: The Jews of Wurzburg, Germany were massacred. [8][15]



Between July 20 and July 23, 1567: Mary Queen of Scots miscarried twins.[136][16]



July 23rd, 1558: - Battle at Grevelingen: Gen/earl Lamoraal van Egmont beat France[17]

July 23, 1618: On July 17th, 1617, Sir Lauchlan MacKinnon of Strathordell and the rest appeared before the council in July (he with MacLeod, Gorme, and Vic Ian having been knighted A.D. 1613), when the practice of taking “calps " (sort of tithe) of vassalage, was abolished. At this appearance, Sir Lauchlan exhibited his uncle, John MacKinnon. (ancestor of Kyle), and in the following year, on July 23rd, he again appeared before the council with his uncle John. [18]

1618: Berkeley Hundred

Berkeley Hundred in the Virginia Colony comprised about eight thousand acres (32 km²) on the north bank of the James River near Herring Creek in an area then known as Charles Cittie (sic). It was named for one of the original founders, Richard Berkeley,[citation needed] a member of the Berkeley family of Gloucestershire, England. In 1619, Berkeley Hundred was the site of America's first Thanksgiving Day. It later became known as Berkeley Plantation, and was long the traditional home of the Harrison family, one of the First Families of Virginia.

History

Berkeley Hundred was a land grant in 1618 of the Virginia Company of London to Sir William Throckmorton, Sir George Yeardley, George Thorpe, Richard Berkeley, and John Smyth (1567–1641) of Nibley. Smyth was also the historian of the Berkeley group, collecting over 60 documents relating to the settlement of Virginia between 1613 and 1634 which have survived to modern times.

In 1619, the ship Margaret of Bristol, England sailed for Virginia under Captain John Woodliffe and brought thirty-eight settlers to the new Town and Hundred of Berkeley. The proprietors instructed the settlers of "the day of our ships arrival . . . shall be yearly and perpetually kept as a day of Thanksgiving." The Margaret landed her passengers at Berkeley Hundred on December 4, 1619. The settlers did indeed celebrate a day of "Thanksgiving", establishing the tradition a year and 17 days before the Pilgrims arrived aboard the Mayflower at Plymouth, Massachusetts to establish their Thanksgiving Day in 1620.[1]

On March 22, 1622, Opchanacanough, head of the Powhatan Confederacy, began the Second Anglo-Powhatan War with a coordinated series of attacks against English settlements along the James River, known in English histories as the Indian massacre of 1622. Nine colonists were killed at Berkeley. The assault took a heavier toll elsewhere, killing about a third of all the colonists, and virtually wiping out Wolstenholme Towne on Martin's Hundred and Sir Thomas Dale's progressive development and new college at Henricus. Jamestown was spared through a timely warning and became the refuge for many survivors who abandoned outlying settlements. A myth about the March 22 date was that it occurred on Good Friday. This is incorrect.[2]

For several years, thereafter, the plantation at Berkeley Hundred lay abandoned, until William Tucker and others got possession of it in 1636, and it became the property of John Bland, a merchant of London. By this time, the area had become part of Charles City Shire in 1634, later renamed Charles City County.

Giles Bland, son of John Bland, inherited it, but he was hanged by Governor Sir William Berkeley in 1676, after participating in Bacon's Rebellion. Confiscated by Governor Berkeley, the land was purchased in 1691 by Benjamin Harrison (1673–1710), attorney general of the colony, treasurer and speaker of the House of Burgesses. He died at age thirty-seven in 1710, leaving the property to his only son, also named Benjamin.

The Berkeley Hundred was the next plantation down river from the Shirley Plantation.[3][19][20]

1619Jews expelled from Kiev.[21]

1619: Shah Abbasi of the Persian Sufi Dynasty increases persecution against the Jews, forcing many to outwardly practice Islam. Many keep practicing Judaism in secret. [2][22]



July 23, 1622

On July 23rd, 1622, the Laird of MacKinnon, with the rest, appeared before the council, when they were bound to repair their parish churches to the satisfaction of the Bishop of the Isles, and bound not to molest the' traders of fishing in the Isles. On this occasion he exhibited his cousin Lauchlan, and Neill MacKinnon, John's son. On December 12th of the same year, Neill McKynnon, student at Glasgow, has a gift of the life-rent escheat of Sir Lauchlan, forfeited by his being a denounced rebel, and at the horn for not appearing, to stand his trial for the alleged ravishing of Mary, sister to Sir Donald Gorme of Sleat, and spouse to Ronald McConneil of Castle Torrin in Uist, but as Sir Lauchlan appeared personally before the council on 23rd July the following year, and no proceedings were then taken against him for the above offenses, it is presumed that the matter had been privately settled.[23]

