Tuesday, November 19, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, November 19

This Day in Goodlove History, November 19

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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 19, 1761: The military records show that John Dodson was inducted into by Lt. James Brice. This process took place February 5, 1778 in Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, Maryland. [1] Lt. James Brice was the son of Captain John Brice. St. John's parich register shows that on November 19, 1761 Sarah Bryce, the second daughter of Captain John Bryce of Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, Maryland was married to Richard Henderson. [2]This wedding took place while the McKinnon family was associated with St. John's parish. Thus it is likely that Eleanor knew the Brice Family and they could have acted to bring John Dodson and Eleanor (Howard) McKinnon together. [3]



November 19, 1770:. At the same place, & in the same Situation as yesterday.



November 19th, 1770: .—The Delawares set off with the canoe, and our horses not arriving, the day appeared exceedingly long and tedious. Upon conversing with Nicholson, I found he had been two or three times to Fort Chartres, on the Illinois, and I got from him an account of the lands between this place and that, and upon the Shawanese river, on which he had been hunting. [4]



November 19, 1776: at Hackensac [New Jersey]:



I began this Letter at the White plains as you will see bythe first part of it; but by the time I had got thus far the Enemy advance a Second time (for they had done it once before, & after engaging some Troops which I had posted on a Hill, and driving them from it with the loss of abt. 300 killed & wounded to them, & little more than half the number to us) as if they meant a genel. Attack but finding us ready to receive them, & upon such ground as they could not approach without loss, they filed of & retreated towards New York.

As it was conceived that this Manoeuvre was done with a design to attack Fort Washington (near Harlem heights)[5] or to throw a body of Troops into the Jersey’s, or what might be still worse, aim a stroke at Philadelphia, I hastend over on this side [New Jersey] with abt. 5000 Men by a round about March (wch. we were obliged to take on Acct. of the shipping opposing the passage at all the lower Ferries) of near 65 Miles, but did not get hear time enough to take Measures to save Fort Washington tho I got here myself a day or two before it surrendered, which happened on the 16th. Instt. after making a defence of about 4 or 5 hours only.

This is a most unfortunate affair, and has given me great Mortification as we have lost not only two thousand Men that were there, but a good deal of Artillery, & some of the best Arms we had. And what adds to my Mortification is that this Post, after the last Ships went past it, was held contrary to my Wishes & opinion; as I conceived it to be a dangerous one: but being determind on by a full Council of General Officers, and recieving a resolution of Congress strongly expressive of their desires, that the Channel of the River (which we had been labouring to stop for a long while at this place) might be obstructed, if possible, & knowing that this could not be done unless there were Batteries to protect the Obstruction I did not care to give an absolute Order for withdrawing the Garrison till I could get round & see the Situation of things & then it became too late as the Fort was Invested.[6]

November 19, 1777: EBENEZER ZANE, b. October 7, 1747, Berkeley County, VA/WV, d. November 19, 1812, Wheeling, VA/WV, married Elizabeth McCulloch. With his brothers, in 1769, laid claim to the area that is now Wheeling. One who directed the construction of Fort Henry, defended it at the "first siege"*, September 1, 1777. Delegate to the 1788 Virginia Assembly and served as Colonel of the Virginia troops. Listed in D.A.R. Patriot Index - Patriotic Service, Colonel, VA. [7]

November 19, 1776: At a Court held for the district of West Augusta at Augusta

Town, November 19, 1776 :



Present, Edward Ward, John McColloch, John Cannon,

William Goe, David Shepherd.



Thomas Glenn, who was bound by recog to Appear at the

Grand jury Court, appeared, and was Ord to be prosecuted

for beating his Serv't. No prosecutor or Witnesses appearing,

it is ordered that he be discharged.



Ord that the Court be adjorned until to Morrow Morning 8

o'clock Edw'd Ward. [8]



November 19, 1777


https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjn9yPXkb4ij39xg1N6DDX9QresW4aI8xIt8Ss6nig7NCr2O_VkVeYa4gdNv_BMJsOedIZplJj5ZF863kVjcq5q5r0pkmzp1mCJdA0pTiT-GcIm51iKViFFTSh6Px8fkvqg5aQfE1H_iRuT/s640/Redoubt+at+Billingsport.jpg
November 19,: 1777: General Cornwallis joined our troops with a Hessian grenadier battalion, the English Thirty-third Regiment, and one hundred Hessian jägers and twelve of ours, and assumed command. He came over at Chester from Howe’s army. [9][10]



November 19, 1778:

19th Nothing material. Other than Employing Fatigues and

Artificers to carry on the work of the Fort[11]



