This Day in Goodlove History, November 18
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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
November 18, 215: Clement, a bishop of Alexandria (d. ca. 215 CE), thought Jesus was born on November 18.[1]
November 18th: 794 - Japanese emperor Kammu deallocates residence of Nara to Kioto[2]
795 - Vikings raid the monastery on Iona in Scotland.[3]
796 - Offa's dyke is completed. The death of Offa marks the end of Mercian supremacy in England. His son Ecgfrith reigns for less than 6 months. [4]
796: In 796 a synod of Western bishops had met at Frejus in Southern France and had inserted an extra clause into the Nicene Creed. This stated that the Holy Spirit proceeded not only from the Father but also from the Son (filioque). [5]
796” Ya'qub Ibn Tariq
Probably of Persian origin, flourished in Baghdad, c.767-778 died c. 796. One of the greatest astronomers of his time. He probably met, c. 767, at the court of al-Mansur, the Hindu Kankah (or Mankah?), who had brought there the Siddhanta. He wrote memoirs on the sphere (c. 777), on the division of the kardaja; on the tables derived from the Siddhanta. H. Suter: Die Mathematiker und Astronomer der Araber (p. 4, 1900)[6]
796:
Death of Hisham in Spain; accession of al Hakam.[7]
799:
Suppression of the revolt of the Khazars. Ninth century. [8]
100-800 A.D.
[9]
Ceramic Vessal of a man with a goatee and ear ornaments.
Moche (AD 100-800) Ancash Region, Peru.
[10]
[11]
800 CE: The earliest evidence for permanent camps is consistent with the Hopewellian occupation of the Ohio valley. Five groups of mounds have been documented in the dunes area. These mounds would be consistent with the period of 200 BCE (Goodall Focus) to 800 CE (early Mississippian).[1] The advent of European exploration and trade introduced more changes to the human environment. Tribal animosities and traditional European competition affected tribal relations. Entire populations began moving westward, while others sought to dominate large geographic trading areas. Once again the dunes became a middle point on a journey from the east or the west. It continued to remain a key hunting ground for villages over a wide area.[12]
800 A.D.: A Chinese alchemist in search of an elixir for long life combines carbon, sulfer, and
salt peter and instead discovers gunpowder.[13]
800 c. JEWS MOVE INTO THE RHINE AREA, RETURNING TO NORTHERN EUROPE: About the turn of the ninth century we start to see Jews reappearing in Northern Europe. There had been Jews there under the Roman Empire but with the defeat of the Empire they disappear from view and only now do we start to find Jews in the area again. The focal points of the new activity were the trading towns along the Rhine river. In this area trade and economic life was developing fast, especially because of the initiative of Charlemagne, King of the Franks, who tried hard to develop his kingdom economically. There were clearly opportunities for enterprising traders and the Jews were among the first to seize the opportunities. There are even traditions that tell of Charlemagne making overtures to the Jews of Southern Europe to attract them to his new areas.[14]
800 A.D., Volcano, Dakataua
Bismarck Volcanic Arc
VEI=6
800 AD[15]
800 A.D.: By 800 A.D. With limited technology the Mayans built great temples and mastered the mapping of the stars and by 800 the population had grown to one million people in 6,000 cities. They were known for their advanced writing system and their meticulous record keeping. [16]
800:
The Aghlabid rule is established in North Africa.[17]
AD 800 - “Epistle of Jesus” arrives in Ireland - warns against desecration of Sunday
The "Epistle of Jesus" is a letter that Roman church authorities claim was written from Jesus and delivered to them from heaven in support of their effort to abolish Sabbitarianism.
The Letter itself claims to have been written by Jesus. Catholics expressed that it appeared on the altar of St. Peter in Rome; and that the priest, who was saying Mass, discovered it there and was obviously quite scared by it.
A letter from heaven! Think about it! Who wouldn't’t want one of those to support their opinions? That would be a pretty convincing weapon of persuasion, especially to the uneducated and superstitious people of medieval times.
