Sunday, July 7, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, July 6


Every Day is Independence Day at “This Day in Goodlove History”

10,614 names…10,614 stories…10,614 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, July 6

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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 6, 1515: AD 1414 – 1418 Council of Constance - orders burning of John Hus

John Huss (c. 1369 - 1415) was a Czech (living in the area then known as Bohemia) religious thinker, philosopher, and reformer, master at Charles University in Prague. His followers became known as Hussites. The Roman Catholic Church considered his teachings heretical, and Hus was excommunicated in 1411, condemned by the Council of Constance, and burned at the stake on July 6, 1415, in Konstanz (aka Constance), Germany.

Huss, was opposed of the Roman Catholic ideals, especially of 'Indulgence', thus causing his excommunication and murder.

Indulgence - In the Roman Catholic Church, a declaration by church authorities that those who say certain prayers or do good deeds will have some or all of their punishment in purgatory remitted. 1 ‡ In the Middle Ages, indulgences were frequently sold, and the teaching on indulgences was often distorted. The attack by Martin Luther on the sale of indulgences began the Reformation.(The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. 2002).

The storm of the Protestant Revolt ignited from the doctrine of indulgences. Martin Luther charged at first that indulgences were mere reductions in canonical penance. Later, he asserted that indulgences were not found in Scriptures. Tradition could not be appealed to, as the Bible, for him, is the only source of Revelation. Further, Luther asserted that salvation is a matter of faith alone; works, including indulgences, are superfluous and thus malign the redemptory work of Jesus. Thus, the core of Protestantism strikes at this doctrine.[27] [1]

July 6, 1553: At the age of 15, Edward VI died from a lung infection, possibly tuberculosis.[68] He did not want the crown to go to Mary because he feared she would restore Catholicism and undo his reforms, as well as those of Henry VIII, and so he planned to exclude her from the line of succession. His advisers, however, told him that he could not disinherit only one of his sisters, but that he would have to disinherit Elizabeth as well, even though she embraced the Church of England. Guided by John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland, and perhaps others, Edward excluded both of his sisters from the line of succession in his will.[69]

Contradicting the Succession Act, which restored Mary and Elizabeth to the line of succession, Edward named Dudley's daughter-in-law Lady Jane Grey, the granddaughter of Henry VIII's younger sister Mary, as his successor. Lady Jane's mother was Frances Brandon, who was Mary's cousin and goddaughter. Just before Edward VI's death, Mary was summoned to London to visit her dying brother. She was warned, however, that the summons was a pretext on which to capture her and thereby facilitate Lady Jane's accession to the throne.[70] Instead of heading to London from her residence at Hunsdon, Mary fled into East Anglia, where she owned extensive estates and Dudley had ruthlessly put down Kett's Rebellion. Many adherents to the Catholic faith, opponents of Dudley, lived there.[71] On 9 July, from Kenninghall, Norfolk, she wrote to the privy council with orders for her proclamation as Edward's successor.[72][2]

July 6, 1553: Edward VI died on July 6, 1553, aged 15. His will swept aside the Succession to the Crown Act 1543, excluded both Mary and Elizabeth from the succession, and instead declared as his heir Lady Jane Grey, granddaughter of Henry VIII's sister Mary, Duchess of Suffolk. Lady Jane was proclaimed queen by the Privy Council, but her support quickly crumbled, and she was deposed after nine days. Mary rode triumphantly into London, with Elizabeth at her side.[29]

The show of solidarity between the sisters did not last long. Mary, a devout Catholic, was determined to crush the Protestant faith in which Elizabeth had been educated, and she ordered that everyone attend Catholic Mass; Elizabeth had to outwardly conform.[3]

July 6, 1560: Under the terms of the Treaty of Edinburgh, signed by Mary's representatives on July 6, 1560, France and England undertook to withdraw troops from Scotland and France recognised Elizabeth's right to rule England. However, the seventeen-year-old Mary, still in France and grieving for her mother, refused to ratify the treaty.[56][4]