November 19, 1778

Head Quarters Camp N 12 19th Novr

Officer of the Day Col° Beeler [12]


November 19, 1779: This Baltimore agreement was ratified and finally confirmed by the Pennsylvania General Assembly on November 19, 1779. Virginia, however, held back, and whether from a dissatisfaction with the boundary as recommended by the commissioners or with an intention of
benefiting her whilom adherents in the Monongahela valley, her
Assembly had no action on the subject until the following summer.
And what occurred in the meantime ? [13]





1779 MAP OF THE EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN NORTH AMERICA, [14]



In 1779, Col. John Bowman, commanding a force of 160 men, crossed the Ohio at the mouth of the Licking, and after a rapid march attacked the Indian town of Old Chillicothe, on the Little Miami. three miles north of Xenia. The attack was repulsed, and Col. Bowman capturing a sufficient number of ponies to mount his men, began a hurried retreat, being closely, pursued by the Indians until he recrossed the Ohio, having lost nine men in the expedition. In October of the same year, Col. David Rogers and Capt. Robert Benham, with 100 men, were passing down the Ohio, in two keel boats, and noticing Indians on the shores, Col. Rogers landed one-half his command for the purpose of attacking the savages. The whites were ambushed by about 500 Indians, a fierce battle ensued, but the odds were too great, and Rogers, with nearly all his men were tomahawked and scalped. Capt. Benham, with a few survivors, cut his way out and finally escaped, although the Captain was severely wounded and lay in the woods two days ere rescued by a passing boat.[15]



November 19, 1794: Jay Treaty



Jay Treaty


Description: First Page of the Jay Treaty

First Page of the Jay Treaty


Ratified

February 29, 1796


Author(s)

Main authors were John Jay and Alexander Hamilton


Signatories

Great Britain and the United States.


Purpose

To relieve post-war tension between Britain and the U. S.


Jay Treaty, also known as Jay's Treaty, The British Treaty, the Treaty of London of 1794, and officially the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, Between His Britannic Majesty and The United States of America,[1][2] was a treaty between the United States and Great Britain that is credited with averting war,[3] resolving issues remaining since the Treaty of Paris of 1783, which ended the American Revolution,[4], and facilitating ten years of peaceful trade between the United States and Britain in the midst of the French Revolutionary Wars, which began in 1792.[16]

The treaty was signed on November 19, 1794, the Senate advised and consented on June 24, 1795; it was ratified by the President and the British government; it took effect on the day ratifications were officially exchanged, February 29, 1796.

The historian George Herring notes the "remarkable and fortuitous economic and diplomatic gains" produced by the Jay Treaty.[6][17]







November 19, 1861: Boteler, Alexander Robinson, a Representative from Virginia; born in Shepherdstown, Jefferson County, Va. (now West Virginia), May 16, 1815; was graduated from Princeton College in 1835; engaged in agriculture and literary pursuits; elected as the candidate of the Opposition Party to the Thirty-sixth Congress (March 4, 1859-March 3, 1861); during the Civil War entered the Confederate Army and was a member of Stonewall Jackson’s staff; chosen by the State convention a Representative from Virginia to the Confederate Provisional Congress November 19, 1861; elected from Virginia to the Confederate Congress, serving from February 1862 to February 1864; appointed a member of the Centennial Commission in 1876; appointed a member of the Centennial Commission in 1876; appointed a member of the Tariff Commission by President Arthur and a member and subsequently made pardon clerk in the Department of Justice by Attorney General Brewster; died in Shepherdstown, Jefferson County, W. Va., May 8, 1892; interment in Elmwood Cemetery.[18]



November 19, 1863

Edward Everett, the most renowned orator of his day gave one of his best performances of his life and spoke for two hours in a speech that no one will remember.[19]



President Lincoln delivers his Gettysburg Address at the military cemetery on the Gettysburg battlefield.[20] 20,000 come to pay tribute on that day.[21] His 271 word remark would become one of the finest speeches in world history.



The Gettysburg Address

Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth, upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Now we are engaged in a great Civil War testing whether that nation, or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated,[22]

can long endure.

We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.



