Monday, December 9, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, December 9, 2013

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Jeff Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com

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

The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, Thomas Jefferson, and ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson and George Washington.



The Goodlove Family History Website:

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html

The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://wwwfamilytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx

• • Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.

• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.


“Jacob’s Legacy, A Genetic View of Jewish History” by David B. Goldstein, 2008.

December 9, 1745: Francis Taliaferro (2nd cousin 8x removed)(b. December 9, 1745) [1]

December 9, 1776: Colonel Donop and 300 Grenadiers reconnoitered Burlington (5 hours below Trenton on the Delaware (River) where there was a ferry
crossing to Philadelphia.[2]



“December 9, 1777: - Since the army has moved back into the line, the Ansbach battalions again occupy the barracks. The entire Jaeger Corps received a commendation for its conduct during the last expedition and especially on the seventh. They suffered nine killed and nine wounded and the English Light Infantry lost about 100 altogether.” Rueffer also noted the von Mirbach Regiment’s return to New York prior to the end of the year[3]

December 9, 1777: Daniel McKinnon (half 4th great grand uncle) and Maria Wilson (wife of half 4th great grand uncle) are married December 9, 1777 in Anne Arrundel County, Maryland. Daniel is the son of Daniel McKinnon and Ruth (---).[4]The Maryland Marriage Records show a marriage license was issued on December 9, 1777 to Daniel
McKennon and Maria Wilson(58 59). This would appear to have been the unnamed son born to Ruth and
Daniel in 1752.

It appears from the research of others that Eleanor's half-sisters and half-brother may have left
Maryland about this time. They are reported to have gone to Fayette County Pennsylvania, south of
Pittsburgh(60).

Maryland appears to have had no divorce law prior to the Constitution of 1851 and the March 1759
publication in the Maryland Gazette is considered by some as a divorce(61). It should be noted that no
other information has been located for Ruth McKinnon (wife of Daniel) in the records Anne Arundel
County or any place the McKinnon family was located after 1759.

Nothing in the above information concerning the McKinnon family would be inconsistent with the
assumption that Eleanor McKinnon and Eleanor Howard were in fact the same person. [5]\\

December 9, 1778: Henry Laurens only served as vice president of South Carolina until June 1777. He was elected to the Continental Congress in January of that year and became the president of Congress under the Articles of Confederation[6] on November 1, 1777, a position he held until December 9, 1778. Beginning in 1780, Laurens served 15 months of imprisonment in the Tower of London after being taken captive on a Congressional mission to Holland. He spent the last years of his life in retirement on his plantation, where he lived until his death in 1792. [7]

December 9, 1799:

(18th cousin 4x removed)


Lord Frederick FitzClarence

December 9,1799

October 30, 1854

Married Lady Augusta Boyle, one surviving daughter.


[8]

December 9, 1800: ELIZABETH McCULLOCH ZANE, b. October 30, 1748, d/o Samuel, Sr. & Rachael, d. after December 9, 1800, married Ebenezer Zane February 1768. Listed in D.A.R. Patriot Index, Patriotic Service, VA. [9]


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






December 9, 1823: Andrew Jackson (2nd cousin 8x removed) appointed to Senate committees on foreign relations and military affairs. [10]



December 9, 1824: Andrew Jackson visited with Secretary of State John Q. Adams. [11]


•December 9, 1832: Nancy MC_KINNON (1st cousin 4x removed)
•[2789]
•____ - ____
•Father: Uriah MC_KINNON
Mother: Jane SHARP

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

• _________________________
• |
• _Daniel MC_KINNON ___|
• | (1767 - 1837) m 1798|
• | |_________________________
• |
• _Uriah MC_KINNON ____|
•| (1795 - ....) m 1832|
•| | _William HARRISON _______+
•| | | (1740 - 1782) m 1765
•| |_Nancy HARRISON _____|
•| (1772 - 1856) m 1798|
•| |_Sarah (Sally) CRAWFORD _+
•| (1748 - 1838) m 1765
•|
•|--Nancy MC_KINNON
•|
•| _________________________
•| |
•| _____________________|
•| | |
•| | |_________________________
•| |
•|_Jane SHARP _________|
• (1817 - 1861) m 1832|
• | _________________________
• | |
• |_____________________|
• |
• |_________________________