"Whatsoever plague and trouble has come into the world, it is through the transgression of Sunday that it has come.” “There are, moreover, in certain eastern parts beasts which were sent to men; and it is to avenge the transgression of Sunday they have been sent.”35 locusts are simply waiting to avenge the transgression of Sunday. There’ll be massive rainstorms with thunder and lightning, hailstones. There’ll be flying serpents in the sky. (The “Epistle of Jesus”)"
This “letter from Jesus” shows how determined medieval Roman Church leaders were to replace the biblical Sabbath with Sunday. Similar schemes involving messages from heaven were used in other places, in other centuries.[21] [18]
800 - Around this time the Book of Kells is written in Ireland.[19]
November 18, 1703: George Smythe (b. 1672 / d. November 18, 1703)[20]
November 18, 1718:Andrew Harrison had patents on Golden Vale Creek, St. Mary's Parish, Essex Co. VA as early as 1684. He supposedly was the brother of Judge James Harrison of Old Rappahannock Co. In 1704 he was granted land southwest of Golden Vale on the Mattaponi River in King and Queen Co. VA. He died testate in 1718 and named four children in his will.
Will April 1718, St.Mary's Parish, Essex Co. VA.
My beloved wife Eleanor my executrix.
My son Andrew and my son in law Gabriel Long as trustees. Children; William, Andrew and Elizabeth already settled on lands on which they now live;
My dau Margaret Long and three youngest sons viz. Richard and Gabril and William.
Wit: Jno. Ellitts, Wiliam Davison, Mary Davison, November 18, 1718.
The Will OF ANDREW HARRISON of St Mary ‘a Parish, Essex County,
Virginia, was dated April 28, 1718; proved in Essex’ County Court,
November 18, 1718, December 16, 1718 and March 17, 1718 (1718-19).
“Being grown very aged. & at this time, sick & weak in body, but in perfect sense and memory—” After the usual expressions of Christian faith in the atonement and resurrection, and the committal of his body to the ground at the discretion of his executors, provision? for the payment of. debts and funeral charges, he disposed of his estate as follows: Wife, Eleanor Harrison is named as executrix; son Andrew Harrison, and son-in-law. Gabriel Long are named as trustees and overseers to assist her in carrying out the provisions of the will; he ratifies former gifts of land to three of his children, viz, son William Harrison, 270. acres; son Andrew Harrison. 200 acres, and daughter Elizabetli, 200 acres, “all of which lands, they are now possessed, and which I now give to them & theirs forever.’? * lie refers to having put into the hands Of William Stanard, bills of exchange for Sixty five pounds, twelve shillings and Six pence, sterling, with which said Stanard is to buy two negroes for said Harrison; the use of these two negroes,. or that money, to testator’s wife~ during life or widowhood, and after her decease, the negroes or the money to daughter Margaret Long ‘a three youngest sons, viz: Richard; Gabriel, and: William (Long), to be given and equally divided between them and their heirs as soon as they are 21 years old. * If wife dies before either of the three mentioned Long children come of age, then testator’s son in law, Gabriel Long, to have use thereof, until that ~specified time, and for the use’’. thereof, he is to give the said three Long children ‘schooling, that is to teach them to read & write & cast aecount4’~ daughter
Margaret Long, after the death of testator’s wife, a servant boy named
Richard Bradley, “till he comes of age of one & twenty years”; also to
Margaret, at the time specified, a “featherbed, bolster, pillow, rug and blankets”; son William, after decease of testator’s wife, a “ feather bed, bedstead, and all furniture belonging thereto, my own chest and all my wearing apparel and the cloth which I have to make ~my clothing, and my riding saddle”; “to my son William” after the decease of the testator ‘s wife, an “oval table”, a “large iron pot”; to son Andrew, after the decease of testator’s wife, “a feather bed, bolster, pillows, and furniture belonging thereto; a large iron pot;” residue of estate, personal & movable, after wife’s death, to be equally divided among testator ‘s four children, Viz: “William, Andrew, Elizabeth, and Margaret “.