But in a larger sense, we can not dedicate…we can not consecrate…we can not hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, thatconsecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us—that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion--- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vane--that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government: of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.[23]



“I failed, I failed, and that is about all that can be said about it.” Abraham Lincoln used these self critical words to dismiss his Gettyburg Address moments after delivering it.[24]



President Lincoln falls ill with a variation of small pox, and will be be bedridden for three weeks.[25]



Abraham Lincoln

Gettysburg Address, 1863



The victory of the Union troops in the battle of Gettysburg, in July of 1863, was a turning point in the war, halting General Lee’s momentous drive into the heart of the northern states. The losses suffered by both sides were astounding. Three days of brutal fighting left over fifty thyousand soldiers dead or wounded. In the bloody after math, a cemetery was hastily planned and contructed on the site

Months later, on November 19, an official ceremony was held to honor the dead and dedicate the cemetery to their memory. Popular speaker Edward Everett (1794-1865) gave a two hous long exercise in oratorical excess, after which President Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) was asked to give “a few appropriate remarks” for the occasion. His brief address was not received well at the moment, but over the years it has come to be considered one of the finest speeches in the English language/. In a succinct, powerful manner, Lincoln conveyed a sense of awe and respect for the sacrifice made by the soldiers. At the same time he placed the tragedy in a larger context, presenting the vision of a great leader with the words of a poet.[26]



“Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endure.

We are met on a great battlefield of that war.

We have come to dedicate a portion th that field as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and properthat we should do this.

But in the larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here hav consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living rather to be dediczated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us: That from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. [27]



Sat. November 19, 1864

A nice day all quiet[28]



November 19, 1865: More about Indiana Powell
Indiana married James E. Eason (b. November 19, 1865 / d. August 21, 1930 in GA) on July 25, 1886 in Carroll Co. GA.[29]



November 19, 1891: Henrietta Mildred Hodgson: 6th cousin, 4x removed of Gerol Lee Goodlove


Henrietta Mildred Hodgson


Born

(1805-01-06)January 6, 1805


Died

November 19, 1891(1891-11-19) (aged 86)


Nationality

British


Other names

Henrietta Mildred Smith (married name)


Known for

Great-great-grandmother of Elizabeth II


Spouse(s)

Oswald Smith


Parents

Robert Hodgson
Mary Tucker


Henrietta Mildred Hodgson (January 6, 1805 – November 19, 1891) was an English lady with both royal and presidential genealogical connections.

Through her Virginia ancestry, Queen Elizabeth II and her descendants are related to George Washington, the common ancestor of both being Augustine Warner, Jr.

Henrietta Mildred was the grand-daughter of Mildred Porteus, who married the older Robert Hodgson, who was herself the grand-daughter of Robert and Mildred Porteus, until 1720 of Virginia, who in that year moved to Yorkshire. The earlier Mildred Porteus was the daughter of John and Mary Smith, Mary being a daughter of Augustine Warner, Jr. and a sister of Mildred Warner, who married Lawrence Washington (1659–1698) and was the grandmother of the first US President, George Washington.[7]

Henrietta Mildred Smith died November 19, 1891. At her death, her memorial in All Saints Church, Sanderstead, states:

Sacred
TO THE MEMORY OF
HENRIETTA MILDRED SMITH,
WIDOW OF OSWALD SMITH.
B. JANuary 6, 1805 D. NOVember 19, 1891
LEAVING AT HER DEATH
ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN
DIRECT SURVIVING DESCENDANTS.

'HER CHILDREN ARISE UP AND CALL HER BLESSED"
PROV. XXXV V. 28.'







November 19, 1894: There were 1,016 names on the lists for this convoy of adults and children. Among the 987 deportees for whom nationality is noted, there were: 215 Poles; 166 Germans; 106 French; 101 Austrians; 24 Czechs; 19 Russians; 12 Hungarians; 9 Romanians; 9 Lithuanians; 7 Latvians; 6 Dutch; 4 Luxemburgers; 3 from the Saar Basin; 29 stateless; and 262 undetermined.



On Convoy 27 was Nicolas Gotlibs, born November 19, 1894, from Latvia, and Joseph Gottlieb, birth and place of residence unknown. (probably illegible.)



The list is on onionskin and is in deploable condition. Even with a magnifying glass the names cannot all be deciphered correctly. They are not in alphabetical order. The transport of September 2 is divided into six sublists, labeled as follows:



1. Unoccupied Zone 1--468 people. These are Jews who were undoubtedly arrested in the mass roundup in the unoccupied zone which took place on the night of August 26 (and into the morning of August 27). The roundup led to the arrest of 6,584 Jews (XXVI-58) who were surrendered to the occupying authorities. This list is composed of 17 sublists totaling 468 persons. Some of the lists comprise males only, but the majority had families. There were nmo children under 15. These lists were hastily prepared, and none contain the place of birth.

2. Unoccupied Zone 2, 28 people, including some intire families. The date and place of birth, abd ub nabt cases the nationality are missing.