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

•INDEX
•[2789] ! Correspondence from Ruth Inskeep, 209 E. Chillicothe, Bellefontaine,
Oh., 43311:
From History of Hardin Co., by Warner, Beers, 1883: "The Hardin Co.
history is a reprint and an index has been added but I find it is a very
poor index. On page 571 (it wan't indexed!) is a short writeup for Uriah
Mc Kennan in Roundhead Twp. 'Uriah McKennan came here from Logan Co.,
Oh., in 1834 and settled on Sec. 17, where he died. He was twice
married; first to a Miss Inskeep, by whom he had John M., Margaret A.,
Benjamin W., Levi and Daniel F. His second wife was Jane Sharp, who
born him Nancy and Henry, there were some others, but they died
young . . .
"Nancy (Inskeep) McKinnon died April 4, 1832, Uriah married Jane Sharp,
December 9, 1832. " [12]

December 9, 1833: Statement of Colonel Samuel Newell, December 9, 1833, in The land We Love, May, 1867; King’s Mountain and its Heroes, History of the Battle of King’s Mountain, Lyman C. Draper, LL. D. page 385:

“Regarding the hanging of Francis Hopkins, the Tory bandit, …At the ensuing October session of the Virginia Legislature, an act was passed, at the instance of Gerneal Thomas Nelson, Jr., one of the signers of the Declatation of Independence, and afterwards Governor or the state, to fully meet the case, though it sould seem to have hardly been necessary. The act states, that while the measures may not have been “strictly warranted by law, it was justifiable from the immediate urgency and imminence of the danger”, hence, that ”William Campbell, Walter Crockett , and other liege subjects of the Commonwealth, aided by detachments of the militia and volunteers from the County of Washington and other parts of the frontiers, did by timely and effectual exertion, suppress and defeat such conspiracy,” and they were declared fully exonerated and indemnified for the act”

December 9, 1861: one of Albert's doctors, William Jenner, diagnosed typhoid fever.[13]

The entrance to the Confederate Cemetery at Rock Island


Confederate Cemetery, December 9, 1863 to June 11, 1865




Civil War prison camp on Arsenal

ARSENAL ISLAND -- On a crisp winter day, the Stars and Stripes lapped softly in the icy breeze coming off the Mississippi River. The sunlight bathed a field of uniform white stones marking the graves of American patriots -- graves many Americans don't know exist. It's not that soldiers in the graves are unknown. Each grave is identified. It isn't that they're historically insignificant. They fought and suffered valiantly.

They were just fighting for what many say was the wrong side.

The Civil War was long ago, and to northerners, far away. However, in 1863, the Union brought the war to a small, rocky island in the Mississippi.

Two days before Christmas, a train rustled into Rock Island and passed over a wooden bridge to the island where a landmark clock tower was being built, and unloaded 468 Confederate soldiers captured in battles near Chattanooga, Tenn.

They were the first prisoners of war incarcerated on the 12-acre Confederate prison camp on the northern side of the island. Before the camp closed 20 months later, 1,964 prisoners died and were buried in the cemetery on Rodman Avenue.

Dan Whiteman is director of the Rock Island Arsenal Museum and resident expert on the cemetery's history. He said it has a fascination for the 50,000 people who visit the site each year.

``The romance of the Confederacy has been, even for northerners, a rather persistent thing,'' Mr. Whiteman said. ``Americans love the underdog. It's interesting to walk through, but it is all the same. That's part of the drama of it, of course.''

The white marble gravestones, in rows of 100, contain only the soldier's name, regiment and grave number. Unlike the rounded stones in the National Cemetery down the road, the tops are pointed. Mr. Whiteman isn't sure why.

