This Day in Goodlove History, November 21
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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 21, 1272: Edward returns home to England when he hears that his father Henry III has died.[1]
1273: Rudolph I becomes first Habsburg ruler of Austria at Aix-la-Chapelle HRE to 1291 – end of “Great Interregnum” proceeds to conquer Austria, , Bohemia, Germany, Hungary and Spain which are controlled by Hapsburgs, Death of Djelaleddin Rumi the Persian poet and founder of the order of Dancing Dervishes, Thomas Aquinas writes “Summa theological (Credo ut intelligam)”. [2]
1274: Kyushu eruption, death of Nasir ed-Din et-Tusi the Arab scholar, Kublai Khan fails to conquer Japan, death of Arab scientist Nasir ed-Din, First Mongol invasion of Japan – Mongols fail to gain foothold, Synod of Lyons called by Pope Gregory X recommends that conclaves should be secret to avoid corruption (more corruption follows), Papal Council of Lyon declares all Cardinals must meet within 10 days of a pope's death to elect new one, plus seclusion. [3]
November 21st: 1317 - Frederik of Sierck/Zyrick becomes bishop of Utrecht[4]
November 21, 1492 - Pinta under Martin A Pinzon separates from Columbus's fleet[5]
November 21, 1728: Elias GUTLEBEN was born on November 21, 1728 in Metzeral,Munster,Colmar,Haut-Rhin,Alsace.[6]
November 21, 1770: Reachd Fort Pitt in the Afternoon & lodged at Samples.
November 2lst., 1770: Reached Fort Pitt in the afternoon; distance from our last encampment, about twenty-five miles, and as near as can guess, thirty-five from the Mingo town. ‘The land between the Mingo town and Pittsburgh, is of different kinds. For four or five atiles after leaving the first mentioned place, we passed over steep, hilly ground, covered with white oak, and a thin shallow soil. This was sttceeeded by a lively white oak land, less broken; and this again by rich land, the growth of which was chiefly white and red oak, mixed; which lasted with some interval of different ridges, all the way to Pittsbttrg. It was very observable, that as we left the river, the land grew better, which is a confirmation of the accounts I had before received, that the good bodies of land lie upon time heads of the runs and creeks ; but in all my travels through this country, I have seen no large body of level land.—. On the branches of Raccoon creek, there appear to be good meadow ground; and on Sharter’s creek, over both of which we passed, the land looks well. ‘The country between the Mingo town and Fort Pitt, appears to be well supplied with springs. [7]
November 21., 1771: Left Col. Bassetts on my return home. [8]
November 21, 1775: At a Court held for Augusta County at Pittsburg, Nov'r 21st, 1775, According to an Ordinance of the Convention held at
Richmond :
Pres't Geo Croghan, Edward Ward, Thos Smallman, John
Cannon, Geo Vallandigham.
Samuel Hinch is appointed Surveyor of the Highway in the
room of David Steel.
The persons App'd to Veiw a road from Capn Fromans to
the Mouth of Yough, made their report : It is Ord that the s'd
road be Established and that John Malony and Thos. Lapsley
and Edward Sharp be Survey and that Tithables with 3 miles on
Each side work thereon
John Bears is App'd a Consta, and It is Ord that he be
Sum'd to be Sworn.
It Appearing to this Court by Wm. Wilson that John Collins
had paid £7. 10s. for takeing up his Serv't Wm. Freeman, who
run away, It is Ord that he Serve Acc'd to Law for the same.
The Complt of Wm Freeman ag'st his Master, John Collins,
for abuseing and beating him and, It App'g to the Court to be
2d Complt, It is Ord the Sheriff sell him Acc'd to Law.
Ord that the Court be adjoined until the Court in Course
Geo : Croghan.
At a Court held for the Examination of Mr. Devereux Smith,
at His House, by His Petition to the Justices, this 21st No-
ember, 1775, for the Murder of Capn Geo Aston :
Pres't Geo Croghan, Thos. Smallman, John Cannon, Geo
Vallandigham, Edward Ward.
{66) The above Devereux Smith was Examined, denied the fact
wherewith he stands Charged, whereupon several Witnesses
were sworn and Examined ; on Consideration of which the
Court are of Opinion that after hearing Smith by his Atto,
that he is Guilty of the s'd fact wherewith he stands Charged,
that he ought to be tried for the said fact at the General Court
in April, on the 6th day thereof, and in Order thereto he is re-
manded to the Goal of this County and thence to be removed.
