Monday, December 16, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, December 16, 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), Jefferson, 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, ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson,.



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 1648: Andrew HARRISON (8th great grandfather)

Dec 1648 - ABT 1718

Repository ID Number: I1018



◾RESIDENCE: London, ENG;Essex Co; King & Queen Co;Caroline Co. VA
◾BIRTH: December 1648, London ENG To Essex Co., VA, [S94] [S9]
◾BIRTH: December 30, 1648, St. Giles Without Cripplegate Pa., London, Middlesex Co., ENG [S166]
◾DEATH: ABT 1718, Caroline Co. VA (Will)
◾CHRISTENING: January 7, 1648, St. Giles Cripplegate, London, Middlesex Co., ENG [S166]
◾RESOURCES: See: [S9] [S14] [S94] [S155] [S438] [S461] [S1023] [S1359]

Father: Richard HARRISON



Family 1 : Elizabeth PALMER

§ MARRIAGE: April 22, 1669, St. Clement Danes, ENG

1. John HARRISON

Family 2 : Elinor LONG ELLIOTT

§ MARRIAGE: 1684, Virginia [S419]

1. + Andrew HARRISON Jr

2. + Elizabeth HARRISON

3. + Margaret HARRISON

4. + William HARRISON SR.

Notes

Ancestry fairly well documented in Cripplegate circumstantial evidence of neighbors and friends in VA compared to Cripplegate ENG were used to conclude that Andrew who died 1718 in Essex Co., VA was in fact the son of Andrew and Margaret Barber of Cripplegate. This is in conflict with Worth S. Ray but seems quite plausible.

Andrew had patents on Golden Vale Creek, St. Mary's Parish, Essex Co. VA as early as 1684. He supposedly was the brother of Judge James Harrison of Old Rappahannock Co. In 1704 he was granted land southwest of Golden Vale on the Mattaponi River in King and Queen Co. VA. He died testate in 1718 and named four children in his will. [1]

The Will OF ANDREW HARRISON of St Mary ‘a Parish, Essex County,

Virginia, was dated April 28, 1718; proved in Essex’ County Court,

November 18, 1718, December 16, 1718 and March 17, 1718 (1718-19).



“Being grown very aged. & at this time, sick & weak in body, but in perfect sense and memory—” After the usual expressions of Christian faith in the atonement and resurrection, and the committal of his body to the ground at the discretion of his executors, provision? for the payment of. debts and funeral charges, he disposed of his estate as follows: Wife, Eleanor Harrison is named as executrix; son Andrew Harrison, and son-in-law. Gabriel Long are named as trustees and overseers to assist her in carrying out the provisions of the will; he ratifies former gifts of land to three of his children, viz, son William Harrison, 270. acres; son Andrew Harrison. 200 acres, and daughter Elizabetli, 200 acres, “all of which

lands, they are now possessed, and which I now give to them & theirs forever.’? * lie refers to having put into the hands Of William Stanard, bills of exchange for Sixty five pounds, twelve shillings and Six pence, sterling, with which said Stanard is to buy two negroes for said Harrison; the use of these two negroes,. or that money, to testator’s wife~ during life or widowhood, and after her decease, the negroes or the money to daughter Margaret Long ‘a three youngest sons, viz: Richard; Gabriel, and: William (Long), to be given and equally divided between them and their heirs as soon as they are 21 years old. * If wife dies before either of the three mentioned Long children come of age, then testator’s son in law, Gabriel Long, to have use thereof, until that ~specified time, and for the use’’. thereof, he is to give the said three Long children ‘school­ing, that is to teach them to read & write & cast aecount4’~ daughter

Margaret Long, after the death of testator’s wife, a servant boy named

Richard Bradley, “till he comes of age of one & twenty years”; also to

Margaret, at the time specified, a “featherbed, bolster, pillow, rug and blankets”; son William, after decease of testator’s wife, a “ feather bed, bedstead, and all furniture belonging thereto, my own chest and all my wearing apparel and the cloth which I have to make ~my clothing, and my riding saddle”; “to my son William” after the decease of the testa­tor ‘s wife, an “oval table”, a “large iron pot”; to son Andrew, after the decease of testator’s wife, “a feather bed, bolster, pillows, and furni­ture belonging thereto; a large iron pot;” residue of estate, personal & movable, after wife’s death, to be equally divided among testator ‘s four children, Viz: “William, Andrew, Elizabeth, and Margaret “.

- His

Witnesses: (Signed) Andrew A. II. Harrison

Mark

John Ellitt

William-X-Davison

Mary-X~Davison[2]



December 16, 1772 George Washington Journal: (grandnephew of the 1st cousin 10x removed))Valentine Crawford (6th great granduncle) who came yesterday went away today.