- His
Witnesses: (Signed) Andrew A. II. Harrison
Mark
John Ellitt
William-X-Davison
Mary-X~Davison[21]
Sunday November 18, 1753” .—And at night got to my house in the new settlement, about twenty-one miles;snow about ancle deep.[22]
The American Pageant, Bailey, Kennedy, Cohen.
November 18, 1762: Page 109: "Samuel, son of Andrew and Jane, apparently came to Frederick Co., Va. with his father as he is reported in Frederick Co. by 1743. Samuel Vance took part in the French and Indian Wars. The Journals of the House of Burgesses of Virginia, Vol. 10, p. 98, 1761-1765, states: "Thrusday, the 18th of November (November 18) 1762-- Also an account of Samuel Vance, for Powder and Ball purchased by him of Alexander Sayers, for the use of the mILITIA UNDER HIS COMMAND AT FORT LIGONIES, IN 1758."[23]
November 18, 1770. At this place all day waiting for Horses which did not arrive.
November 18th, 1770: —Agreed with two Delaware Indians to take up our canoe to Fort Pitt, for the doing of which I was to pay six dollars, and give them a quart tin can. [24]
November 18, 1777: We were debarked in the Jerseys at Billingsport, which a short time previously had been taken from the Americans and wherein six thousand rebels would have had their winter quarters because it was large and had many barracks. Here, in severe cold, we had to camp in tents. [25][26]
November 18, 1778:
18th The Army march.d about twelve OClock and Arriv.d at
the banks of Tuskarawas by two hours of up Sun. as soon as Our
Stock and Baggage had passed the River24[27] the Army was formd in
their usual Order of marching and continued passing through an
Extensive plain into a Scattering wood where Ordred to halt for
the Reception of the Indians &c who were fully apprised of Our
Coming and held themselves in Readiness to receive us in great
taste, they Formed themselves with great regularity. And when
Our front Advanced near theirs they began the Salute with Three
Indian Cheirs. from thence A Regular fire which was Returned By
A hasty Running Fire round Our whole lines which being done
we Encamped round our Brethren and Included the place where
Col° Boqueat had Formerly erected a Block house 25[28][29]
November 18, 1778:
Head Quarters Camp N 11th Novr 18 th 1778
Field Officers of the Day Col° Evins and Major Springer
The General is informd that some Enemy Indians have Been seen
near Our Camp, therefore Cautions All Officers
Be Verey Carefull that none of their men Stragle or Go Out side
of their lines by Night or Day unless they are Ordred upon some
Duty and Call there Roles Often as the Repeted [orders] issued
Against firing Guns wantonly is Shamefuly Neglected . Any Soldier
who Detacks [detects] Another Shooting A Gun hereafter without
leave Shall upon Conviction of the Offender Intitled to One months
pay Extraordanry And Any who Shall not Detackt or inform A
276 EDWARD G. WILLIAMS SEPTEMBER
Gainst any Such Ofender Or Ofenders shall be Confin.d as Guilty
of the Crime himself And forefit One Months pay And Such other
punishment as A Court Martial may Inflict Or if any
Officer Commanding a party next where A shot is heard Does not
Immeiadly rush unto the place AGreeable to the Order of the 9th
Is* To see if it is an Enemy he Shall be put under an Areast for
Breach Of Orders. This the Field officers of The Day are
to see inforced in there Respective Departments. And also that
The Centinels have No fires At Night, all Officers and Soldiers
Are desired to Colect and save all the Deers Tails they Can Get
and wear them in their hats which may Induce our friend Indians
to do the same &Distinguish Ourselves and them from Our Enemies.
A return of Powder Horns wanted in each Regiment to be made
out this morning[30]
November 18, 1781
The faithful services of the unfortunate Delaware captain just mentioned, had long been appreciated at Fort Pitt, as shown by the following certificate:
“FORT PITT, November 18, 1781.