``The story among (Confederates) was it was to keep the Yankees from taking their ease'' atop the gravestones, Mr. Whiteman said.

The camp wasn't operating long before a cemetery was needed. The winter of 1863 was exceptionally cold, something Southern soldiers weren't accustomed to.

To make matters worse, prisoners on the first train were infected with smallpox, pneumonia and dysentery. Ninety-eight died within the month. Before spring, the Confederate cemetery held more than 900 graves. Nearly 30 Union guards also died.

The first prisoners to die were quickly buried adjacent to the prison grounds. Not long after, in February 1864, the bodies were moved to the present site to improve sanitary conditions and end the plague. The prisoner death rate then dropped considerably.

In June, the Secretary of War ordered prisoner rations cut in response to conditions Union soldiers faced in the infamous prisoner of war camp at Andersonville, Georgia.

Malnutrition contributed to the scurvy deaths of at least 12 prisoners, and while it remained a problem, the subsequent drop in the death rate belied rumors of starvation.

After the war, prison buildings were razed. Ornate stone officers' quarters were erected along what is now Terrace Drive.

In following years, the camp gained an allegedly unearned reputation as a place of suffering, torture and death. Many referred to it as the ``Andersonville of the North.'' The myth was fed by articles written by Confederate veterans and published in Confederate magazines.

In her epic Civil War novel, ``Gone with the Wind,'' author Margaret Mitchell noted these accounts in a paragraph which claims ``at no place were conditions worse than at Rock Island.'' The fictional character Ashley Wilkes was said to have been held at Rock Island, in the ``hellhole of the north.''

Although camp conditions certainly were not pleasant, many of those ``memories'' were proven false. ``The death rate here was not extraordinary,'' Mr. Whiteman said, ``compared to what the soldiers would have faced in the field.''

While nearly 2,000 Confederate soldiers died at Rock Island, more than 13,700 Union soldiers died in Andersonville.

The Union kept fairly good records of prisoners who came through the camp, which Mr. Whiteman said he refers to often, particularly when he's contacted by prisoners' ancestors, trying to trace their genealogy.

Sometimes, he can't help them, he said. ``They want to know if (their relative) was married, what was his wife's name,'' information that isn't in the records, he said.

Over the years, families of about a dozen of the dead Confederates moved their relatives' bodies from the cemetery to family plots. Most however, remain in the cemetery. On Memorial Day, a Confederate flag is placed at every grave and ``Taps'' is played.

Through it all, the American flag flies. For the Confederates, it's perhaps an insult to forever lie in the shadow of the flag they defied. However, Mr. Whiteman said it is there to claim them as our own, although they died swearing allegiance to another banner.

He said the men are honored as Americans who gave their lives for a cause they deemed sacred.

-- By Marcy Norton (January 22, 1998) [14]

Fri.; December 9, 1864

Came in off picket cold day

Received letter from G Hunter snow fell

At night 8 inches deep

William Harrison Goodlove (2nd great grandfather) Civil War Diary



December 9, 1888: Erna Gottlieb, born Edelheim, December 9, 1888

Resided Hamburg. Deportation: from Hamburg November 19, 1941, Minsk. Missing. Killed at Tuchinka? [15]



December 9, 1940

At the Gurs camp, in the lower Pyrenees, 17 deaths are reported for the day. A total of 470 deaths are counted in Gurs for the months of November and December, almost all from hungfer and cold. (Gurs was the first French internment camp, established in April 1939 to hold Spanish Republican soldiers fleeing into France after their defeat by Franco’s army.) Food, sanitary, and material conditions in most French camps are disastrous during this exceptionally cold winter.[16]





December 9, 1941: Enterprise was at war.



