Monday, August 12, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, August 9


“Lest We Forget”

10,656 names…10,656 stories…10,656 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, August 9

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

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



August 9, 48 B.C.: Julius Caesar defeats Pompey, who is killed in Egypt. [1][1] Considering Pompey’s behavior towards the Jews, including his desecration of the Temple, Caesar’s victory was the preferred outcome. [2][2]

August 9, 378: Roman Emperor Valens who began his reign in 364, was killed by the Visigoths as he led his large to defeat at the Battle of Adrianople. During his reign Valens followed the course of his predecessors and issued an edict strengthening the Patriarchate. He issued an edict that exempted “officers of communities subject to the ‘illustrious Patriarch (Nasi)’ from service on municipal councils. In 368 he issued an edict forbidding the billeting of troops in Synagogues. Such minor sounding positive notes, makes him better than his imperial peers when it came to treatment of the Jewish people.[3]

380 CE: Emperor Theodosius mandates orthodoxy.[4]

August 9, 681: Founding of the first Bulgarian Empire. Archaeologists have found traces of Jewish communities in the area that pre-dated the formation of Bulgaria. The first major movement of Jews into Bulgaria took place early in the 8th century when Jews fled persecution in the Byzantine Empire.[5]

682 A.D.

When in 682, Pope Martin I was accused of friendly dealing with the Moslems, he explained that his motive was to seek permission to send alms to Jerusalem.[6]

682: Visigothic king Erwig begins his reign by enacting 28 anti-Jewish laws. He presses for the “utter expirpation of the pest of the Jews” and decrees that all converts must be registered by a parish priest, who must issue travel permits. All holidays, Christian and Jewish, must be spent in the presence of a priest to ensure piety and to prevent the backsliding.[7]


682:

In North Africa Uqba b Nafe marches to the Atlantic, is ambushed and killed at Biskra. The Muslims evacuate Qairowan and withdraw to Burqa.[8]




August 9, 1048: Pope Damasus II consecrated.[9] Death of Pope Benedict IX – Pope Damascus II, Ou Yang Hsiu the Chinese poet writes stories of T’and dynasty, Death of Beruni, Arab historian, Pope Benedict IX deposed and excommunicated, July 17, Pope Damasus II (Poppo Tirol) appointed, dies August 9. [10]



Beaujeu. Capitaine Daniel Lienard de Beaujeu. (BOH-joh). Born August 9, 1711 in Montreal and killed at the Battle of the Monongahela July 9, 1755. French officer who persuaded Fort Duquesne commander Contrecoeur to allow him to lead a group of French and Canadian soldiers plus allied Indians out of the fort and up the Monongahela River to meet the force of British General Braddock. The Indians thought Beaujeu would be leading them against an invincible force and refused his request. But, after an impassioned plea by Beaujeu where he apparently shamed them, the Indians changed their minds and added around 637 warriors to his force of some 254 French/Canadian troupes de la marine and militia. Thus, Beaujeu was able to lead a force of approximately 900 to the battle

Beaujeu was killed by the third volley from the British and was replaced by Captain Jean-Daniel Dumas (see Dumas). Some accounts record that Beaujeu had been appointed commandant of Fort Duquesne—replacing Contrecoeur. Without Beaujeu’s persuading the Indians to fight, Fort Duquesne would certainly have fallen. After Beaujeu’s death and the defeat of Braddock, Contrecoeur was quick to claim credit for the victory.

Beaujeu had a younger brother—Louis Lienard (1716-1802) who was commandant at Fort Michilimackinac 1758-1760. After the August 1760 French surrender to the British in Canada, Beaujeu turned over command to Charles de Langlade so that Beaujeu would not be the one surrendering to the enemy. Perhaps Louis Lienard felt that surrendering to an enemy who had killed his brother would have resulted in a humiliation beyond the call of duty.[11]



August 9, 1743: Robert Thrap b: 1728 in Baltimore Co., MD. d: February 26, 1808 in Muskingum Co. OH.

. +Elizabeth Hilton b: August 9, 1743 in Baltimore Co. MD m: February 28, 1760 in Baltimore County, MD d: Unknown in Muskingum Co., OH.

. 2 John Thrap b: 1761 in MD d: Abt. 1844 in Perry Co. OH bur @ Holcomb Cem. in Bearfield Twp Perry Co., OH

.... +Elizabeth ? b: 1760 d: December 7, 1837 in buried in Holcomb Cem Portersville, OH (stone illegible).

.... 3 Nancy Anna Thrap b: September 9, 1783 in MD d: March 10, 1845 in Perry Co., OH buried Holcomb Cemetery

....... +John Godlove b: 1777 in VA m: May 19, 1805 in Muskingum Co., OH d: 1864 in ? buried at Riverside Cemetery Washington Co., IA

....... 4 Sarah A. Godlove

....... 4 Rebecca Godlove b: Abt. 1807 d: November 14, 1899 in Perry Co., OH

.......... +James Allen b: 1806 in VA m: October 23, 1827 in Perry Co., OH d: October 14, 1871 in Bearfield Township Perry Co., OH