July 23, 1626: Birthdate (on the secular calendar) of Sabbatai Zevi, the most famous of the Jewish false messiahs. He died in 1676 after converting to Islam and becoming a low-level official in the Turkish government. [15][24]

In 1627, Sir Lauchlan grants a provision of some of his lands to Katherine, eldest daughter of Lauchlan MacLean of Coll, and spouse, or intended spouse, to his eldest son, John. MacNeill, Rector of Sleat, acted as Sir Lauchlan’s baillie in giving seisure to the lady.[25]

1628 : (History of Werneck’s Catholic Church, It was indicated that Franz Gottlop was a Catholic. Perhaps there was a conversion during this period.) In the year 1628 by the Fürstbischoff at that time Adolf by honour mountain a dreistöckiger Getreidespeicher one built. This in the year 1631 of Sweden was robbed, but was not burnt down how often usual. In the northern part this Getreidespeicher was furnished to 1668 a hall with an altar in honours Maria Verkündigung and an organ. This hall raised wurde1691 by Gottfried from Guttenberg to the branch church (the Pfarrei Ettleben). The municipality Werneck a corner belonged up to the year 1910 to the Pfarrei Ettleben. In the context of the new building of the lock developed there its own castle church, which was inaugurated on August 29, 1745 by the Fürstbischoff Friedrich Karl von Schönborn. The first service found against it only 1756 instead of and to May 30, 1807 Werneck raised with the castle church to the Kuratie.

(Translation)[26]

AD 1628 - Theophilus Brabourne publishes first English book promoting seventh-day Sabbath.[27]

1628: Richard HARRISON

ABT 1628 - ____

Repository ID Number: I1014



◾RESIDENCE: Essex & New Kent Co., VA
◾BIRTH: ABT 1628, VA [S589]
◾RESOURCES: See: [S9]

Father: Anthony HARRISON



Family 1 :

1. + Andrew HARRISON

Notes

Patented lands July 6, 1664. (Nugent) [S9]


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_Peter HARRISON Of Cambridge_+

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_Anthony HARRISON ___|

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|--Richard HARRISON

| (1628 - ....)

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Sources

[S589]

[S9]

[S9]


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INDEX

HOMEBack to the Harrison Repository Home Page




EMAIL

© 1995-2001. Becky Bonner and Josephine Lindsay Bass. All rights reserved.


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HTML created by GED2HTML v3.6-WIN95 (Jan 18 2000) on 10/20/01 12:48:53 PM Central Standard Time.

[28]

[29]

1619

[30]



1619

Some of the tribesmen continued to fight for their territory, but they were quickly overwhelmed and taken into captivity, placed aboard ships and sold as slaves in the West Indies. At the same time the whites were bringing to America their own slaves whose skins were black. The first shipments of these unfortunates were brought to Jamestown for sale by the Dutch in 1619.[31]



Tuesday July 23, 1754:

A general muster is taken of Washington's Virginia Regiment at Winchester. It includes 183 enlisted men and 10 officers fit for duty. Another 38 enlisted men were sick or wounded and 9 were missing. Without aid from the other British colonies and the mother country, Lt. Governor Dinwiddie, Colonel Innes, and Colonel Washington realized that the Virginia Regiment alone would not be able to drive the French from the Upper Ohio River Valley. [32]

July 23, 1775; Got pretty well again, but still continue to take the tea. [33]



“Fort PITT, July 23, 1783.

“Sir, The above is an extract of my orders from General Muhlenberg for discharging and paying the Virginia line at Fort Pitt. I have the honor to be your most humble and obedient servant,.

“W. CR0GEAN, Major Virginia Line.[34]

“General IRVINE.”

Immediately afterward, Irvine issued the following: “Orders. Fort Pitt, July 24,’1783. In consequence of orders from the honorable the secretary at war, Major [William] Croghan will begin to-morrow to furlough (which will serve as discharges as soon as the definitive treaty of peace is concluded) the troops of the Virginia line at this post, and will pay them in notes for the months of February, March, and April last. Lieutenant Rose will pay them in specie for the month of January, at the same time.

“The general has reason to expect directions in a few days for discharging. the Pennsylvanians oa similar principles. The men will be allowed to take their arms with them. As Captain [Uriah) Springer’s company will be first settled with, none of them are to be detailed for duty tomorrow.[35]



July 23, 1787: The Jews of Austria were required to take family names.[19][36]





July 23, 1812: On June 18, 1812, the United States declared war on Great Britain. Since the British had a strong presence in Southern Canada and Detroit, this necessitated an American military presence in Ohio. The Army in Ohio was to consist mainly of Militia from Ohio, Kentucky and Pennsylvania. There were also to be mustered two regiments for federal service in Ohio; the 18th & 19th US Infantry. On March 12, 1812, Batteal Harrison was commissioned an Ensign in the US Army. On July 23, he was appointed as Ensign in the 19th Infantry.