Be it Remembered that John Nevill, Thos. Herbert, James
Nowlan, Simon Morgan, all of this County, came before our
Justices and Acknowledged themselves Indebted to ours'd
Lord the King in the Sum of ioo Pounds Each, to be Levied
of Each of their respective Goods and Chattels, Lands and
Tenements, and to ours'd Lord the King rendered upon Con-
dition they do appear at the General Court in April next and
there testify and Evidence ag'st Devereux Smith for the Murder
of Geo Aston, and shall not depart with out leave of the s'd
General Court
The Prisoner moved the Court that he might be admitted to
Bail and It is Ordered that the Court be adjorned until to Mor-
row Morning at 7 o'clock, Geo : Croghan. [9]
[Hackensack] November 21, 1776:
The unhappy affair of the 16th. has been succeeded by further Misfortunes.
Yesterday Morning a large body of the Enemy landed between Dobb’s Ferry and Fort Lee. Their object was evidently to inclose the whole of our Troops and stores that lay between the North and Hackensack Rivers, which form a narrow neck of Land. For this purpose they formed and Marched, as soon as they had ascended the Heights towards the Fort. Upon the first information of their movements, our men were ordered to meet them, but finding their numbers greatly superior and that they were extending themselves It was thought proper to withdraw our Men, which was effected and their retreat secured over Hackensack Bridge. We lost the whole of the Cannon that was at the Fort except two twelve pounders, and a great deal of Baggage, between two & three hundred Tents, about a thousand Barrels of Flour and other stores in the Quarter Master’s Department. This loss was inevitable. As many of the stores had been removed, as circumstances & time would admit of. The Ammunition had been happily got away. Our present situation between Hackensack & Passaick Rivers, being exactly similar to our late one, and our force here by no means adequate to an Opposition, that will promise the smallest probability of Success, we are taking measures to retire over the Waters of the latter, when the best dispositions will be formed, that Circumstances will admit of.[10]
October 22 to November 21, 1777
Franz Gotlop’s regiment was at Redbank.[11]
November 21, 1777: REGIMENT VON MIRBACH
(MIR plus company number)
The Regiment V. Mirbach departed on March 1, 1776 from Melsungen. It embarked from Breznerlehe on May 12, 1776 and reached New York on August 14, 1776. The regiment was part of the Hessian First Division and took part in the following major engagements:
-- Long Island (NY, August 27, 1776)
-- Fort Washington (upper Manhattan, NY, November 16, 1776)
-- Brandywine (PA, September 11, 1777)
-- Redbank (Gloucester County, NJ, also known as Fort Mercer, October 22-November 21, 1777)
The regiment departed from New York on 21 November
1783 and arrived at Breznerlehe on April 20, 1784.
They returned to their quarters in Melsungen on May 30, 1784.
Musketeer Regiment von Mirbach, to 1780: Musketeer Regiment Jung von Lossburg, 1780 to war’s end (Hesse Cassel) Arrived at New York August 1776 Sent on the 1777 Philadelphia campaign fighting at Brandywine and Red Bank, N.J. Returned to New York, December, 1777, and stationed there until returned to Germany, 1783. Uniform: Red facings trimmed with plain white lace, white small clothes, red stocks; officers’ lace, silver.
CHIEF: Major General W. von Mirbach, to 1780
Major General W. von Lossburg, 1780 to war’s end
COMMANDER: Colonel J.A. von Loos, to 1777 Colonel von Block, 1777-1779
Colonel C.C. von Romrod, 1777 to war’s end
FIELD COMMANDER: Lieutenant Colonel von Schieck, to October, 1777
Lieutenant Colonel H. von Borck, October, 1777 to war’s end.[12]
November 21, 1777: We broke camp early, and Lord Cornwallis, with the entire army, marched eight miles to Kothtown. [13][14]
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjx0KKBn6o1UoYW8e04e0gzFHSBaSDLaZ4NXcAT57YJQYz5wpQuojw5GT_413AcI2JR4SUkCplm8XAjxnJ2PjB1F3QASSLIf-2tQBQjOtCWEo-FRZE_7gQG6gFHYvykzDI8VEaSMXDz5Al2/s640/March+from+Billingsport.jpg
November 21, 1778:
Head Quarters Camp N° 12 November 21st 1778
Field Officer of the Day Col° Morrow
A General Court Martial whereof Major Vernon is Apointed president
for the Trial of Capt Cook 41[15] of the Eight Pennsylvania Reg*
and Willm Eliot42[16] Director Or Superintendant of Pack horses And
such Other Prisoners As may be Brought Before them.