.......... 5 Margaret Allen b: Abt. 1828 in OH

............. +Benedict House m: April 26, 1850 in Perry Co., OH

.......... 5 Jasper Allen b: March 30, 1830 in OH d: June 23, 1881

............. +Eliza Jane Jadwin m: December 30, 1851 in Hocking Co., OH

.......... 5 Rebecca J. Allen b: Abt. 1836

.......... 5 Priscilla Allen b: Abt. 1838

.......... 5 Jeremiah F. Allen b: 1840

.......... 5 John Wesley Allen b: April 30, 1842

.......... 5 James K. P. Allen b: Abt. 1844

.......... 5 George W. Allen b: Abt. 1848

.......... 5 Benedict R. Allen b: Abt. 1850

....... 4 Jeremiah Godlove b: June 11, 1816 in OH d: March 3, 1893

.......... +Cyrena Ellison b: Abt. 1818 m: September 24, 1840 in Perry Co., OH[12]



August 9, 1757

French General, Joseph de Montcalm, takes Fort William Henry on LAKE George, furing the French and Indian War.[13]



No. 10.—CRAWFORD TO JAMES[14] TILGHMAN.[15]





STEWART’S CROSSINGS, August 9, 1771.

SIR:—I understand by Captain John Haden, the bearer of this, that there is an agreement entered into by a number of the inhabitants of Monongahela and Redstone. They have entered into a bond or article of agreement to join and keep off all officers of the law, under a penalty of fifty [pounds], to be forfeited by the party refusing to join against all officers whatsoever.

I understand this was set on foot by a set of people who have made a breach of the law by driving out men from their homes for which there was a King’s warrant issued against them, together with a notion propagated by Colonel Croghan that those posts would not fall into Pennsylvania. He told me it was the opinion of some of the best judges that the province line would not extend.by considerable so far; as it would be settled at forty-eight nifles to a degree of longitude, which was the distance of a degree of longitude allowed at the time the charter was granted to Mr. Penn. He has since told these people that they had no right to obey any precept issued from Pennsylvania.

He has run a line from the mouth of Raccoon [creek] up the Ohio to Fort Pitt, and thence up Monongahela, above Pigeon creek; thence across till it strikes Raccoon creek ten miles up It; and says he has one more grant of 100,000 acres to lay off in a paralleI with that. Many surveys he has cut to pieces and sold to sundry people, that have been returned to your office, some of which are not above three or four miles from Fort Pitt. He has done so with one of mine and many others. It is a great pity there is not a stop put to such proceedings, as it will be attended with very bad consequences.

I am informed there is a large number of signers already to the paper; when I see it, I will give you a more distinct account. I am, etc.

P. S.—I shall be down this fall and pay off to the land office for the different lands I am concerned in or have undertaken to transact.[16]



Wednesday August 9th 1775

Mr. Berwick and I set out this morning to Major Crawford’s, but met him at his Mistresses. This woman is common to him, his brother, half brother, and his own son and is his wife’s sister’s daughter, at the same time. A set of Vial Brutes. He informed me, the Congress has discharged all the Governors on the Continent and taken all affairs Civil and Military into their Management. independence is what these Scoundrals aim at. Confusion to their Schemes. [17]



XI.— COOK TO IRVINE.



AT My House, August 9, 1782.

Sir:— We have hired five spies who are now out, who are to reconnoiter from Fort Crawford to the Kittanning, agreeable to what was proposed when with you. They are ordered to correspond with those you may send. They are to make the figure of the day of the month upon a tree in order to ascer­tain their meeting or appointing places, and leave a line under a stone at the root of the tree importing the nature of the discovery if they have made any.

I have had a meeting of the field officers and other principal inhabitants upon the subject of the expedition.2 The plan agreed upon I will lay before the gentlemen who are to meet



August 9, 1777

FROM BRIGADIER-GENERAL KNOX.



"It is the opinion of the subscriber that the Battery on

Fort Island ought to have an additional work thrown up

upon its left, and Garrisoned with 12 pieces heavy cannon,

150 cannoniers, and half as many assistants, with 500 In-

fantry.



" Red Bank is to be contracted so as to have 5 or 6 can-

non on the land side, and as many heavy towards the river ;

to prevent any ships coming up the channel leading to it, in

order to flank the Gallies which may be station'd for the

defence of the Cheveaux de Frize near the Fort.



" Billingsport to be finished as at present contracted, or if

possible more so ; so as to hold 300 men exclusive of 150

cannoniers and 75 assistants, to work 12 pieces heavy can-

non which ousrht to be in this work.



" The Gallies to lye opposite to it at the break of the low

Island, in order to assist the fire of Billingsport : these Gal-

lies would be for this purpose preferable to the floating

Batteries, as they can be most easily remov'd in case of an

accident to Billingsport.



" If much depends on the fire ships an inclosed Battery

ought to be constructed on some advantageous piece of

ground near Derbys Creek, and something higher up the

river than where the present defective Battery is ; this in

order to prevent any of the enemy's ships mooring at the

mouth of the western channel ; so to hinder the fire ships

sent round into the, main ship channel. The western chan-

nel is thought to be most commodious for the free operation

of the fire ships either in the Channel leading to Billings-

port or further down the river ; the Gallies ought also to lye

in the western channel if their retreat is perfectly secure ;

as the Commodore says ; as well in order to protect the fire

ships, as to annoy any of the enemy's Frigates which may

be opposed to Billingsport ; but the two floating Batteries

which from their unwieldiness, cannot be easily mov'd to-

gether with the Frigates and Xebecques, ought to lye behind

the second row of Chevaux de Frize, upon a line with Fort

Island.