December 16, 1773; George Washington Journal: Mr. Val Crawford who came yesterday and went this day.[3]




Old South Church, Boston.[4]

December 16, 1773
The deadline was midnight, December 16. That day, some 7,000 citizens came to Old South, spilling out into the surrounding streets. Samuel Adams chaired the meeting, and a delegation was sent to Governor Huchinson’s country estate with a final plea.
At a quarter to six, the delegation returned. Hutchinson had once again refused. Adams asked a few questions; then he said, resignedly, “Gentlemen, this meeting can do nothing more to save the country.”
Adams was not accepting defeat; he was giving a signal.
Nearly a hundred men, disguised as Mohawk Indians, suddenly appeared outside the meeting house doors. Amidst war whoops, the cry “To the wharves!” rang out. “Boston Harbour a teapot tonight!” The “Indians”, followed by 2,000 spectators, rushed down to Griffin’s Wharf.
The protest over tea was costly. The East India Company’s destroyed cargo was valued at 45 times the price of Paul Rever’s sevenroom house.
Destroyed were 342 chests, half-chests, and quarter chests of tea, wighing 92, 626 pounds in all, more than 46 tons of tea leaves, enough to make 18,523,200 cups! And tea was a luxery then. TheEast India Company’s losses mounted to L9,659; today the ruined tea would cost about a million dollars in the grocery![5]
Parliament retaliated by taking away Boston’s self-government and even its livelihood, the port. The troops returned, and soon colonists began to prepare for the inevitable war.[6]

What came to be known as the Boston Tea Party would lead to the war of American independence. Many scholars believe that Mason’s were deaply involved in the Tea Party. Brothers were known to have met regularly at the Green Dragon Tavern where it was more than likely where the plot was hatched. Their former Lodge Master was Paul Revere, an artist and patriot that made an engraving of the Boston Massacre.[7]
Another brother was Joseph Warren, who died in the Battle of Bunker Hill.[8]

[9]

After the Tea Party, British officials banned town meetings and restricted the use of Faneuil Hall. The Cradle of Liberty became a barracks for troops, then a theatre for their amusement. One performace of a farce written by General Burgoyune was rudely interrupted by the news of an American attack. All of the actors and most of the audience rushed out to take their posts.[10]

[11]

Uniforms used by “The Ancients” at Faneuil Hall, in Boston.

The Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, or Ancients, as they are called, are America’s first and oldest militia organization. Founded in 1637 to protect the colony against Indian attack, they were a “School for Officers and a Nursery for Soldiers”. Members of the Company dumped tea into Boston Harbor and fought at Bunker Hill; indeed, they have fought in every American war since the 17th century. As a unit, however, their only service was with Myles Standish in a 1645 skirmish with native Americans, and again in Say’s Rebellion in 1787.[12]

The Boston Tea Party the night of December 16, 1773, when Samuel Adams and other "Sons of Liberty" dressed as Mohawks, boarded ships in the harbor and threw the tea overboard, southwest PA was on the side of the revolutionists. This action and the reaction of the British Parliament, was greeted by Pittsburghers with a local ban on the drinking of tea. Some historians cite Connolly’s actions following this hostile action against the Crown together with several minor skirmishes back and forth between settlers and Indians to justify Dunmore’s War in 1774. [13]

No. 19.—William CRAWFORD (6th great grandfather) TO George WASHINGTON.

[No date.[14]]

SIR:—I should be glad to know how matters were settled at Fredericksburg, at the last meeting of the officers in regard to our lands under his Majesty’s proclamation. You may depend on my taking every step in my power to finish the soldiers’ land this fall and winter. As soon as any can be finished, it shall be sent to you by time hand of some person who shall bring it to you immediately. I waited on Colonel Mason on my return home, and have agreed with him to survey time Ohio land as soon as the land for the soldiers is done.

I am indebted to Mr. Hite for some goods had last spring of him before I went down the river, and I am obliged to give him an order on you for some money, which I hope you will pay as soon as you get it in your hands. Any news you may hear toward the new government that may concern me, I should be glad to hear as soon as convenient. Your lands on Chartier’s are safe yet; but how long they may continue so, I do not know, as the people that were going to settle on them at the time we come down were driven off, but attempted to return in the spring.

I shall settle some man on them if possible, and hope by that means to secure them. Everything in my power shall be done. They must be stronger than I and my party are if they take them. I have agreed to pay twenty pounds to Mr. Stephenson’s (Hugh Stephenson, half 6th great granduncle) estate from you, which I should be obliged to you for. I am, etc.[15]

December 16, 1811



George Rogers Clark, Daniel Boone and Simon Kenton all played a part in the history of Clark County. So did the great chief Tecumseh. (Ref. 9.3) According to Allan Eckert in pages 537-543 of the “Frontiersmen,” Tecumseh had predicted two signs that were to be the “signs” of his followers to go to battle against the whites. One was a meteor across the heavens and another was to be an earthquake. (Page 537-543-Ref 9.31) On December 16, 1811, an earthquake shook the entire mid-section of North America exactly as predicted. It continued off and on for two days, the second on January 23, the third on January 27 and the worst, the fourth, on February 13, 1811, according to Allan Eckert’s narrative. It would have been the next August that Conrad Goodlove (3rd great grandfather) and William McKinnon (1st cousin 3x removed) would have entered the war; Conrad would have felt the earthquake tremors. [16]

100_0873[17]

Saul Henkel, married Conrad and Caty in 1819.