3. Drancy 1—19 people, including families.

4. Drancy 2—

Stairway 8. 21 people, many of them teenagers and young children.

Stairway 9. 64 people, all adolescents and young children.

Stairway 10. 17 people.

5. Departments—75 people. Only family and indicated here. There are sublists from Dordogne (27), Correze (2), Creuse (3), Indre (2), and Haute-Vienne (41).

6. Last minute departures not yet listed—71 people. There were entire families. These people came from camps in both zones.





November 1904: On the history of the Jewish community In Werneck, a Jewish community existed until its resolution in November 1904. Its origin goes back to the 17th century.[30]

1905: The seventh Zionist Congress (Basel) rules out any alternative to Palestine as the objective of the Zionism.[31]

1905: The Protocols of the Elders of Zion

Perhaps the most infamous and malicious religious hoax in history, "The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion" is a book supposedly revealing a secret Jewish conspiracy to take over the world. It first appeared in Russia in 1905, and though the book has been completely discredited as a forgery, it is still in print and remains widely circulated.Many people have endorsed this religious hoax, including actor Mel Gibson, Adolf Hitler, and automaker Henry Ford, who in 1920 paid to have a half-million copies of the book published.[32]

1905 – William Rogers, Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, was impeached and deposed by the Cherokee National Council for being "too cooperative" with the federal government regarding dissolution of the Cherokee Nation. The council replaces him with Frank J. Boudinot, president of the Keetoowah Nighthawk Society, but the federal government reimposes Rogers in office the following year.[33]

November 19, 1908: Mr. and Mrs. Dick Bowdish have moved into the W. H. Goodlove tenant house. (Winton Goodlove note:This would be the house across the road west of where Victor Liege now lives at 3974 Pleasant Valley Road. The same house my Grandad and Grandma Goodlove moved in when they were first married. The house where my dad was born?) W.D.G. (Not sure my Dad born in that house. His obituary reads that he was born on the farm where we lived when I was a child).[34]



November 1918: First Muslim-Christian association formed in Jaffa to oppose the creation of a Jewish homeland. Another was formed in Jerusalem soon after.[35]



November 1918

The flu ends. It killed 550,000 Americans in 10 months. It killed at 30,000,000 worldwide, while infecting the entire human species. As soon as the dying stopped the forgetting began.[36]



1919: In the years after the war, hatred of Jews, even of those whose family lines reached far back into the American past, mounted steadily. The Klan chose the Jewish population as one of its principal targets and profited substantially from general animosity toward Jewish Americans. Yet during the twenties not even the efforts of the Klan could provoke an epidemic of anti-Semitism equal to that which swept Western society, and most spectacularly Nazi Germany, in the succeeding decade.[37]



1919: A number of Jews were active after WWI in the revolutionary government of Bavaria which was headed by a Jew, Kurt Eisner, who was prime minister before his assassination in 1919. Another Jew, Gustav Landauer, who became minister of popular instruction, was also assassinated that year. [38]



1919: A booklet chronicling the achievenments of the Buck Creek Parish was distributed widely to Methodist churches throughout the country for a number of years (Buck Creek Parish [Philadelphia: Board of Home Missions and Church Extension, 1919]. The Gail Borden Library in Elgin sent me a copy of this booklet. How they got it is a mystery. There were only three Librarys in the United States that had it. I would be surprised but they do this type of thing all the time. I guess that is why they were the Illinois Library of the Year. It begins:



“The story of Buck Creek Parish is sent out by the Department of Rural Work of the Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church for the purpose of letting folks know what can be done in a rural community when jthe minster and people work together for the development of a well rounded comuntity life.

The Rev. Gilbert Chalice, who became the first resident pastor of Buck Creek Parish, had all of the problems and difficulties to meet which are found oin the average community of this sort. He solved his problems by first discovering just what they were and then utilizing all of the resources at his disposal. There is a new day coming in for rural America. The rural ministry is a large factor in its coming. To help rural pastors to do their share in making the new day possible is the aim of the Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodis Episcopal Church, through its Department of Rural Work. There are other stories of success to be told. There are desperate situations to be met. The ministry which is now in training for rural parishes has a task worthy the mettle of the best there is.” Paul L. Vogt, Superintendent, Department of Rural Work.

Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church.