" If there should be time enough, a strong enclos'd work

ought to be thrown up on fort Island, capable of contain-

ing 4 or 500 men ; an advantage may be taken of part of

the stone work already erected, and which in its present

state would be infinitely detremental to any body of men

who may seek shelter from it.



" These sentiments are respectfully submitted by Sir Y r

most obt Hble Serv*



" HENRY KNOX

" Brif Gen 1 Artillety.



" CAMP SANDY RUN, 9 th Aug*. 1777."









August 9, 1777

WASHINGTON TO THE PEESIDENT OF CONGRESS.



" HEADQUARTERS, CAMP, NEAR GERMAN TOWN,



"Aug[9],1777. b

" SIR :



" The disappearance of the enemy's fleet for so many

days rendering it rather improbable, that they will again

return, I have thought it adviseable to remove the army back

to CoryelPs where it will be near enough to succor Philadel-

phia, should the enemy contrary to appearances still make

that the object of their next operations, and will be so much

the more conveniently situated to proceed to the Northward,

should the event of the present ambiguous and perplexing

situation of things call them that way. I was the more in-

clined to this step, as the nearness of the army to the city,

beside other disadvantages, afforded a temptation both to

officers and men to indulge themselves in licenses incon-

sistent with discipline and order, and consequently of a very

injurious tendency. 1 [18]



" But before my departure, I esteem it my duty to com-

municate to Congress the result of my examination into

the nature of the River defence proper to be adopted ac-

cording to the means in our possession, to prevent the suc-

cess of any attempt upon Philadelphia by water. I there-

fore beg leave to lay before Congress what appears to me

most eligible, considering all circumstances, and comparing

my own observations, with the different opinions of the

Gentlemen, whom I consulted on the occasion.



" It is generally a well founded maxim, that we ought to

endeavor to reduce our defence as much as possible to a cer-

tainty, by collecting our strength and making all our prepa-

rations at one point, rather than to risk its being weak and

ineffectual every where, by dividing our attention and force

to different objects. In doing this, we may disable ourselves

from acting with sufficient vigor any where, and a misfortune

in one place may pave the way for a similar one in another.

In our circumstances, we have neither men, cannon, nor any

thing else to spare, and perhaps cannot with propriety

hazard them on objects which being attended with the

greatest success we can promise ourselves, can be pro-

ductive of only partial and indicisive advantages, and which

may possibly fail of the end proposed, may have some seri-

ous ill-consequences, and must at all events have some dis-

advantages.



" It is then to be considered, where our defence can be

most effectually made, whether at Billingsport, or at Fort

Island.



"It appears to me, that the last deserves greatly the

preference. Billingsport has but one row of Chevaux de

frize, Fort Island has three; and in addition to them, a

boom and another Chevaux de frize, ready to be sunk in

the channel, on the approach of the enemy; of course the

obstructions in this respect are four times as great at the

one as at the other. The Gallies and floating batteries, that

could be brought for the defence of the chevaux de frize at

Billingsport, would be unable to maintain their station,

when once the enemy were in possession of the command-

ing ground on the Jersey side, to which they would be en-

tirely exposed, and notwithstanding the works raising there,

even supposing them complete, the strongest advocates for

making our defence in this place do not pretend, that that

.event can be protracted more than fifteen or twenty days at

most, at the end of which time, we should be obliged with

the loss of our cannon at least to abandon the defence, and

leave it in the power of the enemy to remove or destroy the

chevaux de frize at pleasure. Nor is it by any means certain

that a single row of chevaux de frize would be an impene-

trable barrier to the enemy's ships. Experiments have been

made that lead to a contrary supposition, and if they should

hazard one, which it might be well worth their while to do,

with some of their less valuable ships, under favor of a

leading breeze and tide, and should succeed in it, the

consequence might be the loss of our gallies and floating

batteries, which I apprehend might be intercepted, and with

the assistance of their gallies and small armed vessels, taken

and this would greatly weaken the opposition we might

otherwise give at Fort Island, and tend powerfully to render

it abortive. But if they should not attempt this, contenting

themselves with safer though slower operations, I have

already observed, that it is agreed, on all hands, in fifteen

or twenty days they would be able to possess themselves of

infallible means of frustrating our opposition there, by the

capture of our works ; and if we add to this, that it might

very possibly happen in less time, if from no other cause,

yet from the garrison being intimidated, by a conscious-

ness of its own inferiority and inability to support itself

against a so much superior force of numbers, which might

occasion a conduct destructive to itself there will remain

no sufficient reasons to justify the making this the principal

point of defence.



" At Fort Island the boom and chevaux de frize are an

ample security against any forcible impression of the enemy's

ships which it would be imprudent in them to attempt. On

the Jersey side the situation of the ground is such, that the

gallies, floating batteries and forts employed in the defence

of the obstructions would have little to fear from any bat-

teries erected there. Red-bank seems, by its elevation to

be the only advantageous spot for annoying them ; but as it

is computed to be above 1900 yards from Fort Island, the dis-

tance is rather too great to allow any battery raised there to

act with so much effect as to be able to silence our fire. On

this side, the ground by dykes and sluices may be laid under

water to so considerable an extent as to leave no danger of

our River force being annoyed from thence ; for which pur-

pose suitable precautions ought, at once, to be made, against

it may be necessary to carry them into effect.



