Wednesday, December 11, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, December 11, 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 11, 1753. — George Washington visits Fort Le Boeuf. [1] (Grand nephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed)

Connoquenessing Creek and pond formed by creek. PA 528 (Prospect Road), Butler County. Photos by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged creek and enlarged pond.

The Indian word connoquenessing has the meaning of “a long way straight.” When George Washington and Christopher Gist returned from their trip to Fort Le Boeuf in the winter of 1753-54 one of the creeks they crossed was this one. [2]





December 11, 1770



Lord Dunmore was appointed Governor of the Virginia Colony on December 11, 1770. He left the governorship of the New York Colony, because of his desire to take up selected lands in western New York, with the approval of Sir William Johnson, the Indian agent. The British government ordered Lord Dunmore not to erect any more western counties. But Washington and others kept importuning him to grant patents for the lands which he and William Crawford had selected.



Colonel Thomas Bullit became on of the most interesting figures in this movement, because of his survey of lands down the Ohio Valley. He was an officer in the Forbes army of 1758, and while guarding convoys of the traders along the Forbes Road, suffered his defeat at the hands of the Indians three miles east of Ligonier on May 23, 1759. He afterwards secured a surveyor’s commission from William and Mary College, at Williamsburg, and started marking out lands in the Ohio Valley. Some of his surveys were questioned. The famed William Crawford (6th great grandfather) also received a commission from the same college, and he interested himself mostly in the lands which he had selected for Washington.



John Murray, Earl of Dunmore, otherwise known as Lord Dunmore, was born in Scotland in 1732, and died in England in 1809. He was descended on the female side from the royal Stuarts. When he was appointed Governor of New York in 1770, his salary was to be paid from a duty on tea, but within the next year he was appointed into the governmental and legal life of old Westmoreland County. He is reputed to have visited western Pennsylvania at least three times. He first came in 1773, when Washington was to have accompanied him to the plantation of Justice Crawford (at present Connellsville). Washington was detained by the death of one of the Custis children. In the spring of 1774 Washington again postponed a contemplated visit with Dunmore, and again failed to accompany him. Lord Dunmore visited Pittsburgh and “Fort Dunmore” for the last time in February 1775. Despite his presiding as a justice in the Pennsylvania court at Hannastown, Crawford was all the while in touch with Dunmore, up until at least the April term, 1774, when Connolly appeared at Hannastown. [3]









EXTRACT FROM A SPEECH DELIVERED TO BRIG. GEN. MCLEAN BY



CHIEFS OF THE Six NATIONS, DECember 11, 1782.]

“We have hitherto, in general, refrained from retaliating their [the Amencans’] cruelties, except in the instance of Colonel Crawford, the principal agent in the murder of the Moravians, and he was burned with justice and accord­ing to our custom.”[4]



December 11, 1820: See Pathkiller to AJ, December 11, 1820, Speaker et al. to AJ, January 3 and 8; and Report of meeting with Cherokee Indians (containing Turtle Fields’s explanation), January 18. The Fields, George (d. 1849) and Turtle, were mixed-blood brothers, both of whom fought under Jackson in the Creek War. Turtle became an itinerant Methodist preacher in Alabama and Tennessee before moving to Arkansas in 1819. Of the other Creek Path conspirators, all but Wososey were found in Alabama by the 1835 census. Young Wolf and Speaker, both full blood Cherokees, lived at Turkey Town and in Blount County, respectively. Archibald Cambell (d. 1859), like Turtle a Methodist exhorter, served on the Cherokee executive council in the 1840s. Knight Killer lived a t Wills Valley; Sperncer, like Campbell, at Creek Path. John Thompson, a white married into the Cherokee Nation, was an interpreter. Wososey and Speaker were considered to be supporters of the so-called “White Path Rebellion,” an anti-missionary movement in 1827.




December 11, 1823: Georgia senate passed resolutions endorsing William H. Crawford (7th cousin 7x removed) for President; house concurred December 13. [5]



December 11, 1836: JOAB FRANKLIN CRAWFORD,(3rd cousin 5x removed) b. December 11, 1836, Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina; d. May 27, 1901, Union Gap, Georgia.[6]



December 11, 1837

State of Ohio, Adams County.