1701 Arch Stree, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[39]



1919: In 1919 Palestine was considered that portion of the Middle East designated for the Jewish people, and included what we know of today as Jordan, east of the river, and Israel, west of the river.[40]



November 1920: The International Jew

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/34/19200522_Dearborn_Independent-Intl_Jew.jpg/220px-19200522_Dearborn_Independent-Intl_Jew.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.21wmf1/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png


The Protocols


1905 2fnl Velikoe v malom i antikhrist.jpg

•The Protocols of the Elders of Zion
•Versions of The Protocols
•Contemporary imprints of The Protocols


First publication of The Protocols

•Programma zavoevaniya mira evreyami


Writers, editors, and publishers associated with The Protocols

•Carl Ackerman ·Boris Brasol
•G. Butmi ·Natalie de Bogory
•Denis Fahey ·Henry Ford ·L. Fry
•Howell Gwynne ·Harris Houghton
•Pavel Krushevan ·Victor Marsden
•Sergei Nilus ·George Shanks
•Fyodor Vinberg ·Clyde J. Wright


Debunkers of The Protocols

•Vladimir Burtsev ·Herman Bernstein
•Norman Cohn ·John S. Curtiss
•Philip Graves ·Michael Hagemeister
•Pierre-André Taguieff ·Lucien Wolf


Commentaries on The Protocols

•The International Jew
•The Cause of World Unrest
•The Jewish Bolshevism
•Mein Kampf

•v
•t
•e


The International Jew is a four volume set of booklets or pamphlets originally published and distributed in the early 1920s by Henry Ford, an American industrialist and automobile manufacturer.

It is to be distinguished from The International Jew: The World's Problem which was the headline in The Dearborn Independent and is the name of a collection of articles serialized in The Dearborn Independent, a newspaper owned by Ford. It is also to be distinguished from the title of the first volume of the series, namely, The International Jew, The World's Foremost Problem (note the absence or presence of the word "Foremost" as the distinguishing mark in the subtitle).

At the Nuremberg Trials, Baldur von Schirach mentioned that The International Jew made a deep impression on him and his friends in their youth and influenced them in becoming antisemitic. He said: "... we saw in Henry Ford the representative of success, also the exponent of a progressive social policy. In the poverty-stricken and wretched Germany of the time, youth looked toward America, and apart from the great benefactor, Herbert Hoover, it was Henry Ford who to us represented America."[1] In 1922, the New York Times reported that Adolf Hitler's office contained a large picture of Ford.[2] A well-thumbed copy of the International Jew was found in his library.[2]
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7e/1920_International_Jew_reprint_from_Dearborn_Independent.jpg/220px-1920_International_Jew_reprint_from_Dearborn_Independent.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.21wmf1/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

The International Jew, The World's Foremost Problem ... (Volume 1) - November, 1920[41]


November 1920: "The Spade Family in America", author Abraham Thompson Secrest. Published privately November 1920, Columbus, Ohio.

Michael Spaid, born October 1, 1795, Married Margaret Godlove (Gottlieb), 1816, daughter of George Godlove, German lineage, born in Hampshire county August 13, 1792.

Geneology.com genealogy records Early West Virginia Settlers, 1600s to 1900s





In 1816 he married Margaret Godlove (Gottlieb, in German) who was born in the same county as himself, August 13, 1792. She was a daughter of George Godlove and wife, [42]








George Spaid Tombstone[43]

.

November 1923: In the growing crisis, a grand coalition from SPD to DVP is formed under Gustav Stresemann, the DVP's chairman (August to November 1923). After hesitating for several weeks, Stresemann breaks off passive resistance on September 26,1923. President Ebert declares a national state of emergency in order to deal with the expected unrest following Stresemann's decision.

Bavarian right-wing activism, virulent, well-armed, and politically radical, is the first to challenge the Republic. In order to check the most militant rightists in Bavaria (including the Nazis), the Bavarian government forms an emergency government, practically a dictatorship, under the more moderate rightist Gustav von Kahr. Bavaria also moves toward greater autonomy from Berlin. [44]



The German army deposes the leftist governments of Saxony and Thuringia (late October/early November 1923). The SPD, outraged because no similar step is considered against Kahr's (even more) refractory Bavaria, leaves the national government. A minority coalition continues in office under Stresemann.

Inflation reaches record heights in November: 1 US dollar=4 Trillion marks. Germans see hyperinflation not only as an economic catastrophe but also as an expression of a huge moral crisis. [45]

November 1926: Wegener presented his continental drift theory at a symposium of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists in New York City, again earning rejection from everyone but the chairman. Three years later the fourth and final expanded edition of “The Origin of Continents and Oceans” appeared.