In the Summer of 1812, General William Hull moved against Detroit with militia. Detroit was taken quickly but fortunes reversed and Hull surrendered Detroit and his entire command. After this setback, command of the Northwestern Army was assigned jointly to General Winchester and General William Henry Harrison. General Harrison planned an attack on several Indian villages in Eastern Indiana. This included an assortment of militia units and one Company of federal soldiers. The army numbering about 600 mounted soldiers started from Franklinton, the Northwest Army Headquarters. [37]

July 23, 1822: Having bought out the Nashville Clarion, Patrick Henry Darby published the first issue of the Nashville Constitutional Advocate, which supported Andrew Jackson’s presidential candidacy and pursued Darby’s private feuds. [38]



July 23, 1832 – The Cherokee National Council, meeting for the first time at Red Clay, passes a resolution to allow the same officers to continue, including John Ross as Principal Chief; after this all officials in the Cherokee Nation were unelected. Boudinot resigns as editor of The Cherokee Phoenix after Ross refuses to allow him to publish the report of the recent delegation to Washington favoring removal; he was replaced by Elijah Hicks, one of Ross’ brothers-in-law. This council marks the divide between people later forming the Treaty Party and the National Party.[39]

July 23, 1864: William McKinnon Goodlove, on March 7, 1864 enlisted in the Union Army, K Co. 57th Inf Reg. in Ohio at the age of 18. Battle at Atlanta, Georgia on July 23, 1864.[40]



Sat. July 23, 1864

Started out on sea at 5 am

Southeasterly direction

Very clear calm morning

Rough sea in the evening two hours[41][42]



July 23, 1865: Fanny Caroline Cavender (b. January 29, 1856 / d. July 23, 1865)
July 23 1865.[43]



July 23, 1908

(Jordan’s Grove) The funeral of Richard Gray was held last Friday at 1 o’clock at the home of William Goodlove. He was the six year old son of Drs. R.H. and Nettie Gray. The Gray’s were visiting in the Goodlove home when little Richard became ill. Dr. Nettie is the daughter of Mr. Goodlove. The Drs. Gray live in Texas.[44]



July 23, 1920: On July 23, M. O. Smith, one of the trustees of the Buck Creek Church and a leader in the Brotherhood, filed the petitions for the formation of a consolidate district with the county superintendent. The petitions were accompanied by qan affidavit maintaining that there were 120 (male) voters in the proposed district.[45] The petitions bore the signatures of 62 qualified voters, a bare majority of the total number of voters that proponents claimed resided in the district. The Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution would extend women the right to vote in less than a month. One hundred and twenty would prove not to be a very good estimate of the actual number of eligible voters in the proposed district. Despite their week long revival on behalf of the consolidated school and years of preparation, Buck Creekers knew that the results of the election would likely to very close. In the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified before the election, as appeared likely, women seemed to hold the balance of power in determining the result.[46]



July 23, 1925: “Delhi Dept.”, “A meeting of the Ku Klux Klan was held in the park Sunday evening, and a second large crowd was in attendance. The meeting was addressed by a state organizer from Dubuque, songs were sung, and apparently the proceedings were of much interest to the members of the order. There were many spectators who watched the proceedings and heard he talk with great interest and curiosity. The flaming cross was not in evidence”.Hopkinton Leader. [47]



July 23, 1938: Jews in Germany are ordered to apply for identity cards to be shown to police on demand. [25][48]



July 23, 1940: Hans Frank issues order revoking the autonomy of all Jewish, Ukrainian and Jewish independent aid organizations in the General Government.[26][49]



July 23, 1941: In White Russia an Einsatzkommando unit commander reported that some Jews were able to ‘escape into the surrounding forests and swamps’ because they “had

managed to organize a ‘signal service’ between villages” that warned of the approach of the Nazi killing squads. [27][50]



July 23, 1941-October 15, 1941: Einsatzgruppe A commanding officer, Franz W. Stahlecker, sent a detailed report about activities in the Baltic and White Russian countries. It stated that between July 23 and October 15, 1941, 135,567 Jews were killed. Eichmann sent out a letter making official the conclusions of the Wannsee Conference, "The evacuation of the Jews . . . is the beginning of the final solution of the Jewish problem."[51]