Personally appeared before me one of the asociate Judges of the County and State aforesaid Jesse Ely and acknowledged the signing and sealing of the within Power of Attorney to be his Act and deed for the purposes tharin named. Given under my hand and seal this 11th day of Dec. 1837.

D. C. Vance (2nd cousin 7x removed) (SEAL)

Associate Judge of A. C.[7]

State of Ohio, Adams County.

I Joseph Darlington Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for the County aforesaid do hereby Certify that the lion: David C. Vance was on the 11th day of June 1837 (June 11) & on December 11, 1837 the days on which he signed the two certificates above, and still is an associate Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in and for the County aforesaid duly Commissioned & quali­fied and that full faith H credit are due to his said certificates and all other official acts by him done as well in Courts of Justice thereout.

In Testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the said Court at West Union this 6th day of January in the year of our Lord and in the 35th year of this State.



Joseph Darlington Clk. A. C.[8]





December 11, 1858: Charles Marcus STEPHENSON (half 3rd cousin 5x removed). Born on February 4, 1842 in Howard County, Missouri. Charles Marcus died in Mendon, Chariton County, Missouri on December 2, 1927; he was 85.



On October 22, 1882 when Charles Marcus was 40, he married Maggie HOLMES, in St. Charles, Missouri. Born on December 11, 1858 in Saline County, Missouri. Maggie died in Chariton County, Missouri on August 7, 1942; she was 83. Was on the census for 52 Years Old in 1910.



They had the following children:

i. William C. Born in 1887.

ii. S. E. Born in 1890.

iii. Charles B. Born in 1896.

iv. Laura E. [9]



Sun. December 11, 1864

Cloudy and cold had sndy[10] inspection

A lonesome day wrote a letter to
GC Hunter very cold and windy night

William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary



December 11, 1889: Joe Bervin Pickelsimer (8th cousin 3x removed) b. December 11, 1889 / d. July 28, 1890).[11]



December 11, 1890

W. H. Goodlove (2nd great grandfather), not to be outdone by his neighbors, run a few of his steers into a car last Tuesday and started them for Chicago. They were dandies and looked as though they might be going to the fat stock show, instead of to slaughter.[12]



1891

Blood libel in Xanten, Germany.[13]



1891

Expulsion of 20,000 Jews from Moscow, Russia. The Congress of the United States eases immigration restrictions for Jews from the Russian Empire. (Webster-Campster report).

1891

[14]
[15]



December 11, 1917: This was the first time Christians had ruled Jerusalem since the days of the Crusaders. While there were three Jewish legions fighting with the British forces, the British were considered a Christian nation by the Moslems of the Middle East. The general that led the forces was General Edmund Allenby. As part of his campaign, leaflets were dropped by plane on the inhabitants of Jerusalem. These leaflets were printed in Arabic telling them to surrender, and they were signed by General Allenby. In Arabic, his name could be misread as “Allah Nebi” which means a prophet of Allah, putting great fear into the hears of those who thought to defy this command.[16]

Allenby was a devout Christian and it is said he always kept the Bibl at his bedside. Out of respect for the city, he dismounted his horse as he approached the Jaffa Gate, entered Jerusalem on foot, and declared “We have returned to you!” This was on December 11, 1917, and British rule lasted until 1948, when Israel became a sovereign nation.[17]



1918: BUCK CREEK PARISH “BUCKLES RIGHT IN” At the beginning it was decided to hold morning and evening services, although evening services were very difficult for farmers to attend, because it was necessary for them to be home in the evening in order to take care of their stock and do their “chores,” but owing to splendid co-operation of the members and an earnest endeavor to make both service bright and attractive there were good congregations.

As soon as the pastor was settled, a program for the year was outlined. On the basis of such a program the work of the parish was always carried on.

In the yearly program of Buck Creek Church there was always considerable attention given to farm management and rural education. The pastor of Buck Creek Church believed that country ministers must interest themselves in these things if they would win men in the “land of the Lean Land.”

He knew that no church could thrive in a nonproductive section or in a community where the labor income was small. He sought out the aid which the State Agricultural College gives so gladly to any pastor to bring information proactively without cost to his people in silo construction, soil fertility, animal husbandry, corn testing, dairying, fruit raising, poultry raising, good roads, rural health and sanitation and subjects that interest the people of rural America.

So interested did the men of Buck Creek Church become, that finally a Men’s Adult Bible Class was organized. In addition to having a fine gathering of men every Sunday the3y were responsible for a good social time once every month. The most constructive piece of work these men did was to finance the buying of sixteen acres of land adjoining the church, with a small house and farm building upon it.