In 1929 Wegener embarked on his third trip to Greenland, which laid the groundwork for a later main expedition and included a test of an innovative, propeller-driven snowmobile.[46]






November 1930: Alfred Wegener

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/36/Wegener_Alfred_signature.jpg/220px-Wegener_Alfred_signature.jpg
Alfred Wegener, around 1925


Born

(1880-11-01)November 1, 1880
Berlin, German Empire


Died

November 1930 (aged 50)
Clarinetania, Greenland


Residence

Germany


Citizenship

German


Nationality

German


Fields

Meteorology, Geology, Astronomy


Alma mater

University of Berlin


Doctoral advisor

Julius Bauschinger


Known for

Continental drift theory


Influenced

Johannes Letzmann


Signature
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/51/Alfred_Wegener_Signature.svg/128px-Alfred_Wegener_Signature.svg.png


Alfred Lothar Wegener (November 1, 1880 – November 1930) was a German polar researcher, geophysicist and meteorologist.

During his lifetime he was primarily known for his achievements in meteorology and as a pioneer of polar research, but today he is most remembered for advancing the theory of continental drift (Kontinentalverschiebung) in 1912, which hypothesized that the continents were slowly drifting around the Earth. His hypothesis was controversial and not widely accepted until the 1950s, when numerous discoveries such as palaeomagnetism provided strong support for continental drift, and thereby a substantial basis for today's model of Plate tectonics.[1][2] Wegener was involved in several expeditions to Greenland to study polar air circulation before the existence of the jet stream was accepted. Expedition participants made many meteorological observations and achieved the first-ever overwintering on the inland Greenland ice sheet as well as the first-ever boring of ice cores on a moving Arctic glacier.[47]

November 1941: Jean Gottleib born November 28, 1880 in Gro?, Mesertsch.

Resided Hamburg. Deportation: from Hamburg, November 1941, Minsk.

Missing. [48]

Throughout November 1941: There had been increasingly ominous signs that war with Japan was imminent.
http://www.cv6.org/images/midway-4111.jpg
Midway Atoll, looking west, November 1941. Eastern Island is in the foreground, Sand Island is behind. [49]

November 1941:Terezín Terezín

Město bylo založeno na konci 18. The city was founded in the late 18th století jako vojenská pevnost a nazváno po císařovně Marii Terezii.century as a military fortress and named after Empress Maria Theresa. V listopadu 1941 v něm bylo zřízeno ghetto pro Židy z českých zemí, z Německa, z Rakouska, z Nizozemí, z Dánska, ze Slovenska az dalších okupovaných zemí.In November 1941 there was established a ghetto for Jews in the Czech lands, from Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, Slovakia and other occupied countries. Přímo v Terezíně zahynulo přes 30 tisíc vězňů, dalších téměr 90 tisíc bylo odtud posláno do vyhlazovacích táborů na východě. Directly in the Terezin killed more than 30,000 prisoners, almost another 90,000 were sent from there to the extermination camps in the East.



November 19, 1941: Erna Gottlieb, born Edelheim, December 9, 1888

Resided Hamburg. Deportation: from Hamburg November 19, 1941, Minsk. Missing. Killed at Tuchinka? [50]



November 19, 1941

The British 7th Armoured Division suffers heavy casualties during an attack by the German 21st Panzer Brigade in North Africa.[51]



November 1942: German military administration regulations define a Jew as any person who now or ever has professed the Jewish religion or who has more than two Jewish grandparents. The regulations order a census of Jews in the Ocdcupied Zone, the stamping of the words “Juif” or “Juive” on their identity cards, and the posting of placards identifying Jewish owned shops and businesses. (The stamping of the word “Jew” on identity cards was not imposed in the Unoccupied Zone until after the Germans occupied all of France in November 1942. A Vichy decree issued December 11, 1942, required the stamp of Jews’ identiy cards and food rationing cards.)[52]



November 1942: "In November 1942 the medical directors of all Bavarian psychiatric hospitals were summonded, by secret letter, to the Health Department of the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior in Munich. The meeting was immediately declared secret. The directors had to justify the number of deaths in their institutions, which had risen in number due to starvation and tuberculosis. Despite this, the chairman explained that far too few patients were dying, and that it was not necessary to treat arising illnesses.
The director of the Heil- und Pflegeanstalt Kaufbeuren gave a short explanation of his personal procedure. Initially, he had been opposed to euthanasia, but when he learnt of the official statistics, he regretted that euthanasia had been stopped. He now gave patients in his institution, that would have formerly come within the euthanasia programme, a completely fat-free diet; he especially stressed fat-free. The patients died of famine edema within three months. He recommended this procedure to all institutions as being what was called for.
The chairman accepted this recommendation, and gave the immediate order that this "starvation diet" be put into practice in all institutions. There was to be no written order, but it would be checked whether the order had been followed or not." The starvation diet was introduced in many hospitals, first in Bavaria, and later nationwide.
Around 90,000 people died either directly as a result of the starvation diet, or indirectly from a starvation induced illness, mainly tuberculosis. [53]