December 9, 1941: Over the course of two days over 24,000 are killed and “sardine packed” at Rumbula. [17]



December 9, 1941: Frieda Gottlieb, born Sondheimer, July 15, 1883 in Uttrichshausen. Resided Neuhof LK Fulda. Deportation: from Kassel, December 9, 1941. Osten (Last known whereabouts). Declared legally dead.[18]



December 9, 1941: Aron Gottlieb, born December 10, 1877 in Neuhof LK Fulda.

Born Neuhof. Deportation: from Kassel. December 9, 1941. Riga. Declared legally dead.[19]



Karoline Gottlieb, born December 10, 1875 in Neuhof. Resided Neuhof. Deportation: 1942, Ziel unknown[20]



Rina Gottlieb, born December 4, 1886 in Wonfurt. Resided Frankfurt a. M.. Deportation: 1942, Ziel unknown[21]



Fanny Gottlieb, born Nowenstern, March 10, 1903 in Wioska. Resided Bendorf

Deportation: 1942, Izbica. [22]



November 9, 1942: For nearly two months the transports had been interrupted. Eichmann and the SiPo-SD in France made a reckoning of the situation in December and of the picture for deportations for the beginning of 1943 (XXVc-184 of December 9, 1942; [23]



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[1] Proposed descendants of William Smith


[2] http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/AMREV-HESSIANS/1999-03/0922729801


[3] Lieutenant Rueffer, Enemy Views by Bruce Burgoyne, pgs. 244-245.


[4] JoAnn Naugle, January 24, 1985 and Marriage Index: Maryland, 1655-1850.


[5] http://washburnhill.freehomepage.com/custom3.html


[6] Articles of Confederation. (1781-1788). The United States Constitution was first drafted in 1775 by Benjamin Franklin and then a series of drafts by Silas Deane of CT and others until John Dickinson of PA in June 1776 drafted one that with alterations was presented to the colonies for approval. The Articles were not approved until March 1, 1781. The major hang-up was ownership of the land west of the Alleghenies. Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia, Connecticut, and Massachusetts all claimed their territory extended to the Mississippi River and beyond. Charters of PA, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, and Rhode Island limited their western borders to a few hundred miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean. The logjam was broken when Thomas Jefferson persuaded his fellow Virginians to forfeit their demands and to accept the west to be divided into states and brought into the United States on an equal basis as the original thirteen. The land speculators would be cut out of the deal—and the sale of the western land could be used to pay the war debts owed to other countries, war veterans, local suppliers, etc. Representatives to the Congress elected a new president each year with three Pennsylvanians serving—Thomas Mifflin, Arthur St. Clair, and Thomas McKean.

As might be expected, taxes were a central problem. Some representatives wanted taxes to be apportioned on a "per capita" basis. The southern states rejected a count that would include Blacks. With a war going on, the question of the slave trade and fugitive runaways was placed on the back-burner. The rebels needed money and fell to gathering it on the value of land and improvements. The slave problem would have to wait.

The Confederation had a unicameral congress with each state having one vote. Delegates were elected by the state legislatures. People and trade could move across state lines without interference. All states needed to agree to important actions; such as, declaring war, making treaties, introduction of amendments—with simple majorities required of lesser items. Wartime problems of gaining acceptance of foreign countries and borrowing money persuaded many that a loose confederation could not satisfy the needs of a people determined to be an equal among the nations of the world.

The Articles were in effect from 1781 to 1787 when they were rejected in favor of a new Constitution for the United States.

http://www.thelittlelist.net/abetoawl.htm#abenaki


[7] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/south-carolina-approves-new-constitution


[8] Wikipedia


[9] (Source: Wheeling, An Illustrated History, by Doug Featherling, 1947.)




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


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


[12] http://jonathanpaul.org/silvey/graham/d0001/g0000115.html


[13] Wikipedia




[14] http://www.qconline.com/progress98/places/prfedcem.html


[15] [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.


[16] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 18.


[17] Nazi Collaborators, MIL, Hitlers’ Executioner, 11/8/2011.


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


[19] [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,.


[20] [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,.


[21] [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,.




[22] [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,.


[23] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 360-361.

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