As the weather Begins Already to Set in Very Severe And we
have Experienced the pack horses to be Exceeding Sorry which
willmake Our Suplies Uncertain the General is Sorry he is Obligd
To Curtail the Rations to One pound Of flour per man pr Day untill
A suply Arives here. And hopes the Brave men of his Army will
Content themselves with it for A short Time And see the Necessity
and Propriety of, to make up for the Dificency Each man
is to be Serv.d with 1-1/2 lb of Beef per Day which the Commisary
must Strictly Observe Untill farther Orders —
After Orders
As the General is Anxious to have the Fort Finished and Try if
we Can Do any thing AGainst the Enemy this Season he Desires
Each Reg* to take there Share Of it in proportion to there number
of men off Duty Imeadatly as the pickets are Now Cut and he hopes
they willExert themselves to Shew who willbe Done first[17]
November 21, 1840: During Victoria's first pregnancy in 1840, in the first few months of the marriage, 18-year-old Edward Oxford attempted to assassinate her while she was riding in a carriage with Prince Albert on her way to visit her mother. Oxford fired twice, but either both bullets missed or, as he later claimed, the guns had no shot.[60] He was tried for high treason and found guilty, but was acquitted on the grounds of insanity.[61] In the immediate aftermath of the attack, Victoria's popularity soared, mitigating residual discontent over the Hastings affair and the bedchamber crisis.[62] Her daughter, also named Victoria, was born on November 21, 1840. The Queen hated being pregnant,[63] viewed breast-feeding with disgust,[64] and thought newborn babies were ugly.[65] Nevertheless, she and Albert had a further eight children.[18]
November 21, 1848: Orlando S. Harman was born on November 21, 1848, in Richmo nd County, Ohio. As a youth he came to Iowa, locating in Johnson County,k and in January, 1864, enlisted in Company H, Twenty-fourth Iowa Infantry.
On November 21, 1855, Charles Dow was shot and killed by Franklin Coleman in Hickory Point about fourteen miles south of Lawrence. Shortly after, a small army of Missourians led by Douglas County Sheriff Samuel L. Jones entered Kansas to attack Lawrence. John Brown and James Lane had hustled Lawrence citizens into an army and erected barricades but no attack happened. A treaty was signed and the Missouri army reluctantly left.[16][19]
November 21, 1862: State of NC yadkin county, nov the 21, 1862
"Dear sir [Governor Zebulon B. Vance] it is with a troubled heart a distressed mind and afflicted body that I now attimpt to write to you and I hope that you will not turn a deaf ear to my request Sir my husband has been forced from me to the army while he is deseased in different ways and I have understood that he was not allowed to stop to be examined but was sent right to the army and has to stay there diseased and afflicted and has not been well since he has been there and was not well when he left but he was taken away while others well and sound was let off and I am left here desolate and weekly I have neither father nor brother to assist me and I a poor woman and one child to take care of and my request to you that you will let my husband off so that he can come to my assistance that me and child may not suffer and die deny me not I come as a beging lazerous and as a weeping mary I come pleading for my husband my self and my child that we may not perish and die hear me in behalf of my husband and I hope that god will reward you for it my husband's name is L L chamberlain." -- From Elizabeth chamberlain "....I had forgotten to state where he was 13th regiment NC troops company G care of captain Hyman answer my letter if you please but don't put your name on the back for fear that I never git it Hamptonville." [20]
November 21, 1864: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Clinton November 21-23. [21]
Mon. November 21, 1864
Detailed on fatigue to build breast works
For a battery[22]
Washington, November 21, 1864.
To Mrs. Bixby, Boston, Massachusetts.
Dear Madam,
I have been shown in the files of the War Department a statement of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts, that you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle.