July 23, 1942: Adam Czerniekow, the head of the Warsaw Judenrat, commits suicide rather than assist the Nazis in deporting the Warsaw Jews.[1] Born in 1880, Czerniakow was the leader of the Jewish council of Warsaw, the Judenrat. Czerniakow had held the position for 3 years and kept a diary of over 1000 pages chronicling the formation of the ghetto up to the beginning of the forced transports. The Germans had ordered him to provide them with a list of names for deportation. His response was a list of his own name written hundreds of times. The day before his suicide, the Nazi officer in charge of the deportation procedure threatened to shoot his wife if he didn’t cooperate. In his suicide note he wrote "I am powerless, my heart trembles in sorrow and compassion. I can no longer bear all this." [2][28][52]



July 23, 1942: The Nazis opened the Treblinka Extermination Camp. [29][53]



July 23, 1942: Several documents pertain to this convoy. They are dated July 23 (XXVb-91); July 29 (XXVb-103); July 30 (XXVb-108); and August 12 (XXVb-105).



When they arrived at Auschwitz on August 7, 214 men were selected for word and received numbers 57103 through 57316. The 96 women selected received numbers 15711 through 15806. The other 704 deprtees were immediately gassed.

To the best of our knowledge, there were only 6 survivors from this convoy in 1945.[54]



July 23, 1943: Julius Gottlieb, born February 20, 1927 in Berlichingen. Resided Berlichingen. Deportation: ab Westerbork. July 20,1943, Sobibor. Date of death, July 23, 1943, Sobibor. [30][55]





July 23, 1944



Soviet forces capture Pskov, the last major Russian town in German hands.[56] Nothing could have prepared the Red Army for what it was about to discover. Soviet forces reach the small Polish Vilage of Maidanek, near Lublick. Here they came across the first evidence of Hitlers “Final Solution”. The Maidanek Extermination Camp. Soviet troops liberate the abandoned death camp at Majdanek, where about 500 inmates are alive. It was a camp designed for the murder of Jews on an industrial scale. But as the first reports of what they found leaked out, the western allies dismissed them.[57]



July 23, 1944: The Nazis deport 1700 Jews from Rhodes, Italy, to Auschwitz. [33][58]



July 23, 1957: USS SCAMP was the second SKIPJACK - class nuclear-powered attack submarine and the second ship in the Navy to be named after the fish. Both decommissioned and stricken from the Navy list on April 28, 1988, the SCAMP later entered the Navy’s Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Wash., and finished it on September 30, 1991.


General Characteristics: Awarded: July 23, 1957

Keel laid: January 23, 1959

Launched: October 8, 1960

Commissioned: June 5, 1961

Decommissioned: April 28, 1988

Builder: Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, Calif.

Propulsion system: one S5W nuclear reactor

Propellers: one

Length: 251.64 feet (76.7 meters)

Beam: 31.5 feet (9.6 meters)

Draft: 27.9 feet (8.5 meters)

Displacement: Surfaced: approx. 2,880 tons Submerged: approx. 3,500 tons

Speed: Surfaced: approx. 15 knots Submerged: approx. 30 knots

Armament: six 533 mm torpedo tubes

Crew: 8 Officers, 85 Enlisted [59]



Launching of USS Scamp (SSN-588) James Kirby, Sonar




USS Scamp (SSN-288)


Career

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/a/a4/Flag_of_the_United_States.svg/67px-Flag_of_the_United_States.svg.png


Name:

USS Scamp


Ordered:

July 23, 1957


Builder:

Mare Island Naval Shipyard


Laid down:

January 23, 1959


Launched:

October 8, 1960


Commissioned:

June 5, 1961


Decommissioned:

April 28, 1988


Struck:

April 28, 1988


Honors and
awards:

Three campaign stars for Vietnam War service


Fate:

Entered the Submarine Recycling Program in 1990


General characteristics


Class and type:

Skipjack-class submarine


Displacement:

2,830 long tons (2,880 t) surfaced
3,500 long tons (3,600 t) submerged


Length:

232 ft (71 m)


Beam:

32 ft (9.8 m)


Draft:

30 ft 5 in (9.27 m)


Propulsion:

1 × S5W reactor
2 × Westinghouse steam turbines, 15,000 shp (11 MW)
1 shaft


Speed:

More than 20 knots (23 mph; 37 km/h)


Complement:

83 officers & men


Armament:

6 × 21 in (530 mm) torpedo tubes



Service record


Part of:

US Seventh Fleet


Operations:

Vietnam War


Awards:

3 Battle stars


For other ships of the same name, see USS Scamp.

USS Scamp (SSN-588), a Skipjack-class nuclear-powered submarine, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the scamp, a member of the serranidae family of fish.