July 6, 1664: " I believe this John at St. Andrews Cambridge was the common ancestor of Antony of Over and Richard Peter, son of John and died in 1593, was their father. Richard became the father of Benjamin, Clerk of Council in VA, 1630, and Antony of Over was the father of Antony, who, according to Nugent, came to VA in 1630, and is the direct ancestor of the Long, Nash, Halbert and Simonton line. Antony II was the father of Richard Harrison who received a land patent in VA July 6, 1664 (Nugent). He, in turn was the father of Andrew who married Eleanor_________, and left a will in Essex co. VA, 1718." [S9] [5]

July 6, 1664: Richard Harrison apparently patented lands in Virginia on July 6, 1664.[6] At present all that is known of Richard Harrison is that he was brother to George,. Andrew, and James and son of Anthony.[7]

July 6, 1685: Charles's eldest son, the Duke of Monmouth, led a rebellion against James II, but was defeated at the Battle of Sedgemoor on July 6, 1685, captured and executed.[8]

July 6, 1752: Eyewittness reports of cannibalism after the attack

At least two eyewitness accounts refer to cannibalism that occurred after the attack. William Trent kept a journal of a 1752 trip to visit the Twightwee Indians. When he was at ―lower Sawanees town‖, he encountered traders Thomas Burney[9] and Andrew McBryer, whom he described as the ―only two men that escaped, when the town was attacked‖. Trent‘s July 6, 1752 journal entry describes their eyewitness account, and includes the sentence ―One of the whitemen that was wounded in the belly, as soon as they got him they stabbed and scalped, and took out his heart and eat it.‖

In his 1902 book ―History of Ohio‖, Rowland H. Rerick states:

As soon as they could take a, French scalp in retaliation, the Maumees of Pickawillany sent

Burney with it and a message to the governors of Virginia and Pennsylvania, saying: ―We saw our great Piankeshaw king taken, killed and eaten within a hundred yards of the fort, and before our faces. We now look upon ourselves as a lost people, fearing our brothers will leave us; but,before we will be subject to the French, or call them our fathers, we will perish here.‖[10]



July 6, 1773

When Justice William Crawford presided at the second term of the criminql court beginning on July 6, 1773, the minutes show that the criminal court beginning on July 6, 1773, the minutes show that the proceedings were regular and that the Court had a lot of things to do. Unquestionably there was due decorum, commensurate with the proper administration of the English law.

On that warm day in July, with a good crowd at court, there came up for consideration the case of The King v. David McCacen, the defendant being charged with an assault and battery on Dr. David Marchand, prominent physician and chruchman, who lived on the waters of the Little Sewickley about midway between Fort Allen and Brush Creek Church, where he was a member. Dr. Marchand was held in ₤20 security, so that he would be at court at the next session to “testify for his Majesty.” [11]

The Court of Common Pleas began its work in earnest at the July term, 1773. Close to him was the famed Captain Arthur St. Clair, who was also a justice, and to whom was intrusted the keeping of the court records. In those days one man could fill the several county offices, such as prothonotary, clerk, register, and recorder of deeds. Most of the records of the court were actually written by St. Clairs’s clerk, James Brison, who served under succeeding prothonotaries. When Allegheny County was erected fifteen years later, James Brison became its first prothonotary and served for almost twenty years. [12]



July 6, 1776:

uc06330



This is the only surviving fragment of the broadside of the Declaration of Independence printed by John Dunlap and sent on July 6, 1776, to George Washington by John Hancock, President of the Continental Congress in Philadelphia. General Washington had this Declaration read to his assembled troops on July 9 in New York, where they awaited the combined British fleet and army. Later that night, American troops destroyed a bronze-lead statue of Great Britain's King George III that stood at the foot of Broadway on the Bowling Green. The statue was later molded into bullets for the American Army. [13]

John Hancock, colonial Boston’s wealthiest merchant, who was the “milch cow” who funded the secret activities of the Sons of Liberty. Hancock , a Freemason[14], was the first person to sign the Declaration of Independence. Freemason Benjamin Franklin would also sign.[15] He later served as the the first elected governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Hancock’s elegant mansion stood on what is now the west lawn of the State house. Hancock wished to give his home to the state,. For use as a governor’s mansion, but he died begfore he could sign his will. Years later, his heirs offered to sell the old house to the state, but the price was considered too high. Much to the dismay of all Bostonians, the Hancock mansion was demolished in 1863.[16]