The American Mercury and the Reader’s Digest were alone among mass-circulation magazines in bringing the extermination issue to public attention in the weeks following the revelations of late November 1942. Except for a few inconspicuous words on the UN declaration, such news magazines as Time, Life, and Newsweek over looked the systematic murder of millions of helpless Jews. The first clear comment on mass killing of Jews came on March 24, 1944.[54]





November 19, 1942: Soviet forces begin a counterattack near Stalingrad.[55]



November 19, 1943: Her appearance in Pearl Harbor on November 6 reportedly caused one Admiral to declare "If Enterprise is ready to fight, so am I." She had returned to a new war. The desperate defensive battles of 1942, fought by a handful of carriers against staggering odds, were past, as the U.S. Navy prepared to embark on the most sustained naval offensive in history. Enterprise and Saratoga, the only surviving veterans of 1942, now joined over a dozen new flattops, including six new Essex-class fleet carriers. Returning to action November 19, off the Gilbert Islands, Enterprise would not return to the United States for another 560 days. In that time, she and the armada which surrounded her would carry the war to the very shores of Japan.[56]

Howard Snell would transfer to the Morrison in December 1943:



November 19, 1943: The Sonderkommando 1005 prisoners in the Janowska camp revolt. Several dozen escape and the rest are killed.[57]

November 1944: USS Scamp (SSN-588), a Skipjack-class nuclear-powered submarine, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the scamp, a member of the serranidae family of fish.

Her keel was laid down on January 23, 1959 at Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, California. She was launched on October 8, 1960, sponsored by Mrs. John C. Hollingsworth, widow of Commander John C. Hollingsworth, the commanding officer of Scamp (SS-277) at the time of her loss in November 1944. She was commissioned at Mare Island on June 5, 1961 with Commander W. N. Dietzen in command.[58]

November 19, 1951:


Lady Constance Bowes-Lyon

1865

November 19, 1951

Robert Francis Leslie Blackburn (d 1944)

Phyllis Frances Agnes Blackburn (b 1894)
Leslie Herbert Blackburn (b 1901)
Hilda Constance Helen Blackburn (b 1902)
Claudia Blackburn (1908–2001)


[59]

November 1956: Britain and France invaded Egypt in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to capture the Suez Canal. Lord Mountbatten claimed the Queen was opposed to the invasion, though Eden denied it. Eden resigned two months later.[73]

The absence of a formal mechanism within the Conservative Party for choosing a leader meant that, following Eden's resignation, it fell to the Queen to decide whom to commission to form a government. Eden recommended that she consult Lord Salisbury, the Lord President of the Council. Lord Salisbury and Lord Kilmuir, the Lord Chancellor, consulted the British Cabinet, Winston Churchill, and the Chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee, as a result of which the Queen appointed their recommended candidate: Harold Macmillan.[74]

The Suez crisis and the choice of Eden's successor led in 1957 to the first major personal criticism of the Queen. In a magazine, which he owned and edited,[75] Lord Altrincham accused her of being "out of touch".[76] Altrincham was denounced by public figures and physically attacked by a member of the public appalled at his comments.[77] Six years later, in 1963, Macmillan resigned and advised the Queen to appoint the Earl of Home as prime minister, advice that she followed.[78] The Queen again came under criticism for appointing the prime minister on the advice of a small number of ministers or a single minister.[78] In 1965, the Conservatives adopted a formal mechanism for electing a leader, thus relieving her of involvement.[79][60]

November 19, 1966: Hallie Lynn Brown b August 2, 1890 at Valley Junction (West Des Moines, Ia.) d at Los Angeles, Calif, in early 1960's md ca 1920 at Los Angeles, Marion E. Woods b St. Johnsbury, Vt. d November 19, 1966 at Torrance, Calif. Both are buried at Gardena, Calif.