They decided to wreck the old house, and build in its place a fine six room modern home which should be the new parsonage. Sometimes fifteen teams a day were excavating and grubbing until they wrought a perfect transformation. The parsonage and land cost about $5,000, for which these men stood good until such time as the people could pay for it.

About a year afterward it was decided to pay the debt of $5,000. The pastor did a little preliminary work in getting subscriptions. He secured the services of President Charles W. Flint of Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa, who had charge of finances. President Flint gave a very impressive sermon at Buck Creek Church.

At this service $5,000 was raised in thirty minutes. This paid for the sixteen acres of land and the new home, besides providing athletic grounds and piece of land with timber, pasture and orchards upon it, and an endowment for the church.

Surely there never was a group of more progressive, resourceful and helpful men! If only the men in the rural sections of America would get under the burdens of the church, what a mighty impetus it would be for the regeneration of rural life and the rejuvenation of the villages all over the land. There are always those who will say it cannot be done. But the pastor of Buck Creek Church would reply to such a man.



“There are thousands to tell you it cannot be done;

There are thousands to prophesy failure;

There are thousands to count over, one by one.

The dangers that wait to assail you;

But just buckle in with a bit of a grin, Then take off your coat and go to it;

Just start in to sing as you tackle the thing

That ‘cannot be done,’

And You’ll Do it!”



For five years, the men and women and young people and the pastor had “just buckled right in” to the business of rejuvenating Buck Creek Church. During those five years the congregations grew steadily with the modern program. A handful of faithful ones no longer made up the Buck Creek congregation..



In 1870 the church had 60 members on the roll.

In 1912 the church had 67 members on the roll, an increase of 7 in 42 years.

From 1912 to 1914 the church had 87 members on the roll, an increase of 20 in 2 years (with a modern program and nonresident pastor).

From 1914 to 1918 the church had 176 members on the roll, an increase of 89 in 4 years (with a modern program and resident pastor).

During these for years, 1914-1918, the church received 137 new members. Fifteen were removed by death and 33 by transfer, making a net increase of 89.



Sunday School Pupils



1870…..30

1912…..52

1913…..85

1914….100

1915…120

1916…140

1917…210

1918…230



Epworth League Members

1912…..10

1914…. 25

1915….30

1916….36

1917…. 50

1918….50



Ministerial Support and Benevolences



1912…350 100

1913…400 120

1914…1400 200

1915…1520 307

1916…1561 300

1917…1586 305

1918…1580 403



Church Property Value



1912…$4000

1919…$9000



For some time there was no County Agent at Buck Creek. But the community organized a team of men who toured the county giving demonstrations for canning fruits, vegetables and meats, with the result that in every township a Canning Club was organized and the cry, “Save Food,” was heard far and near.

Everywhere these men went they constantly urged the men to get behind the proposition of securing a County Agent. Eventually the whole county stood behind the idea, and today the county has its own County Agent.

Who can estimate the good that a rural community derives from these disciples of better agriculture. Our government has given every assistance possible in helping the people of rural America. Through the Department of Agriculture it has sent out eight seven teams to demonstrate scientific agriculture and has appropriated $600,000,000 in order to benefit the farmer generally.

The Department of Education offers every facility adequately to educate the children of rural America so that conditions in country communities have changed very much for the better. County Agents are sent to the farmer’s very door, assisting him to combat the pests that ravage his crops.

The religious life of rural communities, also, has begun to feel an awakening. All over the country training conferences and rural clinics have been conducted, until today some of our best trained men have heard the “call of the country” and are dedicating their lives to work among the people in these neglected fields and there are signs of a real renaissance in the interests of country life.

The story of Buck Creek Church is only an example of what is happening throughout the country. The Church must enter into the activities of the times. It must serve the whole man, body, mind and spirit. There can be, however, no spiritual leadership without spiritual culture.

One of the reasons for the success of the Buck Creek Church program was the constant emphasis upon evangelism. The church must be alert and efficient to upbuild the individual in strength of character, for the chief function of the church is to transform and encourage social justice in all its activities. It must emphasize the consecration of personality to insure this leadership for the future. There must also be a consecration of purposes in order to reconstruct the rural churches of America, to “fill God’s Hose!”