Her keel was laid down on January 23, 1959 at Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, California. She was launched on October 8, 1960, sponsored by Mrs. John C. Hollingsworth, widow of Commander John C. Hollingsworth, the commanding officer of Scamp (SS-277) at the time of her loss in November 1944. She was commissioned at Mare Island on June 5, 1961 with Commander W. N. Dietzen in command.



Operational history

1960s

Scamp’s first four months in the fleet were taken up by advanced trials and training exercises in the Bremerton, Washington, San Diego, California, and Pearl Harbor, areas. Following these operations, she returned to Vallejo, California, for post-shakedown availability at Mare Island Naval Shipyard. Leaving the shipyard Scamp completed her final acceptance trials and began local operations in the San Diego area. In April 1962 she deployed to the western Pacific, returning to San Diego in July. She operated locally until September, when she departed on another extended training cruise. Scamp returned to San Diego and local operations until February 1963 when she entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard for interim drydocking. She refloated in March and, in April, deployed again to the western Pacific. While in the Far East, she conducted another extended period of advanced training, including operations in the Okinawa area. Scamp reentered San Diego Bay in October 1963. She resumed her West Coast operations out of San Diego until June 1964, then, she headed west again for advanced readiness training. She arrived back in San Diego in September 1964.

Scamp entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard again in January 1965 for extensive modification. In June 1966 after the installation of the SUBSAFE package and overhaul, she left Mare Island and returned to training cruises in the San Diego operating area. In November she ventured north to Puget Sound for a month of operations and returned to San Diego in December. The nuclear submarine operated out of San Diego for the first six months of 1967. On June 28, she departed San Diego to join the Seventh Fleet in the western Pacific. She remained in the Far East, participating in fleet operations along the Vietnamese coast, until returning to San Diego on December 28, 1967.

Scamp operated out of San Diego in the local operating area from January to May 1968. On May 11, she arrived at Pearl Harbor to conclude an extended training cruise. She returned to San Diego on May 19 and remained there until June 15, when the submarine shifted to San Francisco to enter Mare Island Naval Shipyard for a three-week restricted availability. She returned to San Diego on July 16 and finished out the year sailing from that port on various exercises and training cruises.

Scamp continued stateside duty throughout 1969. She alternated in-port periods with training cruises until early March when she began pre-overhaul tests in the San Diego operating area. She continued preparing for overhaul and participating in exercises until November 1 when she entered Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for regular overhaul. While at Bremerton, Scamp was assigned that port as her new home port. The overhaul continued through 1970 and ended in January 1971.

1970s

Following post-overhaul sea trials in Puget Sound, Scamp was reassigned back to San Diego, as home port on February 12, 1971, but did not enter that port until April 15after a voyage to Pearl Harbor. On July 27, she deployed to the western Pacific. Scamp stopped at Pearl Harbor from 2 August to 13 August, then headed on to Subic Bay, R.P., arriving on August 30. For the bulk of 1971, she operated with the Seventh Fleet in Far Eastern waters other than off the coast of Vietnam, except for one short two-day period, October 8 and October 9.

She returned to San Diego on February 2, 1972, but due to increasing tension in Southeast Asia, redeployed to the Seventh Fleet in May. She operated in the South China Sea for most of the summer, returning to San Diego on August 1. Upon arrival, she went into a two-month standdown period, followed by more than a month of restricted availability at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. She departed Puget Sound on November 28, conducted weapons system accuracy tests, and returned, on December 11, to San Diego, where she remained for the remainder of the year.

Scamp operated locally around San Diego until March 29, 1973. At that time, she departed the West Coast for deployment to the Far East. She stayed at Pearl Harbor between April 5 and 10, then headed for Yokosuka, Japan. She arrived in Japan on April 23 and operated with the Seventh Fleet until September 1, when she departed Guam for Pearl Harbor. Scamp stopped at Pearl Harbor during the period September 10 to 15, then set sail for San Diego. Arriving on September 21 the nuclear submarine immediately entered a period of standdown and upkeep until November 1, when she resumed operations in the vicinity of San Diego.

History for 1973-1988 needed.

Decommissioning

Scamp was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on April 28, 1988. ex-Scamp entered the Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program in Bremerton, Washington, in 1990 and on September 9, 1994 became the first hulk to complete the program and ceased to exist.