" But, though a battery upon Red-bank, would not in my

apprehension, be able to prevent the efficacy of our defence

or give any material disturbance to Fort Island, in particular, yet it might serve to make the situation of some of our

gallics rather uneasy ; and this perhaps makes it worth

while to pre-occupy it in order to keep it out of the enemy's

hands erecting a small, but strong work there capable of

containing about two hundred men, with six or eight pieces

of light cannon, and a proportionable quantity of stores. As

the approaches to it are difficult on account of the adjacent

creeks, and a communication can be kept open between it

and our army, by which means the garrison might receive

succors from time to time, though we could not expect to

make it impregnable, yet we should have a prospect of hold-

ing it much longer than we could the work at Billingsport.



"In the position, which from my present view of it, I

should think it best for our army to take, the left wing of it

would be nearly opposite to Red-bank, and therefore in a con-

dition to relieve and support it ; whereas Billingsport being

more remote from the probable position of the army, and

detached from any other work, could not easily derive any

assistance from without and must rely wholly upon its own

strength.



" Either at Billingsport or at Fort Island, I believe there

is not much to be apprehended from the fire of the enemy's

ships unaided by land batteries ; For as by the information

of those who ought to be acquainted with the fact, not more

than three ships can act abreast at a time at either place,

and as the gallies, not requiring the same depth of water,

can extend themselves at pleasure, and besides carry a supe-

rior weight of metal to that which frigates commonly have,

a much superior fire, could be opposed to them than any

they could bring and from the difference of size and make

between the frigates and gallies, to much better effect than

theirs. The comparative extent of the River at Billings-

port and at Fort Island has been assigned as a motive of

preference to the former, the river being narrower there

than at the latter, and supposed to admit of fewer ships

operating at a time ; but as it is asserted by the gentlemen

in the River department, that the sand banks and shallow-

ness of the River in most places near Fort Island, compensate for the width of it and make it impossible for more

than three ships to act together at a time, this reason of

preferring the position at Billingsport seems to have no

foundation. And if we consider, that our whole force of

gallies and floating batteries, would be collected at Fort

Island, assisted by the fort itself and that it would not be

safe to trust them all out for the defence of Billingsport, for

fear of the disaster already suggested, it seems evident

enough that this is the place where our defence may be

most successfully made.



" One of the most weighty considerations with me is, that

our Army as before intimated, could more conveniently

co-operate with the defence by water here than at Billings-

port. The ground on this side is better situated here than

at the other place, and the Army being so much nearer the

city, it is so much the less likely, that the enemy should be

able, by a circuitous route to fall into the rear of it and sep-

arate it from the city, which is a circumstance that ought

carefully to be attended to.



" Some Gentlemen are of opinion that our principal de-

pendence ought to be upon Fort Island and its appendages ;

but at the same time, that we should make a part of our

defence at Billingsport proposing for that purpose that the

works there should be continued on the new contracted

scale to be garrisoned by four or five hundred men. The

reasons for this are that it would serve to delay the enemy

and give our army time to come up, should it be at any dis-

tance and that it would prevent those disagreeable impres-

sions which never fail to accompany the abandoning works

that have been once raised and plans that have been once in

execution ; especially when the persons concerned in the

defence of them repose a degree of confidence in them ;

which is said to be the case in the present instance. But

these reasons may perhaps not be so conclusive as 'tis

imagined ; for 'tis a question whether, if our army was so

remote as to make such a delay necessary, the enemy would

embarrass themselves with removing the water obstructions

in the first place, but would not rather debark and make

a rapid march by land ; possessing themselves of the city

and of those positions which would make the surrender of

the gallies, &c., in some sort a natural consequence; and it

is worthy of consideration, whether the* abandoning the

works begun at this time, which will probably allow some

leisure for any disagreeable impressions it might make to

be effaced, will not be less injurious than the abandoning

them hereafter when they have cost more expence, time and

labor, and in the critical moment of an attack, when every

misfortune, and the loss of the most inconsiderable post is

too apt to have a much worse influence on the mind than

the real importance of it will justify. Add to this the pos-

sibility that the garrison dismayed at the approach of num-

bers so superior to their own, might not answer the end

expected from them, and might even be lost by their ti-

midity the certahity of losing the cannon after the time

limited for the defence and thereby weakening that of the

upper position the chance of losing the gallies and floating

batteries, requisite for covering the chevaux de frize, by a

hazardous and successful attempt to break through them,

and the garrison with them, which would fall of course upon

such an event, It is however, submitted to Congress to

ballance the advantages and disadvantages and determine

accordingly. I would only beg leave to give it clearly as

my opinion, that our principal dependence ought to be upon

Fort Island and the obstructions there, and that Billingsport

ought not by any means to be defended, more than as a

secondary object.



" And to that end, I would recommend that the works on

Fort Island, which on their present construction are by no

means calculated for the defence of the Chevaux de frize be

immediately altered and adapted to that purpose, taking

care, at the same time, to make them defensible with a

small number of men against any sudden attempt to land

in boats and carry them by assault. But whatever scheme

is pursued, I could wish the greatest diligence and despatch

may be used in bringing it to maturity; for though the

danger which lately threatened seems to have subsided, there is no knowing how soon it may return and certainly

it will be prudent to do every thing in our power to be pre-

pared for it, as we can lose nothing by being so, and may

lose a great deal by neglecting to improve the interval

of leisure they have given us should it be their intention

to revisit this quarter. As the means to this it will be

necessary to furnish Mr. Coudray to whom the Superin-

tendency of those works is intrusted, with a competent

number of workmen, tools, and what other things he may

want to enable him to carry them on with propriety, ease

and expedition.