“I certify that,in consequence of the faithful service of Captain Wilson (an Indian), as well as to encourage him to be active in future expeditions and detachments, I did, last spring, make him a present of a small black horse, belonging to the. United States.
“DANIEL BRODHEAD, Col. 1st P. Reg.”[31]
November 18, 1822: Henry Clay nominated for president by caucus of Kentucky legislature. [32]
November 1833 – The Cherokee who had enrolled for emigration, including most of the Treaty Party, met at the Cherokee Agency at Calhoun, Tennessee, where they elected William Hicks as principal chief of their faction and John McIntosh as his assistant. They send a delegation to Washington City to represent their interests which includes Andrew Ross.[33]
In 1834 Gottlober married again. While residing in Kremenets, he came to know the Haskalah thinker Yitsḥak Ber Levinzon.[34]
November 1834: The Leader of the House of Commons and Chancellor of the Exchequer, John Charles Spencer, Viscount Althorp, inherited a peerage, thus removing him from the House of Commons to the Lords. Melbourne had to appoint a new Commons leader and a new Chancellor (who by long custom, must be drawn from the Commons), but the only candidate that Melbourne felt suitable to replace Althorp as Commons leader was Lord John Russell, whom William (and many others) found unacceptable due to his Radical politics. William claimed that the ministry had been weakened beyond repair and used the removal of Lord Althorp—who had previously indicated that he would retire from politics upon becoming a peer[97]—as the pretext for the dismissal of the entire ministry. With Lord Melbourne gone, William chose to entrust power to a Tory, Sir Robert Peel. Since Peel was then in Italy, the Duke of Wellington was provisionally appointed Prime Minister.[98] When Peel returned and assumed leadership of the ministry for himself, he saw the impossibility of governing because of the Whig majority in the House of Commons. Consequently, Parliament was dissolved to force fresh elections. Although the Tories won more seats than in the previous election, they were still in the minority. Peel remained in office for a few months, but resigned after a series of parliamentary defeats. Lord Melbourne was restored to the Prime Minister's office, remaining there for the rest of William's reign, and the King was forced to accept Russell as Commons leader.[99][35]
* November 1836: The Prophet died in November 1836. While the Prophet once was the catalyst for one of the greatest Indian alliances in history, he died a virtually forgotten figure. [36]
1837: Ancestor and former President Andrew Jackson remained influential in both national and state politics after retiring to The Hermitage in 1837. Though a slave-holder, Jackson was a firm advocate of the federal union of the states, and declined to give any support to talk of secession.[37]
1837: While still quite young, Gottlober gained prominence as a central figure in early circles promoting the Haskalah in the Russian Empire. He associated with a network of maskilim through his many travels. But because of Gottlober’s difficult and contentious personality, his relationships with many of his colleagues, such as Perets Smolenskin and Re’uven Asher Braudes, were difficult and complicated. Gottlober fought for his opinions and positions and had no compunctions about using harsh words in debates with his rivals.