Honors and awards

Scamp earned three campaign stars for service in the Vietnam War.[60]

July 23, 2002: Manoj Nair. "Thane Jews pass the blood test." Mumbai Mid-Day Newspaper (July 23, 2002). Excerpts:

"The news that recent DNA tests have linked India's Bene Israel Jewish community to the patriarch Moses has delighted the small Jewish community in Thane. For hundreds of years, the Bene Israel (meaning Children of Israel), now largely concentrated in and around Thane had fought Western prejudice that denied them their claim as descendants of one of Israel's 12 lost tribes. Now the Jews of Thane, home to 2,000 or 40 per cent of India's Jewry, can hold their head high among the rest of the Jewish community. '...Now science has proved that we are descendants of the Cohanim or hereditary priests. This will improve our status in the Jewish community,' says Ezra Moses, honorary secretary and trustee of Thane's Shaar Hashamaim or Gate of Heaven synagogue.... '...Now the DNA tests have confirmed our claims,' says Rachel Gadkar, a retired schoolteacher who recently published a book in Marathi called 'Bharatiya Bene Israel', that traces the origins of her community.... The current finding that the Bene Israel carry Moses's genes is the result of a research project that started seven years ago.... Sixty-six-year old Phinas Bamnolkar, the hazan or cantor at the Thane synagogue says, 'It was always our claim that we are descendants of Moses. Our claim has now been scientifically proved.'"



July 23, 2006



By coincidence, on the same day that I discovered that Job Kirby was at the Salisbury Prison, I found out that that my daughter, Anna Lee Goodlove was to play in a soccer tournament the weekend of July 22, 2006 and be staying in nearby Winston-Salem.







Upon arrival to Salisbury, North Carolina:





The librarian at the History room at the Rowan County Library in Salisbury N.C. had done some research for me prior to our arrival. Upon our arrival, she shared some interesting information that was not what we had suspected.





Phillip Barton



Library Director



Rowan Public Library



PO Box 4039



201 West Fisher Street



Salisbury, NC 28145-4039



There was no record of Job at the Salisbury National Cemetery. There was a record of his being treated at the Salisbury Prison Hospital and being released.



There was a record of him in the “Index of Prisoners of War of the United States Army Who Enlisted in the Rebel Service at Salisbury, N.C.”



This of course was not what we expected and after doing additional research at the Salisbury Library, my 15 year old daughter, Jacqulin Kirby Goodlove and I made our way to the nearby Salisbury National Cemetery.



There is strangeness that permeates this place that is difficult to explain. It is clearly a



memorial to those who gave their lives for the ideals of the Union, located in a place surrounded by those who fought for the south or were from descendants of slaves and slave owners and their families. It represents more than that however, to those who have friends or family members who were POW’s or soldier’s that are missing or whereabouts are “unknown.” There are many unanswered questions at this place. More questions than answers. “Unknown” graves and unknown stories. What is Job’s story?



During our visit I learned from a former employee of the cemetery that the museum at the cemetery has been closed for years. We arrived prior to the 4:30 PM closing time however we learned that the people that assist in finding graves often leave early. There are many markers that indicate “Unknown Soldier” at the cemetery. Also there is a large area with no markers. These are the eighteen trenches that many were buried without markers because there were too many. The lady at the library said that they know virtually everyone that died at Salisbury. Perhaps they just don’t know who was buried where. It is a solemn place that stretches about sixteen acres. This is not the prison, or the yard. Only the grave area that was outside the prison, across the train tracks in a nearby corn field. A train passed on those tracks while we stood and watched. It reminded me of how that sound of the train must have made those feel that were already in the prison while it brought more men to an already starved and overcrowded prison yard. There are now many more questions than answers. Questions about Job Kirby, of how and where he died. Questions about his desertion to the confederate army and when he was admitted and released from the Salisbury prison hospital.


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In January 1865, Colonel York, who had lost an arm in the service, complained to General Robert E. Lee that he had between six and seven hundred recruits (Official Records, 4, III, 1029) but was unable to obtain any quartermaster's supplies for them. (Quartermaster's Letters, chapter V, vol. 20, p. 410.)

The young lady visiting the Salisbury prison where Job Kirby died and William Harrison Goodlove arrived only weeks later to rescue and guard the trains carrying the former prisoners to safety is descendant Jacqulin Kirby Goodlove, my daughter. [34] [62]


July 23, 2008: 13,200 years ago….
•This July 26, 2012, photo supplied by the University of Oregon shows three Western Stemmed Projectiles discovered in the Paisley Caves near Paisley, Ore. Stone tools and human DNA from the ancient Oregon caves offer new evidence of how the first Americans spread through the continent- and archaeologists reported Thursday, July 12, 2012, that they have dated broken spear points from the cave to about 13,200 years ago, as old as much different stone tools found elsewhere from the better-known Clovis culture found in the southeast and interior United States.(AP Photo/University of Oregon, Jim Barlow)
This July 26, 2012, photo supplied …
•File--This July 23, 2008, file photo, shows the sagebrush desert of Summer Lake Basin and Winter Ridge silhouetted by one of the Paisley Caves near Paisley, Ore. Stone tools and human DNA from the ancient Oregon caves offer new evidence of how the first Americans spread through the continent--archaeologists reported Thursday, July 12, 2012, that they have dated broken spear points from the cave to about 13,200 years ago, as old as much different stone tools found elsewhere from the better-known Clovis culture found in the southeast and interior United States.(AP Photo/Jeff Barnard, file)
File--This July 23, 2008, file …

GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) — Stone tools and human DNA from ancient caves in Oregon offer new evidence of how some of the first Americans spread through the continent: Quite apart from the better-known Clovis culture, a separate group occupied the West.