" On the whole I am of opinion that the obstructions in

the River, with the help of gallies, floating batteries, and

with tolerable industry to put the land works in a proper

state, will be extremely formidable to the enemy and author-

ise a reasonable expectation of their being effectual. The

fire ships also will contribute to this end, for though there

are many obstacles that render their success precarious, and

a happy concurrence of circumstances is necessary towards

it, any of which failing may disappoint the project, and

there is therefore no room to be sanguine, yet there is some

probability of its succeeding and they will be at least an

embarrassment and terror to the enemy, and will oblige

them to use precautions inconvenient to them and service-

able to us.



" As an accurate knowledge of the country is essential to

a good defence and as the enemy's approach may be sud-

den and we may be called to act, without having time, when

it happens, to examine it sufficiently if it is not done before-

hand, it would answer a valuable purpose to have it imme-

diately carefully reconnoitred, and sketches taken of all

the landing places, great roads and bye-paths, In camping

grounds, heights, rivers, creeks, morasses, and every thing

that it can be of any importance to know.



" Marcus Hook seems to be the most advanced place at

which it is conjectured the enemy will land, the survey

should therefore comprehend all the country between that

& Phil*.



" Mr. Du Coudray has offered his services with his Engi-

neers to do this business, if authorized by Congress, only

requiring that they be supplied with horses and a hand or

two. If Congress approve of it, I shall be glad they may

be desired to enter upon it, without loss of time. I have

the honor, &c.



" G? WASHINGTON/' [19]





August 9, 1814: Treaty of Fort Jackson

Description: Map of Land Ceded by Treaty of Fort Jackson.png

Description: http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png
Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/69/Treaty_of_Fort_Jackson_Historical_Marker.JPG/220px-Treaty_of_Fort_Jackson_Historical_Marker.JPG

Description: http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png

A historical marker near Union Springs in Bullock County, Alabama shows the Indian Territory boundary line created by the Treaty of Fort Jackson.

The Treaty of Fort Jackson (also known as the Treaty with the Creeks, 1814) was signed on August 9, 1814 at Fort Jackson near Wetumpka, Alabama following the defeat of the Red Stick (Upper Creek) resistance by United States allied forces at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. It occurred on the banks of the Tallapoosa River near the present city of Alexander City, Alabama. The U.S. force, led by General Andrew Jackson, consisted mainly of the West Tennessee Militia and 39th United States Infantry, allied with several groups of Cherokee and Lower Creek friendly to the American side. The Upper Creek were led by Chief Menawa, who fled with hundreds of survivors into Florida, where they allied with the Seminole. The surrender ended the Creek War, which the United States was fighting simultaneously with the War of 1812.

By the terms of the treaty, the Creek were forced to cede 23 million acres (93,000 km²) of their territory: their remaining land in Georgia and much of central Alabama, to the United States government. This definitive victory freed Jackson to continue southwest to Louisiana, where he defeated the British forces at the Battle of New Orleans. His opposition against Native American forces won him many votes during his first and re-election.

Text of treaty







Articles of agreement and capitulation, made and concluded this ninth day of August, one thousand eight hundred and fourteen, between major general Andrew Jackson, on behalf of the President of the United States of America, and the chiefs, deputies, and warriors of the Creek Nation.

WHEREAS an unprovoked, inhuman, and sanguinary war, waged by the hostile Creeks against the United States, hath been repelled, prosecuted and determined, successfully, on the part of the said States, in conformity with principles of national justice and honorable warfare—And whereas consideration is due to the rectitude of proceeding dictated by instructions relating to the re-establishment of peace: Be it remembered, that prior to the conquest of that part of the Creek nation hostile to the United States, numberless aggressions had been committed against the peace, the property, and the lives of citizens of the United States, and those of the Creek nation in amity with her, at the mouth of Duck river, Fort Mimms, and elsewhere, contrary to national faith, and the regard due to an article of the treaty concluded at New-York, in the year seventeen hundred ninety, between the two nations: That the United States, previously to the perpetration of such outrages, did, in order to ensure future amity and concord between the Creek nation and the said states, in conformity with the stipulations of former treaties, fulfill, with punctuality and good faith, her engagements to the said nation: that more than two-thirds of the whole number of chiefs and warriors of the Creek nation, disregarding the genuine spirit of existing treaties, suffered themselves to be instigated to violations of their national honor, and the respect due to a part of their own nation faithful to the United States and the principles of humanity, by impostures [impostors,] denominating themselves Prophets, and by the duplicity and misrepresentation of foreign emissaries, whose governments are at war, open or understood, with the United States. Wherefore,

1st—The United States demand an equivalent for all expenses incurred in prosecuting the war to its termination, by a cession of all the territory belonging to the Creek nation within the territories of the United States, lying west, south, and south-eastwardly, of a line to be run and described by persons duly authorized and appointed by the President of the United States:

Beginning at a point on the eastern bank of the Coosa river, where the south boundary line of the Cherokee nation crosses the same; running from thence down the said Coosa river with its eastern bank according to its various meanders to a point one mile above the mouth of Cedar creek, at Fort Williams, thence east two miles, thence south two miles, thence west to the eastern bank of the said Coosa river, thence down the eastern bank thereof according to its various meanders to a point opposite the upper end of the great falls, (called by the natives Woetumka,) thence east from a true meridian line to a point due north of the mouth of Ofucshee, thence south by a like meridian line to the mouth of Ofucshee on the south side of the Tallapoosa river, thence up the same, according to its various meanders, to a point where a direct course will cross the same at the distance of ten miles from the mouth thereof, thence a direct line to the mouth of Summochico creek, which empties into the Chatahouchie river on the east side thereof below the Eufaulau town, thence east from a true meridian line to a point which shall intersect the line now dividing the lands claimed by the said Creek nation from those claimed and owned by the state of Georgia: Provided, nevertheless, that where any possession of any chief or warrior of the Creek nation, who shall have been friendly to the United States during the war and taken an active part therein, shall be within the territory ceded by these articles to the United States, every such person shall be entitled to a reservation of land within the said territory of one mile square, to include his improvements as near the centre thereof as may be, which shall inure to the said chief or warrior, and his descendants, so long as he or they shall continue to occupy the same, who shall be protected by and subject to the laws of the United States; but upon the voluntary abandonment thereof, by such possessor or his descendants, the right of occupancy or possession of said lands shall devolve to the United States, and be identified with the right of property ceded hereby.

2nd—The United States will guarantee to the Creek nation, the integrity of all their territory eastwardly and northwardly of the said line to be run and described as mentioned in the first article.

3d—The United States demand, that the Creek nation abandon all communication, and cease to hold any intercourse with any British or Spanish post, garrison, or town; and that they shall not admit among them, any agent or trader, who shall not derive authority to hold commercial, or other intercourse with them, by license from the President or authorized agent of the United States.

4th—The United States demand an acknowledgment of the right to establish military posts and trading houses, and to open roads within the territory, guaranteed to the Creek nation by the second article, and a right to the free navigation of all its waters.

5th—The United States demand, that a surrender be immediately made, of all the persons and property, taken from the citizens of the United States, the friendly part of the Creek nation, the Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Choctaw nations, to the respective owners; and the United States will cause to be immediately restored to the formerly hostile Creeks, all the property taken from them since their submission, either by the United States, or by any Indian nation in amity with the United States, together with all the prisoners taken from them during the war.

6th—The United States demand the caption and surrender of all the prophets and instigators of the war, whether foreigners or natives, who have not submitted to the arms of the United States, and become parties to these articles of capitulation, if ever they shall be found within the territory guaranteed to the Creek nation by the second article.

7th—The Creek nation being reduced to extreme want, and not at present having the means of subsistence, the United States, from motives of humanity, will continue to furnish gratuitously the necessaries of life, until the crops of corn can be considered competent to yield the nation a supply, and will establish trading houses in the nation, at the discretion of the President of the United States, and at such places as he shall direct, to enable the nation, by industry and economy, to procure clothing.

8th—A permanent peace shall ensue from the date of these presents forever, between the Creek nation and the United States, and between the Creek nation and the Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Choctaw nations.

9th—If in running east from the mouth of Summochico creek, it shall so happen that the settlement of the Kennards, fall within the lines of the territory hereby ceded, then, and in that case, the line shall be run east on a true meridian to Kitchofoonee creek, thence down the middle of said creek to its junction with Flint River, immediately below the Oakmulgee town, thence up the middle of Flint river to a point due east of that at which the above line struck the Kitchofoonee creek, thence east to the old line herein before mentioned, to wit: the line dividing the lands claimed by the Creek nation, from those claimed and owned by the state of Georgia. The parties to these presents, after due consideration, for themselves and their constituents, agree to ratify and confirm the preceding articles, and constitute them the basis of a permanent peace between the two nations; and they do hereby solemnly bind themselves, and all the parties concerned and interested, to a faithful performance of every stipulation contained therein.

In testimony whereof, they have hereunto, interchangeably, set their hands and affixed their seals, the day and date above written.

Signatories
•Andrew Jackson, major general commanding Seventh Military District, [L. S.]
•Tustunnuggee Thlucco, Speaker for the Upper Creek, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Micco Aupoegau, of Toukaubatchee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Tustunnuggee Hopoiee, Speaker of the Lower Creeks, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Micco Achulee, of Cowetau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•William McIntosh, Jr., major of Cowetau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Tuskee Eneah, of Cussetau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Faue Emautla, of Cussetau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Toukaubatchee Tustunnuggee of Hitchetee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Noble Kinnard, of Hitchetee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Hopoiee Hutkee, of Souwagoolo, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Hopoiee Hutkee, for Hopoie Yoholo, of Souwogoolo, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Folappo Haujo, of Eufaulau, on Chattohochee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Pachee Haujo, of Apalachoocla, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Timpoeechee Bernard, Captain of Uchees, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Uchee Micco, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Yoholo Micco, of Kialijee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Socoskee Emautla, of Kialijee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Choocchau Haujo, of Woccocoi, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Esholoctee, of Nauchee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Yoholo Micco, of Tallapoosa Eufaulau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Stinthellis Haujo, of Abecoochee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Ocfuskee Yoholo, of Toutacaugee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•John O'Kelly, of Coosa, [L. S.]
•Eneah Thlucco, of Immookfau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Espokokoke Haujo, of Wewoko, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Eneah Thlucco Hopoiee, of Talesee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Efau Haujo, of Puccan Tallahassee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Talessee Fixico, of Ocheobofau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Nomatlee Emautla, or Captain Issacs, of Cousoudee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Tuskegee Emautla, or John Carr, of Tuskegee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Alexander Grayson, of Hillabee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Lowee, of Ocmulgee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•Nocoosee Emautla, of Chuskee Tallafau, his x mark, [L. S.]
•William McIntosh, for Hopoiee Haujo, of Ooseoochee, his x mark, [L. S.]
•William McIntosh, for Chehahaw Tustunnuggee, of Chehahaw, his x mark, [L. S.]
•William McIntosh, for Spokokee Tustunnuggee, of Otellewhoyonnee, his x mark, [L. S.]