July 6, 1777

American forces abandon Fort Ticonderoga, New York, after an attack by a superior British army under General Burgoyne.[17]

July 6, 1781: John Bowyer settled, 1753, in Augusta County, becoming a school-master, Captain

of militiain 1763; Justice of the Peace, 1770; Land Commissioner, 1776;

Lieut. Colonel of Stephenson's Virginia Riflemen; joined Lafayette in the

Yorktown campaign; wounded July 6, 1781, at Jamestown Ford (Battle of

Greenspring) . He lived near Lexington, Rockbridge County, where he died

in 1806. [18]

July 6, 1782: Lieut. Rose in writing June 13, 1782, to Gen. Irvine, says: "Our loss

will not exceed thirty in killed and missing." The Pennsylvania Journal

and Weekly Advertiser of July 6, 1782, estimates the missing at from

fifty to seventy. "The entire loss was about fifty men." (Washington-

Irvine Correspondence, p. 123.) "The result is a total loss of less than

seventy." [19]



William Croghan[20] to William Davies, July 6, 1782



FORT Pitt, June [July] 6, 1782.

DEAR COLONEL:

[Speaks of having been captured May 12, 1780, at Charleston, & greatly wishes to be exchanged.][21]

Gen. Irvine commands at this post, where he has so few Conti­nental troops (about 200 for duty) that ‘tis not in his power to go from the garrison against the Indians, who are daily committing murders through this country. The Pennsylvania militia formed an expedition against the Indians about three months ago; but in­stead of going against the enemies of the country, they turned their thoughts on a robbing, plundering, murdering scheme, on our well-known friends, the Moravian Indians, all of whom they met they in the most cool and deliberate manner (after living with them ap­parently in a friendly manner for three days) men, women & chil­dren, in all ninety three, tomahawked, scalped & burned, except one boy, who after being scalped made his escape to the Delaware Indians (relations of the Moravians) who have ever since been exceeding cruel to all prisoners they have taken.

About six weeks ago, 500 volunteers of this country, commanded by (our old) Colonel William Crawford, went on an expedition against the Indian towns’ - - - the men behaved amiss (were Cowardly) no more than about 100 having fought the Indians, who came out from their towns to meet them - - - the firing continued at long shot with rifles for near two days - - - the second evening our Party broke off & retreated in the most disorderly manner - - - Colonel Crawford and a few others, finding the men would pay no atten­tion to orders, were going on coolly in the rear, leaving the road in case the Indians should pursue, until the second day when they thought they might venture on the road, but before they had marched two miles, a body of Indians fell in between them and the rear of the party, & took them prisoners. We had no certainty of this unhappy affair until yesterday, when Doctor Knight, who was taken with Crawford, came into the garrison in the most deplorable con­dition man could be in and be alive. He says that the second day after they were taken, they were carried to an Indian town, stripped and then blacked, and made to march through the Indians, when men, women, & children beat them with clubs, sticks, fists, &c., in the most cruel manner. Col Crawford and the Doctor were con­fined together all night; the next day they were taken out, blacked again, and their hands tied behind their backs, when Col. Crawford was led by a long lope to a high stake, to the top of which the rope about the Colonel was tied; all around the stake a great quantity of red hot coals were laid, on which the poor Colonel was obliged to walk barefoot, and at the same time the Indians firing squibs of powder at him, while others poked burning sticks on every part of his body; thus they continued torturing him for about two hours, when he begged of Simon Girtv, a white renegade who was standing by, to shoot him, when the fellow said “Don’t you see I have no gun.” Some little time after they scalped him, & struck him on the bare scull several times with sticks. Being now nearly exhausted, he lay down on the burning embers, when the squaws put shovels full of coals on his body, which, dying as he was, made him move and creep a little. The Doctor was obliged to stand by and see the cruelty performed. When the Colonel was scalped, they slapped the scalp over the Doctor’s face, saying “This is your great Captain’s