Such consecration of purpose, such alertness in its activities the pastor of Buck Creek Church has ever found in his parish. This story is a tribute to the splendid cooperation of his little rural congregation, and passes the results of their work in filling God’s House on to you, that you may recognize in them the stuff that is the backbone of the nation, rural America.[18]

,

1918

Influenza out break kills 50 to 100 million worldwide.[19] The “Spanish Flu” kills a half million in the United States.[20]



December 11, 1919: Any attempt to make Buck Creek a still larger place territorially through a Methodist led effort to consolidate the rural schools of the area would entail significant social costs. The key question for members of the Buck Creek Churchy was whether the community and educational benefits of consolidation outweighed the costs of at least a fourfold increase in school property taxes and further destruction of neighborhood relations with Catholic families in the area. Indeed, some landowners in the area had to do some careful calculations to be sure that the combination of higher tax rates, rapidly inflating land values, and higher costs of living would not push them into bankruptcy. Owner operators who had bought land recently and were carrying high debt loads were in an especially precarious position.[21]

For most Catholics, the question of whether the benefits of consolidation outweighed the costs was not worth considering. Catholic parents saw few, if any, benefits of any consolidation proposal that ensured Methodist hegemony over the education of their children. For the previous five years they had witnessed their exclusion from much of the social life of the Buck Creek community and their growing marginalization in its political and economic affairs. In the politics of place practiced in Union ‘Township, and increasingly in the rest of Delaware County as well, differences in religion were already politicized. Efforts to revitalize rural life in the county structured around the rural or village church practically guaranteed this result.

Although Grant was Chalice’s protégé, he appears not to have been the spell binding preacher his mentor was. Aided by a quick wit, a warm, outgoing personality, and relative youth (approximately thirty five years of age), he was, however, equally effective as a community organizer. He won over the young adults in the church almost immediately and set about organizing them into a large, but still cohesive and informed cadre to convince the more recalcitrant Buck Creekers of the merits of rural school consolidation.

Key members of the group included Roy Dighton, Rudolph Kragenbrink, C.R. “Clell” Moulton, Harry B. Sill, Byron “Binney” Smith, Harold “Happy” Stead, Clyde Thompson, Glen Thompson, Thomas Wilson, and Warren Winch (Great granduncle); but there were also some strong supporters of consolidation among the older generation, including Cliff Reed, James A. Wilson, and Harold McBride. [22]



1920: In 1920 Roman Catholics made up 36 percent of the American religious population; and many Protestants were convinced that the papacy was closer than ever to establishing dominance in the United States.[23]



1920 : Rabbi Yisrael Meir HaKohen Kagan (the Chofetz Chaim)- Leader of European Jewry, promoted Temple studies.[24]

1920: Again in Manchuria, about 60,000 people die of Plague.[25]

December 11, 1928: After lengthy deliberation, a White Paper was made public on December 11, 1928 in favour of the status quo.[59][26]



December 11, 1936: Edward VIII (21st cousin 1x removed)was King of the United Kingdom and British Dominions, and Emperor of India, for less than a year – from January 20, 1936 until December 11, 1936 – making him one of the shortest reigning monarchs in the history of Britain and the Commonwealth. Edward VIII didn’t even get chance to be crowned King!

His reign was not cut short by his death but by his love for Mrs Wallis Simpson, an American divorcee. Edward’s ministers (both at home and in the Dominions) opposed the marriage and rather than cause the Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin, to resign over it and cause a general election, Edward decided to abdicate so that he could marry Mrs Simpson.

After his abdication, Edward became Prince Edward and was made the Duke of Windsor on the March 8, 1937.

Read more: http://www.victoriafiles.com/resources/british-history-timelines/house-of-windsor/#ixzz2N60AAOXR[27]

December 11, 1936: George VI became King of the United Kingdom and the Dominions on 11th December 1936 after the abdication of his older brother Edward VIII. George was the first Head of the Commonwealth, the last King of Ireland and the last Emperor of India.

George VI (Husband of the 9th cousin 2x re)moved married Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (9th cousin 2x removed) in 1923, before he was King, and the couple had two daughters – Princess Elizabeth (the future Queen Elizabeth II) (10th cousin 1x removed)and Princess Margaret. (10th cousin 1x removed)

George VI’s reign is known for:-
•The External Relations Act which was passed by the Irish Parliament to remove the UK monarch from power in Ireland.
•World War II
•The decline of the power of the British Empire as the US and Soviet Union grew in power.