Done at fort Jackson, in presence of--
•Charles Cassedy, acting secretary,
•Benjamin Hawkins, agent for Indian affairs,
•Return J. Meigs, Agent of Creek nation,
•Robert Butler, Adjutant General U. S. Army,
•J. C. Warren, assistant agent for Indian Affairs,
•George Mayfield, Alexander Curnels, George Lovett, Public interpreters.[20][21]



August 9, 1823: Andrew Jackson returned home from Alabama. [22]



August 9, 1824: The Washington National Journal, devoted to the interest of John Quincy Adams, commenced publication, replacing the Washington Republican. [23]

August 9, 1862: Gregg, Eligah W. Age 30. Residence Springville, nativity Ohio. Enlisted August 9, 1862. Mustered September 3, 1862. Promoted Seventh Corporal June 20, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga. http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logn/mil508.htm

Tues. August 9, 1864:

At hospital troops passing towards

Shanedoa valley[24]



.August 9, 1897: Cordella Burch (b. December 28, 1896 in AL / d. August 9, 1897 in AL).[25]


August 9, 1899: THIS IS MY LINE FROM JAMES AND ANN CRAWFORD CONNELL

1) James Connell , b 1742, d before 1782 during the revolution, m 1767 in what is now Fayette County, Pennsylvania, Ann Crawford, b 1752 in Virginia, dau of William Crawford and Hannah Vance, d 1783 near what is now Connellsville, PA

2) John Connell b May 22, 1768 in what is now Fayette County, PA. d March 28, 1831, Wellsburg, VA (now WV) m 2nd March 4, 1802 Brooke co. VA (now WV) Eleanor Swearingen b Jan 28, 1786 in Penn. Dau of John and Eleanor Dawson Swearingen d July 3, 1848, Wellsburg, VA (now WV)

3) James S Connell, b April 8, 18096 Charleston VA (now Wellsburg WV) d September 24, 18690 Charleston WV m October 22, 1826, Wellsburg, VA (now WV) Eliza Mendle, b March 29, 1811, Brooke County VA (now WV) dau of Henry and Sarah Reeves Mendle d March 29, 1899 Portsmouth, Ohio

4) Julia Amelia Connell, b November 12, 1828, Wellsburg, VA (now WV) d August 3, 1909 Cincinnati, Ohio William Quincy Adams, b July 20, 1827, Wellsburg VA (now WV) d November 12, 1892, Portsmouth, Ohio

5) Samuel Preston Adams, b March 18, 1869, Delhi, Hamilton County, Ohio. m December 17, 1891, Portsmouth, Ohio Bessie Cecelia Varner b October 4, 1867, Portsmouth, Ohio dau. Of Sampson E and Maria Huston Varner.

6) The above are my parents. I was born in Portsmouth, Ohio August 9 1899. These records are taken from Court House, Bible, Cemetery and old family records. [26]

August 9, 1914-1916: Children of Gamalial Rowell and Ruby Beasley:
. i. James Lindsey Rowell (b. August 9, 1914 in AL / d. January 1, 1980 in AL)
. ii. Luster Rowell (b. August 9, 1916 in AL / d. abt. 1934 in AL)[27]

August 9, 1915: James Woodruff, the DPI’s inspector of consolidate schools and leading spokesperson on consolidation, was brought in just tow days before the election in a last minute attempt to salvage the proposition to consolidate the schools in Hopkinton. He gave what Mrs. Reeve referred to as a “very forceful argument in favor of consolidation,” but it was a case of too little too late.[28]



July 13-August 9, 1941: A total of 9,012 Jews from Dvinsk are killed.[29]



August 9, 1941: Edward Franklin Nix15 [Thomas Nix14, Marion F. Nix13, John A. Nix12, Grace Louisa Francis Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. November 14, 1921 in Bangor, Blount Co., AL / d. May 19, 1993 in Muscle Shoals, Colbert Co., AL) married Nellie Ruth Hunt (b. June 21, 1924 in Cullman Co. AL / d. September 1, 1989 in Colbert Co. AL), the daughter of Harvey Hunt and Violet Coffman, on August 9, 1941 in Blount Co. AL. [30]





August 9, 1941: According to reports at the time the Nazis killed 510 Jews Brest-Litovsk and 296 Jews killed in Bialystok.[31]



August 9, 1942: Teresa Benedicta of the Cross died in Auschwitz. Born Edith Stein, Sister Teresa and her sister converted long before World War II. However, the Catholic Church allowed the Nazis to seize her and thousand of other Jews who had converted to Catholicism and ship them off to the death chambers. According to Canon Law, Sister Teresa was a Catholic. But apparently she was not a real Catholic since the Church let her go up in smoke facing the fate of a Jewess named Stein. [32]



August 9, 1942: In the first mass deportation to the gas chambers 10,000 Jews were sent from the Borislave ghetto to the Belsen death camp. [33]



August 9, 1942: 200 Jews escape into the forests of Mir. During that week, 6,000 would die in Naliboki, Lubcz and Karelicze. Another 1,500 would be taken from the Krzemieniec. [34]



August 9, 1942: During the liquidation of the Mir ghetto, Jews offer armed resitance. Over the nest three days, some 10,000 Jews from Bedzin, Sosnowiec, and Dabrowa are selected and deported.[35]



August 9, 1945

A second nuclear bomb hit Nagasaki. It destroys the city. The Japanese still refuse to surrender. A third atomic strike is considered. Two thousand planes take to the sky targeting Tokyo.