scalp; tomorrow we will serve you so.” The Doctor was to be served in the same manner in another town some distance off; and on his way to his place of torment he passed by where Col. Craw­ford’s dead body had been dragged to & burned, & saw his bones. The Doctor was guarded by but one Indian, who seemed pretty kind to him; on the way the Indian wanted a fire made, and untied the Doctor, ordering him to make it. The Doctor appeared willing to obey, and was collecting wood till he got a good chunk in his hand, with which he gave the Indian so severe blow as leveled him; the Indian sprang up, but seeing the Doctor seize his gun, he ran away; the Doctor could not get the gun off, otherwise would have shot the Indian. He steered through the woods, and arrived here the twenty first day after he left the Indian, having no clothes, the gun being wood bound, he left it after carrying it a few days.

For the twenty one days, and two or three more while he had been under sentence of death, he never ate anything but such vege­tables as the woods afforded. None of the prisoners were put to death but those that fell into the hands of the Delaware’s, who say they will shew no mercy to any white man, as they would shew none to their friends and relations, the religious Moravians. I believe I have not told you, that the whole of the five hundred who went out with Crawford returned, except about fifty. Colonel Harrison & Mr. William Crawford, relatives of Col. Crawford, were likewise taken prisoners, but fortunately fell into the hands of the Shawanees, who did not kill their prisoners.

The people of this country will not suffer Pennsylvania to run the line as Virginia agreed to, but insist on Pennsylvania running its bounds agreeable to Charter, which will leave Virginia a very valu­able country, which Pennsylvania otherwise would have.

I am with every sentiment of esteem,

W. CR0GHAN.[22]



On the 6th of July following, Major William Croghan of the Virginia wrote from Fort Pitt to William Davies, Virginia secretary at war, as concerning the Sandusky expedition:

“Dear Colonel:— . . . About six weeks ago five hundred volunteers this country commanded by (our old) Colonel William Crawford went expedition against the Indian towns. The men were cowardly; ?[23]



“Extract of a letter dated Fort Pitt, July 6th, 1782:

‘The expedition formed by Colonel Crawford with about 500 militia I sup­pose you have heard of, but now I have it in my power to give you the par­ticulars as near as can well be collected. I think it was about the 6th of June, they arrived within two or three miles of tTpper St. Dusky [Sandusky], an In­dian town within 200 miles of Fort Pitt, near a northwest course, where the savages lay in ambuscade for them, and a warm action ensued, commencing about 3 in the afternoon, but in the utmost disorder; our people were obliged to retreat at dark. The Indians in company with some red-coats, mounted horses for speed and overhauled our people at a certain p~ain, 25 miles from the town, where they fought for a considerable time, but were again forced to make their best way home, the enemy hanging on their rear until they came to the Ohio. The details are so irregular it is not easy to ascertain the loss on our part, but I believe it is from 50 to 70 missing. Yesterday one Dr. Knight who was taken with Col. Crawford arrived here after living for 21 days upon herbs in the woods. He says that five days after they were taken the Delaware Indians burnt the Col. with the most excruciating~ pain, first tied him to a long post with room to walk round it, then cut off his ears, after that blew squibs of powder on different parts of his body; then the squaws procured hickory brands and darted against such parts as they thought might most affect him; they then scalped him and slapped the scalp in the Dr.’s face,— told him that was his big captain; the Col. was still alive. This he thinks was an hour after the Col. was tied up, when he (the Dr.) was taken away. Just as he was leaving him the Col. leaned upon his knee and elbow for rest, when a squaw took a shovel of hot embers and threw upon his back to put him again in motion. The next day under the guard of one man the Dr. passed the same place and saw some of the Col. ‘s bones in the ashes. The Col. he says made little noise; he begged one Simon Girty, whom he formerly knew at Fort Pitt, to shoot him, but Girty said with a laugh he had no gun, that examples must take place. The Moravian towns were destroyed and in­habitants by our militia, and then told the Dr. there were Delaware towns which also must have an example, for which purpose he (the Dr.) must be sent there the next day. After one day’s journey, with the one man guard­ing him, the morning following, the Indian loosed the pinions which bound the Dr. and fell to repairing the fire, when the Dr. picked up a stick and tho, weak, knocked him almost down and secured his gun, snapped her at the in­dian, but could not get her off; however, the Indian ran and the Dr. made his escape. He says that the Delawares took nine besides himself and the Colonel; that the squaws and children as well as the men were employed in tomahawk­ing them till the nine were killed. Such as fell into the hands of the Shaw­anese are well treated. The militia are greatly enraged and determined on having ample satisfaction.’ [24]





July 6, 1812: John STEPHENSON. Born on January 7, 1765 in Frederick County, Virginia. John died in Kentucky on March 17, 1832; he was 67. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.