November 19, 1977: Sadat visits Israel.[61]

November 19, 1983: James Henry 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. April 14, 1887 / d. September 9, 1970) married Mammie Unk. (b. August 14, 1902 / d. November 19, 1983). He married Josephine Best (b. Unk. / d. February 26, 1929),

A. Children of James Nix and Josephine Best:
. i. Ottis Nix (b. July 6, 1919)
. ii. James Aaron Nix (b. November 20, 1921 / d. January 1995)
. iii. Lottie Rugh Nix (b. February 26, 1929)[62]

November 1999: A referendum in Australia on the future of the Australian monarchy favoured its retention in preference to an indirectly elected head of state.[182] Polls in Britain in 2006 and 2007 revealed strong support for Elizabeth,[183] and referenda in Tuvalu in 2008 and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines in 2009 both rejected proposals to become republics.[184][63]







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


[1] . (Muster Rolls & Other Records of Service of Maryland Troops in the American Revolution, 1775-1783. Muster of Maryland Troops, Vol. 1, First Regimant, Genealogical Publishing Co) ., Inc. Baltimore, MD, 1972.)


[2] (Maryland State Archives, St. John's Parish Records, Microfilm Roll M 229. Page 331.)


[3] (http://washburnhill.freehomepage.com/custom3.html)


[4] The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor.--vol. 03


[5] William Crawford is listed as serving in the 5th Virginia and later in 1776 in the 7th. In Harlem Heights, the Americans formed a stronghold and Gen. Howe moved up the Sound to gain another rear onslaught. From here, Washinton moved his army to a camp at North Castle. Howe, fearing the worst, ordered the Hessians to take Fort Washinton, which they did at a tremendous cost to the American army.

(From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 pg. 142.)


[6] The grievous loss of men and supplies at Fort Washington must be laid at the Commander in Chief’s door. Washington had believed this last American stronghold on Manhattan should be abandoned; General Nathanael Greene, who was in command of the fort, wanted to defend it. Washington, as he so often did, yielded. His reluctance to impose his decisions was a flaw in leadership; it would disappear only as he came to recognize that since his was the ultimate responsibility, his must also be the final decision. Troubles multiplied. Reporting to the president of Congress on the situation in New Jersey, Washington had not finished his letter before he was forced to tell of a fresh disaster.




[7] (Source: D.A.R. Lineage Book, Vol. 49, page 59)


[8] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt


[9] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html


[10] 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.


[11] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal


[12] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal


[13] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt


[14] by Thos. Kitchin, Hydrographer to His Majesty, from A Philosphical and Political History of the Settlements and Trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies, by Abbe Raynal, Dublin, 1779 per page 590 of Phillips.


[15] HISTORY OF HARDIN COUNTY. – 243


[16] Wikipedia


[17] Wikipedia


[18] Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=B000653


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


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


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


[22] The Real Abraham Lincoln 01/20/2009


[23] Wikipedia


[24] Civil War 2010 Calendar


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


[26] Famous American Speeches by Orville V. Webster, III page 37


[27] Abraham Lincoln; Famous American Speeches by Orville V. Webster, III page 38-39.


[28] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary


[29] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[30] http://www.microsofttranslator.com/bv.aspx?from=de&to=en&a=http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/werneck_synagoge.htm


[31] http://www.zionism-israel.com/his/Israel_and_Jews_before_the_state_timeline.htm


[32] http://news.yahoo.com/history-religious-hoaxes-132526660.html


[33] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


[34] Winton Goodlove Papers


[35] . http://www.zionism-israel.com/his/Israel_and_Jews_before_the_state_timeline.htm


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


[37] The Ku Klux Klan of the Southwest, by Charles C. Alexander, 1969, page 16.


[38] Encyclopedia Judaica, Volume 4, page 345.




[39] Buck Creek Parish [Philadelphia: Board of Home Missions and Church Extension, 1919..


[40] 365 Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr.


[41] Wikipedia


[42] "The Spaid Family in America", author Abraham Thompson Secrest. Published privately November 1920, Columbus, Ohio.


[43] Spaid Family in America", author Abrahan

Thompsom Secrest. Published privately November 1920, Columbus, Ohio


[44] http://www.colby.edu/personal/r/rmscheck/GermanyD4.html


[45] http://www.colby.edu/personal/r/rmscheck/GermanyD4.html


[46] Wikipedia


[47] Wikipedia


[48] [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. Gedenkbuch (Germany)* does not include many victims from area of former East Germany).


[49] http://www.cv6.org/1942/midway/midway_5.htm


[50] [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,. Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1768.


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


[52] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 9.


[53] http://www1.uni-hamburg.de/rz3a035/psychiatry.html


[54] The abandonment of the Jews, by David S. Wyman, page 57, 364.


[55] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774


[56] http://www.cv6.org/1943/1943.htm


[57] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1778.


[58] Wikipedia


[59] Wikipedia


[60] Wikipedia


[61] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 497


[62] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[63] Wikipedia

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