“I realize the tragic significance the atomic bomb. Its production and its use were not lightly taken by this government, but we knew that our enemies were on the search for it. We know now how close they were to finding it. We won the race of discovery against the Germans. Having found the bomb we have used it.”



Harry Truman.[36]



Two major Japanese cities had been anialated by American atomic bombs but even now the Japanese empire resisted defeat searching for any way to stave off the inevitable. According to one report they made one last ditch effort. They conducted a nuclear test.[37]





August 9, 1972: Eva Bell Burch (b. September 12, 1906 / d. August 9, 1972 in OR).[38]





August 9, 1988:The first night baseball game at Wrigley field in Chicago is played, and called after four innings because of rain. The next night, August 9, 1988 the first complete game is played and the Goodlove’s are there.[39]



August 9 2008:

http://www.thelittlelist.net/shrumindianmoundplqoh.jpg

The Adena Culture/Shrum Indian Mound. McKinley Avenue—about a half-mile southeast of the intersection with Trabue Road in Columbus, OH. Photos by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged marker and enlarged plaque.

Marker "The Adena Culture. Native Americans of the Adena culture were some of Ohio's first known settlers. They lived in the upper and middle Ohio Valley during the late Archaic and Early Woodland periods, roughly 1000 B.C.-100 A.D. The Adena people were hunters, gatherers, traders, and farmers. They carved effigy figures, made ceramic pots, built extensive houses, and developed significant burial mounds. These mounds were made of earth, stone, remains of deceased members, and token objects, and were built on uplands near major waterways such as the mound here near the Scioto River. The Ohio Historical Society."

Plaque "Shrum Indian Mound. One of the last remaining earthen mounds in this area of Ohio. Built by Native American people of the Adena Culture (800 BC-100 AD). The Land was deeded to the Ohio Historical Society in 1928 by the Shrum family. Dedicated August 9, 2008 by the Ohio Society National Society Colonial Dames XVII century.".





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[1] [1] The world Before and After Jesus, Desire of the Everlasting Hills by Thomas Cahill, page 337.


[2] [2] This Day in Jewish History


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


[4] The Historical Jesus for Dummies, by Catherine M. Murphy, Phd.


[5] This Day in Jewish History


[6] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 24.


[7] www.wikipedia.org


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


[9] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/germany.htm


[10] mike@abcomputers.com


[11] http://www.thelittlelist.net/bactoblu.htm


[12] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/u/d/Penny-J-Gudgeon/ODT6-0001.html


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


[14] James Tilghman, an officer of the Provincial Council, that there was an agreement entered into by a number of inhabitants of Monongahela and Redstone, who have entered into a bond to keep off the officers of the law, under penalty of ₤50 to be forfeited to the party refusing to join; that this movement was set on foot by a set of people who had made a breach of the law by driving out men from their homes, for which there was a King’s warrant issued against them; together with a notion propagated by Colonel Croghan that the posts would not fall within Pennsylvania. He referred to Croghan’s change of the line, with many surveys cutting into the tract, which would be attended with very bad consequence, if a stop were not put to the proceedings. Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, Volume II. pg. 46.


[15] This letter has been published. See Penn. Arch. IV., pp. 424, 425. It is inserted in this connection (although it does not belong to the Washington-Crawford correspondence), as being germane to the ­general subject about which Crawford and Washington were corresponding.


[16] The Washington Crawford Letters, By C.W. Butterfield, 1877


[17] Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777, p. 100 (1924)


[18] " You will take every possible care in your power, as well in your

march as during your stay at that place [Maidenhead], to restrain every

species of licentiousness in the soldiery, and to prevent them doing the

least injury to the inhabitants or their property, as nothing can be more

disserviseable to our cause, or more unworthy of the characters we pro-

fess to say nothing of the injustice of the measure." Washington to

Colonel Morgan, August 9, 1777.




[19] Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.

•[20] Statutes at Large, Volume VII, page 120.
•Indian Land Cessions in the United States 1784-1894
•"Fort Jackson Treaty", Archive of Native American Agreements and Treaties, First People


[21] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Fort_Jackson


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


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


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


[25] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[26] http://www.brookecountywvgenealogy.org/CONNELL.html


[27] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[28] There Goes the Neighborhoo, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 163.


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


[30] Proposed Descendant of William Smythe.


[31] This Day in Jewish History


[32] This Day in Jewish History


[33] This Day in Jewish History


[34] This Day in Jewish History


[35] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1773


[36] Mission for Mussolini, Military Channel, 6/19/2009


[37] Japan’s Atomic Bomb, HISTI, 8/16/2005


[38] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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

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