Princess Elizabeth had to take on royal duties as her father’s health deteriorated due to the stress of war and his heavy smoking. George VI died from a coronary thrombosis on 6th February 1952 at Sandringham House in Norfolk. After his funeral, he was interred in St George’s Chapel, Windsor, where he was joined in 2002 by his wife, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. The ashes of his daughter, Princess Margaret, were also interred in the Chapel after her death in 2002.

Read more: http://www.victoriafiles.com/resources/british-history-timelines/house-of-windsor/#ixzz2N62LCRAa[28]

1937- Orde Wingate forms "night squads" for Jewish self-defense. [29]

1937-1938: Peel and Woodhead commissions recommend partitioning Palestine into a small Jewish state and a large Arab one.[30] According to the Peel Commission (British, 1937): “The Arab charge that the Jews have obtained too large a proportion of good land cannot be maintained. Much of the land now carrying orange groves was sand dunes or swamp and uncultivated when it was purchased.”[31]

1937-1939: Between 1937 and 1939 Jews build 54 "stockade and watchtower" (Homa Umigdal) settlements to circumvent British regulations against new settlements, and bring tens of thousands of illegal immigrants into Palestine (Aliya Bet).[32]

December 11, 1941



57

William Banks checks the pocketbook of Gladys Newman of Denver, Colo., before permitting her to enter the Senate Gallery to witness the passage by the Senate of the declaration of war on Germany and Italy, December 11, 1941. (AP Photo) #

December 11, 1941: The bombing raids - launched from Roi, in the Kwajalein atoll some 700 miles south - continued for the next three days, taking their toll on the island's defenders, and grinding the Marine's fighter squadron down to four flyable planes. With these planes, six 5-inch and twelve 3-inch anti-aircraft guns, the Marines greeted the Japanese landing force that appeared early December 11. (Dates for events on Wake are localized to Wake, which is west of the International Date Line.)

The invasion force consisted of three light cruisers, six destroyers and two transports carrying an Imperial Marine detachment, under the command of Rear Admiral Kaijou Sadamichi. Approaching from the south, the cruisers and destroyers began shelling the atoll at 0522 that morning. A little more than forty minutes later the force had approached to within 2,500 yards of Wake, and the transports were moving in, closely escorted by the destroyers. Having held their fire during the Japanese bombardment, at 0610 the Marine gunners came to life.

On Peacock Point - the southern tip of Wake - Lieutenant Clarence Barninger's battery engaged Kajioka's flagship, the cruiser Yubari, and quickly scored four direct hits. Sergeant Henry Bedell's gunners on Peale island wasted just two rounds finding their range, and then tore into the destroyer Hayate, which exploded, broke in two and sank. Jubilant over their unexpected success, Bedell's crew stopped firing and broke into celebration, until Bedell's outraged roar restored discipline.

Resuming fire, Bedell's battery, and other gunners on Peale, scored hits on the other three destroyers, and set one of the transports on fire. With the invasion force in disarray, the four Grumman fighters joined the fray: one of the fighters, strafing the destroyer Kisaragi, detonated the depth charges on the destroyer's aft deck, mortally wounding the ship.

Kajioka, his own flagship already retiring, called off the assault. The 450 Marines on Wake thus earned the noble distinction of being the only force in the entire war to defeat an amphibious assault.[33]

While the Marines on Wake were turning back Kajioka's assault, Bill Halsey and Enterprise were patrolling north and west of Hawaii, as they would for much of the first weeks of the war. At lunch, Halsey addressed the men of Enterprise's air group. While no record exists of what Halsey said, one pilot's impression is telling: "The Japs had better look out for that man."



Just a few hours later, the airmen had lent substance to this observation. In three separate incidents, patrolling Enterprise pilots found Japanese submarines running on the surface. While two of the subs escaped - one likely damaged - the third sub, I-70, didn't. It choose to remain surfaced and fight it out with Lt. C. E. Dickinson's Dauntless. Dickinson scored a near miss which apparently sprung the sub's hull, as the sub slowed, settled and sunk, leaving behind a oil slick on the surface.