John first married Elizabeth MOORE. Born on March 19, 1773. Elizabeth died on July 6, 1812; she was 39.



They had the following children:

10 i. Elizabeth (1796-1852)

ii. Mariah.

Mariah married Thomas CALVERT.

iii. Sally.

Sally married Asher COX.

11 iv. Eliza T. (1811-1847)



On March 4, 1813 when John was 48, he second married Alice “Alsey”. Born in 1771. Alice “Alsey” died in Kentucky on September 19, 1846; she was 75. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.



They had the following children:

i. Presley L.

ii. James F.

iii. Edward.

iv. Julia Ann.

Julia Ann married Clifton CALVERT. [25]







July 6, 1824: Andrew Jackson attended an Independence Day celebration at the Fountain of Health near the Hermitage. [26]

July 6, 1853:

LETTER TWO
Portsmouth, Ohio
December 6, 1932

Dear Col. Reasoner,

This last Wednesday afternoon I ran down to Adams County and this time, located the John R Connell cemetery on the old John R Connell f arm.

It is about 2 ½ miles Northwest of Bentonville, by way of the Ellis Pike. The cemetery is on a farm now owned by a Mr. Ambrose Sininger. It is situated on a knoll to the right of a land that runs past the Sininger house and barn, and is about 1/8th of a mile, I would say, from the Pike. There are tow cedar stumps now standing on the lot. These trees died a number of years ago and were cut down.

The cemetery is very small, unfenced and enriched upon as it is now isolated in a plowed field. When Mr. Sininger bought the farms a few years ago the cemetery had been reduced to a square of about twenty feet. But now head stone marks a grave and this stone has been broken off below the line of inscription. Five fragments of partly legible stone were found upon the lot. They bore sufficient evidence to definitely identify the John R Connell cemetery. They were as follows:

A stone to Dunseth, who died July 6, 1853, aged 4 months and 25 days.

A stone to Nancy, wife of Moses Connell

A stone to "Elle"

A stone to "Jo---" son of M and "Na----" Connell

A stone un-named and broken giving incomplete record of age.

If Wednesday is a good day, I will try to take some photographs of the land and also locate the cemetery two miles to the west of this place. You will hear from me again soon.

Yours truly,

(signed) Samuel P Adams

July 6, 1863

Union Field Hospital

Gettysburg, PA

When Lee’s Army retreated to the safety of Virginia, their surgeons traveled with them. This left the overwhelming job of caring for the sick and wounded troops to a handful of men. Of 106 Doctors only 35 were qualified to operate. In their charge were 21,000 wounded left behind by both sides.[27]



Wed. July 6, 1864

Rained very hard in the afternoon

Got marching orders[28] F. Hunter[29][30]



July 6-10, 1864: Battle of Chattahoochie, GA.[31]



July 6, 1865: Governor Vance was arrested by Federal forces on his birthday in May 1865 and spent time in prison in Washington, D.C. Per President Andrew Johnson's amnesty program, he filed an application for pardon on June 3, and was paroled on July 6.[6] After his parole, he began practicing law in Charlotte, North Carolina. Among his clients was accused murderer Tom Dula, the subject of the folk song "Tom Dooley." Governor Vance was formally pardoned on March 11, 1867, though no formal charges had ever been filed against him leading to his arrest, during his imprisonment, nor during the period of his parole.[6][32]

July 6, 1893: In November 1891, George's elder brother Albert Victor became engaged to his second cousin once removed, Princess Victoria Mary of Teck. She was known within the family as "May", nicknamed after her birth month. May's father, Prince Francis, Duke of Teck, belonged to a morganatic, cadet branch of the house of Württemberg. Her mother, Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, was a male-line grand-daughter of King George III and a first cousin of Queen Victoria.