Gottlober expressed his views as a maskil in a wide variety of literary genres, in both Hebrew and Yiddish, the most prominent being poetry. His poems were published in the collections Pirḥe ha-aviv (1837)[38]
1837
1008111256[39]
November 1844: The anonymously published popular science book Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, written by Scottish journalist Robert Chambers, widened public interest in the concept of transmutation of species. Vestiges used evidence from the fossil record and embryology to support the claim that living things had progressed from the simple to the more complex over time. But it proposed a linear progression rather than the branching common descent theory behind Darwin's work in progress, and it ignored adaptation. Darwin read it soon after publication, and scorned its amateurish geology and zoology,[34] but he carefully reviewed his own arguments after leading scientists, including Adam Sedgwick, attacked its morality and scientific errors.[35] Vestiges had significant influence on public opinion, and the intense debate helped to pave the way for the acceptance of the more scientifically sophisticated Origin by moving evolutionary speculation into the mainstream. While few naturalists were willing to consider transmutation, Herbert Spencer became an active proponent of Lamarckism and progressive development in the 1850s.[36][40]
November 1855: Violence marked the tenure of Sheriff Jones in Douglas County, beginning in November 1855. A free-state man by the name of Charles W. Dow was murdered ten miles south of Lawrence by Franklin N. Coleman, a proslavery man. Immediately after the murder, a friend of Dow's, Jacob Branson, was arrested for attending a free-state protest meeting. He was quickly freed by free-state partisans, but the arrest so alarmed the free-state community that it began to organize a militia and fortify the town of Lawrence. The "Wakarusa War" ensued whereby proslavery militia supporting Sheriff Jones and the governor besieged the city for about a week. On December 8 and 9, James H. Lane and Charles Robinson brokered a truce with Governor Wilson Shannon. Thereafter both sides disbanded, and the war came to an official end. [41]
November 1857: Smythe succeeded to his father's peerage in 1855 and died in November 1857 at the relatively young age of 39. His title passed to his younger brother, Percy Smythe, 8th Viscount Strangford.[42]
November 18, 1862
sta[t]e of Northcarolina Randolph Co
"Dear sir [Governor Zebulon B. Vance] this is a greate undertaking for me as i never wrote to a man of authority before necesity requires it of me as we are nonslave holders in this section of the State i hope you and our legislature will look to it and have justice done our people as well as the slaveholders i can tel you the condition of my family and you can judg for your self what its condition woul be if my husban is called from home we hav eight children and the oldest is not forteen years old and an old aged mother to support, which makes eleven in our family and without my husband we are a desolate and ruined family for extortion runs so hie here we cannot support and clothe our family without the help of my husband i hope you will look to the justice of the peepils of this section of the state and i trust you will hold the rane in your own hands and not let the confederate congress have the full sway over your State i appeal to you to look to the white cultivators as strictly as congress has to the slaveholders and i think they men from 35 to 45 be hel as reserves at hom to support their families if the are calld from home it is bound to leave a thoasn families in a starving condition in our county we trust in god and look to you for some help for our poor children . . ." -- [Martha Coletrane] [43]
After November 1863: Berkeley County became a part of the new state of West Virginia that supported the North. In 1872 the Pennsylvania Railroad came to the area, and it, along with the B&O Railroad, gave the area an excellent transportation base. In early times, a major source of the area's income came from selling flour produced by the area's water-powered mills to the Alexandria and Baltimore markets. Electricity, replacing water power, soon followed and the area became a large textile milling center. Martinsburg continues to be the focus of the business area of Berkeley County. Many of Martinsburg's historic and architecturally important buildings were included in seven historic districts placed on the NationalRegister of Historic Places in December 1980. [44]
November 1864: many of the guerrillas who did not go to Kentucky returned to their winter quarters near Sherman, Texas. Among them was Jesse James who had decided against following his older brother to Kentucky with Quantrill. Sim Whitsett was also with those who went back to Texas. William E. Whitsett, brother of Hade Whitsett, many years later in a letter to Hade stated that he met Sim Whitsitt when General Shelby discharged his men after the defeat in Missouri and many of the guerrillas were getting ready to return to Missouri. Even though William Whitsett was writing to his younger brother Hade (many years after the fact), it is likely that it was Hade who introduced Sim to his older brother, since Hade and Sim apparently met the first time the winter before. [45]
November 1864: Citizens requested CSA Secretary of War Seddon to remove at least half of those held at the (Salisbury) Prison due to the shortage of space, food, and water. North Carolina Governor Zebulon B. Vance and the State of North Carolina after several attempts successfully got some clothing for the prisoners from the Union Government.
X4171B
http://ncmuseumofhistory.org/MOH/vfpcgi.exe?IDCFile=/moh/DETAILS.IDC,SPECIFIC=107,DATABASE=40381957
Zebulon Vance is the compilers 3rd cousin, 6 times removed.