I feel how weak and fruitless must be any word of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save.
I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of Freedom.
Yours, very sincerely and respectfully,
LincolnSign2
[23]
November 21, 1922: Clarence Earnest Hogeland (b. November 21, 1922). [24]
November 21, 1922: James Milton Nix, Jr.14 [John 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 21, 1876 / d. April 2, 1935 in Wedowee, Randolph Co. AL) married Reva Jane Young (b. June 21, 1882 / d. October 6, 1946 in Randolph Co. AL). [25]
November 21, 1924: Lila Jane Hamilton b August 3, 1920 at Sioux City, Ia. md September 5, 1950 Richard Howland Finne b November 21, 1924 at Onawa, Ia. d January 2, 1965 at Torrance, Calif. Lila Jane and Richard Finne had two sons. [26]
November 20-21, 1963: ...A comparable incident was the appearance of the "Wanted for Treason" handbill on the streets of Dallas 1 to 2 days before President Kennedy's arrival. These handbills bore a reproduction of a front and profile photograph of the President and set forth a series of inflammatory charges against him.490 Efforts to locate the author and the lithography printer of the handbill at first met with evasive responses 491 and refusals to furnish information.492 Robert A. Surrey was eventually identified as the author of the handbill.493 Surrey, a 38-year- old printing salesman employed by Johnson Printing Co. of Dallas, Tex., has been closely associated with General Walker for several years in his political and business activities.494 He is president of American Eagle Publishing Co. of Dallas, in which he is a partner with General Walker.495 Its office and address is the post office box of Johnson Printing Co. Its assets consist of cash and various printed materials composed chiefly of General Walker's political and promotional literature, 496 all of which is storm at General Walker's headquarters.497
Surrey prepared the text for the handbill and apparently used Johnson Printing Co. facilities to set the type and print a proof.498 Surrey induced Klause, a salesman employed by Lettercraft Printing Co. of Dallas,499 whom Surrey had met when both were employed at Johnson Printing Co.,500 to print the handbill "on the side." 501 According to Klause, Surrey contacted him initially approximately 2 or 2 1/2 weeks prior to November 22.502 About a week prior to November 22, Surrey delivered to Klause two slick paper magazine prints of photographs of a front view and profile of President Kennedy,503 together with the textual page proof.504 Klause was unable to make the photographic negative of the prints needed to prepare the photographic printing plate,505 so that he had this feature of the job done at a local shop.506 Klause then arranged the halftone front and profile representations of President Kennedy at the top of the textual material he had received from Surrey so as to simulate a "man wanted" police placard. He then made a photographic printing plate of the picture.507 During the night, he and his wife surreptitiously printed approximately 5,000 copies on Lettercraft Printing Co. offset printing equipment without the knowledge of his employers.508 The next day he arranged with Surrey a meeting place, and delivered the handbills.509 Klause's charge for the printing of the handbills was, including expenses, $60.510
At the outset of the investigation Klause stated to Federal agents that he did not know the name of his customer, whom he incorrectly described; 511 he did say, however, that the customer did not resemble either Oswald or Ruby.512 Shortly before he appeared before the Commission, Klause disclosed Surrey's identity.513 He explained that no record of the transaction had been made because "he saw a chance to make a few dollars on the side." 514
Klause's testimony receives some corroboration from Bernard Weissman's testimony that he saw a copy of one of the "Wanted for Treason" handbills on the floor of General Walker's station wagon shortly after November 22.515 Other details of the manner in which the handbills were printed have also been verified.516 Moreover, Weissman testified that neither he nor any of his associates had anything to do with the handbill or were ,acquainted with Surrey, Klause, Lettercraft Printing Co., or Johnson Printing Co. 517 Klause and Surrey, as well as General Walker, testified that they were unacquainted with Lee Harvey Oswald and had not heard of him prior to the afternoon of November 22.518 The Commission has found no evidence of any connection between those responsible for the handbill and Lee Harvey Oswald or the assassination. [27]
[28]
File:Wanted for treason.jpg
This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons
Description
A famous handbill circulated on November 21, 1963 In Dallas, Texas. One day before the assassination of John F. Kennedy.[29]