Six weeks after the formal engagement, Albert Victor died of pneumonia, leaving George second in line to the throne, and likely to succeed after his father. George had only just recovered from a serious illness himself, after being confined to bed for six weeks with typhoid fever, the disease that was thought to have killed his grandfather Prince Albert.[11] Queen Victoria still regarded Princess May as a suitable match for her grandson, and George and May grew close during their shared period of mourning.[12] A year after Albert Victor's death, George duly proposed to May and was accepted. They married on July 6, 1893 at the Chapel Royal in St James's Palace, London. Throughout their lives, they remained devoted to each other. George was, on his own admission, unable to express his feelings easily in speech, but they often exchanged loving letters and notes of endearment.[13][33]

July 6, 1896: Max Gottlieb, born July 6, 1896 in Neuhof . Resided Siegburg. Deportation: from Trier-Koln. July 27, 1942, Theresienstadt. October 1, 1944, Auschwitz . missing.[34]



July 6, 1938: President Roosevelt called for an international conference to consider the "displaced persons" problem. The negligible results highlight the passive role the Western world in the face of the Nazis. . Roosevelt's aims, some say, are to deflect American Jewish appeals to help the German Jews. Aside from Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic, which want enormous sums of money to allow a small number of Jews to immigrate, the 32 nations attending the conference decide that they will not permit large numbers of Jews to enter their countries. [35]



July 6-15, 1938

Evian Conference: 31 contries refuse to accept Jews trying to escape Nazi Germany (with exception of Dominican Republic). Most find temporary refuge in Poland.[36]



July 6, 1939: The last remaining Jewish enterprises in Germany were closed.[37]



July 6, 1941: Lithuanian militiamen murdered 2,514 Jews in Kovno. (Lithuania)[38]

July 6, 1492: Max Planck, the father of quantum theory, had been right in assessing the consequences of National Socialist policies. In 1933, Planck, as president of the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft (Kaiser Wilhelm Society), met with Adolf Hitler. During the meeting, Planck told Hitler that forcing Jewish scientists to emigrate would mutilate Germany and the benefits of their work would go to foreign countries. Hitler responded with a rant against Jews and Planck could only remain silent and then take his leave. The National Socialist regime would only come around to the same conclusion as Planck in the July 6, 1942 meeting regarding the future agenda of the Reichsforschungsrat (RFR, Reich Research Council), but by then it was too late.[25][44][39]

July 6, 1942

After writing his report on the July 4 meeting with Bousquet, Dannecker sends Eichmann an urgent telex to inform him of the outcome of the decisive negotioations that have gone on since Eichmann’s departure from Paris on July 1. Dannecker prefers not to begin with his desappoiting news; French Jews will not be arrested, at least for the time being. He leaves it to Eichmann to deuce this from the agreement he reports; “All stateless Jews of the Occupied Zone and the Unoccupied Zone will be readied for evacutation when we order it.” He feels constrained at the end of the telex to specify further; “To close, I must note that until the present we have only been able to settle the question of stateless or foreign Jews to get the action started.” Dannecker ends on an optimistic note: “In the second phase we will attend to the Jews naturalized in France after 1919 or 1927.”



In this telex, Dannecker raises the problem of Jewish children in two sentences that will forever be written in the history of France, because they originate with the head of the French government.



In his initial plan for the roundups on June 15, Dannecker wrote of the “transplantation: of the Jews, “with, in perspective, the possibility of later sending the children under 16 years of age who have been left behind.” But on July 4, according to DANNECKER; “Premier Laval has proposed that at the time of the evacuation of Jewish families from the Unoccupied Zone, their children be taken as well. As for the Jewish children who would remain in the Occupied Zone, the question does not interest him.”



Thus Laval proposes to the Germans the deportation of entire families without a minimum age limit; he leaves to the Nazis the responsibility and therefore a free hand to decide ondeportation of children under 16 whose parent will be arrested in the Occupied Zone and deported. These are children who, as he well knows, are for the most part French, even if to an anti-Semite Jewish children born in France to foreign parents are, in the words of Xavier Vallat, the first Vichy Commissioner for Jewish Questions, “only trainees in French nationality.”