Fri. November 18, 1864
Cut some logs for a tent then rained all
Day and night[46]. D Winans[47] killed a wild
Turkey to day[48]
November 18, 1864: John Q. Wilds. Age 37. Residence Mt. Vernon, nativity Pennsylvania. Appointed Colonel August 10, 1862. Mustered September 17, 1862. Promoted Colonel June 8, 1864; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel United States Volunteers. Wounded severely October 19, 1864, Cedar Creek, Va. Died of wounds November 18, 1864, Hospital, Winchester, Va.
Late November 1871:At the height of the republican movement, the Prince of Wales contracted typhoid fever, the disease that was believed to have killed his father, and Victoria was fearful her son would die.[133] As the tenth anniversary of her husband's death approached, her son's condition grew no better, and Victoria's distress continued.[134] To general rejoicing, he pulled through.[135] Mother and son attended a public parade through London and a grand service of thanksgiving in St Paul's Cathedral on February 27, 1872, and republican feeling subsided.[136]
November 18, 1933: Rolf Gottlieb, born November 18,1933 in Frankfurt a. M.
Oberklingen, (place of residence). Resided Frankfurt a. M..Deportation: from Darmstadt March 25, 1942, to Piaski.[49]
November 18, 1942: The Germans order 8,000 Przemysl Jews to gather for deportation, but only 3,500 do so’ 500 more are found hiding. All told, 4,000 Jews are deported to Belzec.[50]
November 18, 1942-January 12, 1943: Some 15,000 Jews are killed in the Lvov ghetto, which becomes a Julag (Judenlager, or camp for Jews) in January 1942.[51]
November 18, 2004: A search by the Historical Society of Berks County of the index to the extant tax records of Berks County for this era found no reference to Franz Gottlob: correspondence, November 18, 2004. j.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net
November 18, 2009: The U.S. and the world entered a major recession with untold home foreclosures and bank closures. As of November 18, 2009 the national debt had reached $12 trillion. [52]
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[1] http://www.simpletoremember.com/vitals/Christmas_TheRealStory.htm
[2] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/794
[3] http://www.britroyals.com/timeline.asp
[4] http://www.britroyals.com/timeline.asp
[5] The History of God by Karen Armstrong, page 200.
[6] http://www.levity.com/alchemy/islam12.html
[7] http://barkati.net/english/chronology.htm
[8] http://barkati.net/english/chronology.htm
[9] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 12/27/2009
[10] The Art Institute of Chicago, 11/1/2011
[11] The Art Institute of Chicago, 11/1/2011
[12] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
[13] History of the World in Two Hours, H2, October 3, 2011.
[14] Mark Andre Goodfriend email 2/10/2007, http://www.jafi.org.il/education/history/body1.html
[15] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timetable_of_major_worldwide_volcanic_eruptions
[16] Countdown to the Apocalypse, H2, 11/09/2012
[17] http://barkati.net/english/chronology.htm
[18] Ibid, p. 193. ERIU - The Journal of the School of Irish Learning, vol. II, edited by Kuno Meyer and John Strachan, (Dublin: School of Irish Learning, 1905), p. 201.
http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/
[19] http://www.britroyals.com/timeline.asp
[20] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe
[21] Essex County Records, Will Book 3, page 84, 1717-1722. Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pgs. 312-313
[22] Christopher Gist’s Journal: In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 68.
[23] From W. L. Crawford, Ancestors and Friends, p. 108: "Samuel Vance, the son of Andrew Vance and Jane Vance, was born ca. 1710 in Donegal Co., Ireland. He married Sarah Colville also of Ireland. Samuel Vance died in 1778 and he and Sarah are buried in Sinking Spring Cemetery, Abingdon, Washinton Co., VA. The epitaph on the back of their tombstone still legible in 1954 summarizes their life. "To the memory of Samuel Vance with Sarah Colville Vance his wife both from Ireland early in life. We have travelled far and wide to come into this ground. But in this place we will abide until the trumps last sound." We are unable to establish the parents of Sarah Colville..."