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[1] Atheism.about.com
[2] mike@abcomputers.com
[3] mike@abcomputers.com
[4] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1317
[5] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1492
[6] Descendants of Elias Gutleben, Alice Email
[7] The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor.--vol. 03
[8] Besides GW, six officers were present or represented at this meeting. Learning of GW’s recent actions on behalf of the veterans, they warmly thanked him for his efforts and approved his distribution of the surveyed lands as an equitable one. He should, they recommended, be excused from his offer to sacrifice his own bounty lands in case of a redivision (resolves and statement of officers of the Virginia Regiment, November 23, 1772). The Virginia council considered this recommendation on g Dec. and agreed that if no complaints were received by june, GWwould be released from his promise. (Va. Exec.Jls., 6:~i6). George Washington’s Diaries, An Abridgement, Dorothy Twohig, Editor 1999
[9] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt
[10] The Commander in Chief’s spare words did not tell the entire dramatic story. He himself had galloped to warn the garrison of Fort Lee (across the Hudson from Fort Washington) that the British were coming and had hurried the men out so fast that those preparing a meal could not wait for kettles to cool enough to pack. Even so, they barely won a race with the enemy to a bridge over the Hackensack River and escape. Washington now wrote to General Charles Lee, who had been left in cornmand of a force north of Manhattan, directing him to rejoin the main army in New Jersey. Unknown to the commander, another letter had been inserted with his by Joseph Reed, his former secretary and confidant and now Adjutant General. “I do not mean to flatter or praise you at the expense of any other,” Reed wrote in part to Lee, “but I confess I do think it is entirely owing to you that this army, and the liberties of America, so far as they are dependent on it, are not totally cut off.” Reed heaped more praise on Lee, whose self-esteem as a professional soldier was already monumental, blamed Washington for the loss of Fort Washington, and declared, “Oh! General, an indecisive mind is one of the greatest misfortunes that can befall an army; how often have I lamented it in this campaign.” Washington sent several urgent messages to Lee, all in the same vein.
George Washington, A Bioagraphy in His Own Words, Ed. By Ralph K. Andrist, 1972
[11] JG
[12] Encylopedia of British, Provincial, and German Army Units 1775-1783 by Philip R. N. Katcher
[13] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html
[14] 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.
[15] 41 Thomas Cook took the oath of Captain in the Militia,May 26, 1776. "Minutes
of the court of Yohogania County," ACM, III(1903), 85. The military
record of Thomas Cook thenceforward, according to Heitman, 169, stands
thus: 1st Lieutenant, 8th Pennsylvania, Aug. 9, 1776; Captain, July 26, 1777;
retired as supernumerary, Jan. 31, 1779. He died in Guernsey County, not
far from Cambridge, Ohio, November 5, 1831. Pennsylvania Archives, Sth
ser., Ill, 314.
[16] 42 William Elliott was a partizan of Pennsylvania in the jurisdictional disputes
between that colony and Virginia. At the first term of the Virginia Court at
Pittsburgh, he was committed to jail (''goal") until he paid a bond of jEIOO
to keep the peace and refrain from taking an account of individuals' property
for the purpose of taxation on the part of Pennsylvania. "Minutes of the
Court at Fort Dunmore." ACM, I, 526. On May 20, 1775, Robert Elliott
conveyed to William Elliott 900 acres on the "Old Forbes Road," 12 miles
from Pittsburgh, adjacent to land of Ephriam Douglas. Ibid., 301, 302.
His name appears several times in the Account Book of Casper Reel at
Pittsburgh in 1775, for dressing deer skins and making breeches. WPHS, MS.
He also appears on the tax lists of Pitt Township, Westmoreland County, for
1772. Veech, Monongahela of Old, 199.
[17] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal
[18] Wikipedia
[19] Wikipedia
[20] http://thomaslegion.net/zebulon_baird_vance.html
[21] History of Logan County and Ohio, O.L. Basking & Co., Chicago, 1880. page 692.
[22] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary annotated by Jeff Goodlove
[23] ourworld.compuserve.com/.../ dear_mrs_bixby.htm
[24] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe
[25] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe
[26] http://cwcfamily.org/egy3.htm
[27] Source: http://www.jfk-assassination.de/warren/wcr/page298.php
[28] http://johnfitzgeraldkennedy.net/wantedfortreason.htm
[29] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wanted_for_treason.jpg
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