What are Laval’s motives? He explains them at a cabinet meeting in Vichy on July 10: “With humane intentions, the head of government obtained agreement, contrary to the initial German terms, that children, including those under 16, would be permitted to accompany their parents.”Laval’s humanitarian intentions may be doubted.[40]



July 6, 1942: A meeting was held on 6 July 1942 to discuss the function of the RFR and set its agenda. The meeting was a turning point in National Socialism’s attitude towards science, as well as recognition that its policies which drove Jewish scientists out of Germany were a mistake, as the Reich needed their expertise.[41]

July 6, 1954

Elvis Presley makes his first record at Sun Studios, Memphis, Tennessee.[42]



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


[1] [27]Retrieved:http://www.catholic.net/rcc/Periodicals/Faith/0910-96/article9.html


[2] Wikipedia


[3] Wikipedia


[4] Wikipedia


[5] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/Harrison/d0069/g0000031.html#I978


[6] (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett)


[7] The source of this information is:Pat Hanson, 1224 N. W. 91, Okla. City, OKLA 73114. Her sources are given under Ancestor No. 14464.


[8] Wikipedia


[9] Burney. Thomas Burney. An itinerate blacksmith who in 1754 rode into Wills Creek with news of George Washington’s encounter with Jumonville. The announcement that 21 French prisoners were to be marched into Wills Creek caused a great commotion. The fact that one prisoner was Commissary La Force from Fort Machault was especially noted.

http://www.thelittlelist.net/boatobye.htm


[10] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 35.


[11] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, A. M. Volume II 1939. pg. 23.


[12] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, A. M. Volume II 1939. pg. 20.


[13] http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trt024.html

Library of Congress Website


[14] Secret Brotherhood of Freemasons, HISTI, 2/14/2001


[15] Secret Brotherhood of Freemasons, HISTI, 2/14/2001




[16] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail Third Edition by Charles Bahne, page 8.


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


[18] Virginia Magazine of History, XXVIII,45; Frontier Defense, 105




[19] (Crawford's Campaign, p. 259.)


[20]Major William Croghan was a nephew of Colonel George Croghan who served as Indian agent under Sir William Johnson. At the outbreak of the Revolution, he was appointed captain of infantry in the Virginia Line. During 1778 he was promoted to the rank of major. He was captured by the British at Charleston in 1780 but was paroled. In 1784 he went to Kentucky and, shortly afterwards married Lucy, the sister of George Rogers Clark.


[21] This summary appears in the copy of the document in the Draper MSS. The transcript is in Draper’s handwriting.




[22] GEORGE ROGERS CLARK.PAPERS 1781-1784, Edited by James Alton James, pgs. 71-73

EDITED WITH INTRODUCTION AND NOTES BY JAMES ALTON JAMES, Ph. D., LL. D.

WILLIAM SMITH MASON PROFESSOR OF AMERICAN HISTORY, NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY


[23] The Washington-Irvine Papers


[24] “—Pennsylvania Journal and Weekly Advertiser, July 23, 1782.

Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield, pages 375-376.


[25] www.frontierfolk.net/ramsha_research/families/Stephenson.rtf


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


[27] Gettysburg: Speech, Military, 12/06/2008


[28]On July 6th the regiment commenced a series of movements in connection with the army: first marching to Halltown, to intercept the army of 30,000 rebels, under the command of General Early, which was moving towards Maryland and Pennsylvania; but the rebel general was not yet ready for a general engagement, and, handling his force with consumate skill, managed to avoid a conflict.

http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ia/county/linn/civil war/24th/24 history p2.htm




[29] Hunter, Franklin C. Age 18. Residence Linn County, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Jan. 4, 1864. Mustered Jan. 28, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga. http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logan/mil508.htm


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


[31] (State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.)


[32] Wikipedia


[33] Wikipedia


• [34] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

• [2]Memorial Book: Victims of the Persecution of Jews under the National Socialist Oppression in Germany, 1933-1945.


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


[36] www.Wikipedia.org


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


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


[39] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_energy_project


[40] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 35.


[41] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_energy_project-


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

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