After the first assault on Wake was repelled, Kimmel's staff in Pearl Harbor formulated plans for relieving the island. The plans were complicated by the fact that the forces left afloat were widely scattered. The carrier Lexington and Task Force 11 were far southwest of Wake, Saratoga and Task Force 16 were approaching Hawaii from the west coast, and Enterprise's Task Force 8 was the only naval force near Hawaii. With the political fallout from the Pearl Harbor weighing more heavily on Kimmel day by day, he ordered the seaplane tender Tangier to Wake, with the 4th Marine Defense Battalion embarked.



December 11, 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.)[34]



November 11, 1954: Lee Olie STEPHENSON. Born on July 12, 1882 in Chariton County, Missouri. Lee Olie died in Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri on August 13, 1964; she was 82. Buried in McCullough Cemetery, Triplett, Missouri.



On November 1, 1899 when Lee Olie was 17, she married Frank Tipton KING, son of John Wesley KING & Mary Elizabeth FERRELL. Born on April 4, 1875. Frank Tipton died on December 11, 1954; he was 79. Buried in McCullough Cemetery, Triplett, Missouri.



They had the following children:

i. Norma Elsworth (1914-1932)

ii. Lucy May (1899-1918)

iii. Emory Everett (1908-1960)

iv. William Earl (1912-1994)

v. Elizabeth (1905-1905)

vi. Charles William (1911-1911)

vii. Augusta Pear (1917-)[35]



December 11, 1968


688 [36]



December 11, 1968: His Highness Sheikh Sabah al-Salim al-Sabah, Emir of the State of Kuwait with LBJ.





1969: Hurrican Camille unleashes 190 mph wind gusts, strongest in US history.[37]

December 11, 1972: To San Diego, where Scamp remained for the remainder of the year. [38]



December 11, 1978: In Iran, a further demonstration, estimated at the same size as on the previous day, took place in Tehran. In Isfahan crowds attacked the headquarters of SAVAK, the secret police, and five people were killed by troops fire; all the cinemas in the city were reported to have been burned down.[39]

December 11, 1980: Jimmy Carter signs Superfund Bill to clean up toxic waste dumps.[40]



December 11, 2010


Francis Gottlob (1805)





============================================


Joseph Godlove

Adam Godlove (1818)







============================================




Francis Godlove (1835)





============================================




Conrad Goodlove (1824)







============================================




Conrad Goodlove (1838)











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[1] http://www.archive.org/stream/darfortduquesnef00daug/darfortduquesnef00daug_djvu.txt


[2] http://www.thelittlelist.net/coatocus.htm


[3] Annals of Southwestern ‘Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, A. M. 1939, pgs. 42-43.


[4] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield, pages


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


[6] Crawford Coat of Arms


From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U.; Emahiser, 1969, p 245-246.


[8] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U.; Emahiser, 1969, p 246.


[9] www.frontierfolk.net/ramsha_research/families/Stephenson.rtf


[10] sunday


[11] Proposed descendants of William Smythe


[12] Winton Goodlove papers.


[13] www.wikipedia.org


[14] Art Museum in Austin, TX. February 11, 2012


[15] Art Museum in Austin, TX. February 11, 2012


[16] 365 Fascinating facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner Jr.


[17] 365 Fascinating facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner Jr.


[18] Buck Creek Parish, The Department of Rural Work, The Board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1919.


[19] History Center, Pandemics, John Barry. 07-09-2006


[20]Wells Fargo Insurance.5/3/2009


[21] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 179.


[22] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 179-180.


[23] The Ku Klux Klan in the Southwest, by Charles C. Alexander, 1969, page 14.


[24] www.cohen-levi.org


[25] http://www.twoop.com/medicine/archives/2005/10/bubonic_plague.html


[26] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini#World_War_I


[27] http://www.victoriafiles.com/resources/british-history-timelines/house-of-windsor/


[28] http://www.victoriafiles.com/resources/british-history-timelines/house-of-windsor/


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


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


[31] 365 Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr.


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


[33] http://www.cv6.org/1941/wake/wake.htm


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


[35] www.frontierfolk.net/ramsha_research/families/Stephenson.rtf


[36] LBJ Presidential Library, Austin TX. February 11, 2012


[37] Underwater Universe, H2, 6/1/2009




[38] This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.Skipjack-class submarine:


•Skipjack
•Scamp
•Scorpion
•Sculpin
•Shark
•Snook












[39] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 504


[40] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 499.

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