Archaeologists reported Thursday they have dated broken spear points from the caves to about 13,200 years ago, as old as much different stone tools found elsewhere from the Clovis culture.

University of Oregon archaeologist Dennis Jenkins says that indicates the Clovis style of chipping stone tools was not the mother of Stone Age technology. He says the two styles were developed independently by different groups that may have taken separate routes through the continent after crossing the Ice Age land bridge from Asia.[63]



July 23, 2009: From my Aunt Carole (Goodlove) Vanderpool)

My dear Friends,I have a heavy heart today -- our grandbabies arrived last eve (July 22, 2009) at 8:22p.m. by Csection. Baby A weighed 5# 4 oz. name is Bristol Grace and Baby B weighed 5# 12 oz. named Brighton Bea Boyd. They are just beautiful!!Holly had a tough day all day so Dr. indicated no choice but C section. She will be in hospital 3 days.Daddy, Steve, is thrilled and so is Grandma. Pictures will follow.Carole L. Vanderpool


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Henshsel’s Indian Museum Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011 Photo by Jeff Goodlove




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• 100_3891

• 13,000 to 8,000 B.C. Clovis [85]



10,000-8,500 B.C.: Paleo Indian: Hunter gatherers. Big game hunters who move frequently. They arrive from West and South as glaciers retreat. Climate Colder![86]



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8,000 to 10,000 B.C., 10,000 to 12,000 years old: Adres, used to make dugout canoes..[87]





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200 B.C. to 100 A.D.Early to Middle Woodland, Decorative Category: Incised over Cordmarked. Tempered with: Grit, Crushed stone. Found on: Henschel farm.[88]



July 23, 2011

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300 B.C. to 400 A.D.: Middle Woodland period. Lakeside fishing villages in the North. Gardening based villages in the south. Hopewell large scale earthworks. Trade. Artwork.[89]





July 23, 2011





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500 B.C. to 500 A.D. 2500 to 1500 years old: Waubesa Contracting Stem Point. Middle to Early Woodland. [90]

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400 A.D. to 1100 A.D. Late Woodland Point.[91]

400 A.D. to 1100 A.D.: Late Woodland: Greater dependency on cultivated food. Larger permanent villages. Effigy mounds.[92]

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1000 A.D. to 1100 A.D. Missississi. Decorative Category: Aztalan Collared. Fingernail impressed. Cordwrapped stick. Tempered with: Grit, fine crushed stone and shell. Found on: Henschel farm.[93]



July 23, 2011

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1,200 A.D. Shell Beaded Necklace. Mississippi Culture. [94]



July 23, 2012: Ancient Warming May Have Reunited Polar and Brown Bears, for a Bit

LiveScience.comBy Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer | LiveScience.com – 23 hrs ago

•A new genomic study estimates polar bears split from other bears as much as five million years ago.

A new genomic study estimates polar …
•A comparison of the complete genetic blueprints from polar, brown and black bears estimated they diverged roughly 4 to 5 million years ago. (ABC brown bears are a genetically isolated population in Alaska.)

A comparison of the complete genetic …

Polar bears' past may echo their future, indicates a genetic study that finds the white-furred, sea ice-dwelling bears interbred with brown bears long after the two species separated as much as 5 million years ago.

Climate change likely drove this mixing among bears, writes the research team, noting there is evidence this is happening again.

"Maybe we're seeing a hint that in really warm times, polar bears changed their lifestyle and came into contact, and indeed interbred, with brown bears," said study researcher Stephan Schuster, a professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at Pennsylvania State University, and a research scientist at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, in a statement.

The study estimates polar bears split from brown bears between 4 million and 5 million years ago, after which they endured fluctuations in climate, including ice ages and warmer times.

Polar bears are currently facing the effects of climate change, this time caused by humans, as the Arctic sea ice upon which they live recedes to unprecedented levels.