[24] George Washingtons Diaries, An Abridgment, Dorothy Twohig, Editor, 1999: also EARLY HISTORY OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA Western Pennsylvania Pensioners for Revolutionary Services Rejected and Suspended Pension Applications of Western Pennsylvania Residents especially edited for inclusion in this reprint by William L. Iscrupe Shirley G.M. Iscrupe SOUTHWEST PENNSYLVANIA GENEALOGICAL SERVICES Laughlintown, PennsylvaniaWASHINGTON’S JOURNAL, 1770.
[25] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html
[26] The Battle for Fort Mercer: The Americans Abandon the Fort and the Crown’s Forces March In
Text below extracted from A Hessian Diary of the American Revolution, Döhla, 1990:56, 59-61.
[27] 24 This was the historic crossing place where the Great Trail branched, or where
three very important trails converged. (See note 18, above.) The crossing
place was the point upon which the Greenville Treaty Line (1795) hinged.
Itis clearly shown on the U. S. Topographical Map, Dover Quadrangle; also
C. E. Sherman, Ohio Land Subdivision, Columbus, 0., Ill(1925), 95; Hanna,
Wilderness Trail, II,202-205.
[28] 25 This is concrete evidence that Fort Laurens covered the exact site of Bouquet's
fort, where he left Captain Schlosser with 50 men to guard his communications
lines and storehouses of provisions for his homeward march. Smith,
An Historical Account, London edition (1766), 13; Parkman edition (1868),
51-52; Bouquet's Orderly Book, 1764, WPHM, XLII, 191, 199, note 49.
Inhis official report to Vice-President George Bryan, of Pennsylvania, Nov.
29, 1778, General Mclntosh said: "...Ierected a good strong Fort for the
Reception &Security of Prisoners &stores, upon the Indian side of Ohio below
Beaver Creek, with Barracks for a Regiment; and another upon the Muski.ngam River, where Colo. Bocquette had one formerly near Tuscarawas ." Penna. Archives, VII, 133ff. The Tory trader, Nicholas Cresswell,
visited the place in 1775 with his Indian concubine. Journal of Nicholas
Cresswell, New York (1928), 113. He described it as "now demolished."
[29] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal
[30] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal
[31] Washington-Irvine Correspondence
[32] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824
[33] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.
[34] http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Gottlober_Avraham_Ber
[35] Wikipedia
[36] http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=312
[37] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson
[38] http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Gottlober_Avraham_Ber
[39]Techitichoo Forest Preserve, Elgin, IL
[40] Wikipedia
[41] http://www.genuinekansas.com/history_samuel_j_jones_sheriff_kansas.htm
[42] Wikipedia
[43] http://thomaslegion.net/zebulon_baird_vance.html
[44] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/b/r/o/Tawna-L-Brown-TX/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0001.html
[45] http://whitsett-wall.com/Whitsett/whitsett_simeon.htm
[46] The men quickly constructed comfortable log huts in their new winter camp. (A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry 1862-1865 by Harvey H. Kimble Jr. August 1974. page 189)
[47] David C., born Nov. 30, 1843, married Mary M. Hossler. Brown Township, Page 735 (Dont know the name of this Book, page found at Mary and Gary Goodlove archives.) I wonder if it is the History of Linn county.
[48] The regiment was, sadly disappointed in their Thanksgiving feast because they had seen stories in the New York and Baltimore papers of the great turkey and chicken dinners that swould be given to the soldiers in the Valley and on the James. Rigby described the ration for the eight in his mess as “a small chicken with blood shot extereior, and the grist mill of a turkey.” (A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry 1862-1865 by Harvey H. Kimble Jr. August 1974. page 189)
[49] [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
[50] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774
[51]Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774
[52] . Jerusalem Prayer team email 3/30/2010
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