"If this trend continues, it is possible that future [polar bears] throughout most of their range may be forced to spend increasingly more time on land, perhaps even during the breeding season, and therefore come into contact with brown bears more frequently," the researchers write in results published today (July 23) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Recently, wild hybrids and even second-generation offspring have been documented in the Northern Beaufort Sea of Arctic Canada where the ranges of brown bears and [polar bears] appear to overlap, perhaps as a recent response to climatic changes," they write. [Album: 8 Bizarre Hybrid Animals]

Schuster and colleagues sequenced genomes (the complete genetic blueprint) of three brown bears and a black bear and compared them with the genomes of polar bears, one modern and the other obtained from remains from a 120,000-year-old polar bear.

Based on differences they found in the bears' genetic codes, the team estimated polar and brown bears split apart about the same time black bears became a distinct species After the split between polar and brown bears, the two species remained isolated for some time, allowing genetic changes to accumulate, before interbreeding more recently, their analysis indicates.

This complicated history may explain why other research has estimated a much younger age for polar bears, the researchers write.

A study published earlier this year estimated polar bears evolved 600,000 years ago, contradicting a previous estimate of 150,000 years ago.







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


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


[2] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16


[3] http://barkati.net/english/chronology.htm


[4] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 16


[5] http://barkati.net/english/chronology.htm


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


[7] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, page 175.


[8] Chasing Temple Booty, The Naked Archaeologist, HISTI, 4/30/2008


[9] [4] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[10] "Eleanor of Castile," Microsoft’ Encarta’ Encyclopedia 2000. b 1993-1999 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.


[11] www.wikipedia.org


[12] mike@abcomputers.com


[13] www.wikipedia.org


[14] mike@abcomputers.com


[15] [8] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[16] Wikipedia


[17] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1558


[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] References

1. ^ WPA Guide to the Old Dominion, Tour 24

2. ^ http://hnn.us/articles/38375.html

^ Roberts, Bruce (1990). In Kedash, Elizabeth. Plantation Homes of the James River


[20] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_Hundred


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


[22] [2] www.wikipedia.org


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


[25] 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


[26] http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/werneck_synagoge.htm


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


[28]


[29] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/Harrison/d0051/g0000087.html#I1014


[30] The Field Museum, Chicago, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, February 7, 2010.


[31] That Dark and Bloody River by Allan W. Eckert, xxi


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


[33] (Cresswell) From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 pg. 139.


[34] Washington-Irvine Correspondence, Butterfield, 1882 page 419.




[35] Washington-Irvine Correspondence, Butterfield, 1882 page 419.




[36] [19] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[37] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/harrbios/battealHarr3466VA.htm


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


[39] Timetable of Cherokee Removal


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


[41] Opening sealed orders Colonel Wilds learned that the regiment was bound for Washington, D. C. The western soldiers were now headed for the eastern theatre. (A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry 1862-1865 by Harvey H. Kimble Jr. August 1974. page 157)


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


[43] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[44] Winton Goodlove papers.


[45] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 189.


[46] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 189.


[47] Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 282.


[48] [25] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


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


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


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


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


[53]


[54] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld page 125.


[55] [30] [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.


[56] On this Day in America by John Wagman.


[57] World War II in Color. The Soviet Steamroller 12/31/2010


[58]


[59] http://navysite.de/ssn/ssn588.htm




[60] This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.Skipjack-class submarine:


•Skipjack
•Scamp
•Scorpion
•Sculpin
•Shark
•Snook












[61] The date of 01/13/2004 is incorrectly indicated on the photographs. The date is July 23, of 2006.


[62] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlvoe


[63] http://news.yahoo.com/stone-tools-focus-picture-ancient-americans-180122569.html


[64] Henshsel’s Indian Museum Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011Photo by Jeff Goodlove




[65] Henshsel’s Indian Museum Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[66] Henshsel’s Indian Museum Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[67] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove.


[68] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[69] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011




[70] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011




[71] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011




[72] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[73] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[74] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[75] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[76] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[77] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[78] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[79] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI 53020, Photo by Jeff Goodlove. July 23, 2011


[80] Ice Age Museum, Gary Henschel Presentation, July 23, 2011


[81] Ice Age Museum, Gary Henschel Presentation, July 23, 2011


[82] Ice Age Museum, Gary Henschel Presentation, July 23, 2011


[83] Ice Age Museum, Gary Henschel Presentation, July 23, 2011


[84] Ice Age Museum, Gary Henschel Presentation, July 23, 2011


[85] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Dundee, WI, July 23, 2011 Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[86] Henschel Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011


[87] Henschel Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011


[88] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011. Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[89] Henschel’s Indian Musem, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011 Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[90] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI July 23, 2011. Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[91] Henshel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI July 23, 2011.


[92] Henshel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI July 23, 2011.


[93] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI. July 23, 2011. Photo by Jeff Goodlove.


[94] Henschel Indian Museum, Dundee, WI, July 23, 2011, Photo by Jeff Goodlove

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