December 16, 1811: The unusual seismic activity began at about 2 a.m. on December 16, 1811, when a strong tremor rocked the New Madrid region. The city of New Madrid, located near the Mississippi River in present-day Arkansas, had about 1,000 residents at the time, mostly farmers, hunters and fur trappers. At 7:15 a.m., an even more powerful quake erupted, now estimated to have had a magnitude of 8.6. This tremor literally knocked people off their feet and many people experienced nausea from the extensive rolling of the earth. Given that the area was sparsely populated and there weren't many multi-story structures, the death toll was relatively low. However, the quake did cause landslides that destroyed several communities, including Little Prairie, Missouri.

The earthquake also caused fissures--some as much as several hundred feet long--to open on the earth's surface. Large trees were snapped in two. Sulfur leaked out from underground pockets and river banks vanished, flooding thousands of acres of forests. [18]

December 16, 1824: MARY MARGARET CRAWFORD, b. December 16, 1824; d. July 19, 1845. [19]



December 16, 1824

Page 12[20]


December 16, 1839: Prince Albert Honors(Husband of the 18th cousin 4x removed)

: British Empire KG: Knight of the Garter, December 16, 1839[126][21]

December 16, 1847: Missouri Martha Powell (6th cousin 5x removed) (b. December 16, 1847 in GA / d. February 15, 1918)[22]

December 16, 1872: John Paulus GUTLEBEN was born on December 16, 1873 in Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace and died on November 25, 1895 in Emerald, Lancaster, NE at age 21. [23]



December 16, 1941: Japanese forces invade the Dutch East Indies. [24]



December 16, 1942: A ghetto is established in Kharkov. Three weeks later approximately 15,000 Jews are killed in the Drobitski Ravine.[25]



December 16, 1944: On December 16, 1944 at the Opera Theater in Milan “The Duce” Mussolini delivered what was to be called his “redemption speech” in which he referred the German secret weapons…”We are not dealing with secret weapons but new weapons. It is obvious that they are secret until they are used in combat. The British can bitterly confirm that such weapons exist. I can assure you that the first attacks will be followed by others. Those attacks will reestablish the balance of power…and soon return it to the Germans hands. [26]



1945: In 1945 an explosion blew out windows and wrecked equipment in the research building. Three employees were injured: Fred Albinson, a chemist; George Keck, a
company fireman, and Kenneth Town, a lab assistant. My wife, the former Doris Dean, who worked in the laboratory, clearly remembers the incident as well as myself.
The blast buckled the ceiling of the basement and the floor of the first floor, knocking over and destroying analytical balances where Drs. Louis Waldbauer and Larry
Hallet worked and near the area where Dr. Isaac H. Godlove worked as head of the physical chemistry department. If my memory serves me correctly, Doris' boss,
Richard Towne, was attempting to co-polymerize methyl vinyl ether (made from methanol and acetylene) with maleic anhydride, using lauroyl peroxide catalyst. By
mistake, he used fifty times too much catalyst. The accident happened after working hours and they called in the company nurse to assist, but she got so nervous and
excited that they had to take care of her![27]



1945: In 1945, a major trove of manuscripts was unearthed from a cave near Nag Hammadi in Upper Egypt, which included a small number of the sayings of Jesus dating from the second century C.E.[28] Included in the find were 52 documents in 13 papyrus books. Among the manuscripts, which were written in a Coptic translation of the original Greek, was the only complete copy ever found of the Gospel of Thomas, one of the so called Gnostic Gospels. This rich ollerction of banned religionus literatre included texts, and fragments of tests, that had been condemned by early champions of Christian orthodoxy such as Athanasius, Hegesippus, and Irenaueus, who wrote in the second, third, and fourth centuries C.E.The documents in these codices, dating back to the second dentury, were believed to have been originally part of a library at the nearby monastery of St. Pachomius.



The recovery of the complete Gospel of Thomas solved a major puzzle for schoolares. It confirmed something that had previously been only a hypothesis. Scholars had long thought that there had been a proto gospel, a collection of sayings they dubbed the Lost Gospel Q, one of the two sources from which the gospeols of Matthew and luke drew their material. The Gospel of Thomas proved conclusively that such sortys of codices had really existed. [29]



Early Christian teachings had remained something of a mystery until the discovery in 1945 of mystical Christian texts buried for more than a thousand years.

Named for the Egyptian town for which they were unearthed, this collection of some fifty works is known as the Nad Kamady library.



What the Nad Kamady library shows us is that the early Christian movement is enormously more interesting and complicated than we ever imagined. It shows us that instead of four gospels which have in the new testament it shows us that there are dozens and it shows us what they said and that they are really quite different.[30]







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


[1] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/Harrison/d0055/g0000087.html#I1018


[2] Essex County Records, Will Book 3, page 84, 1717-1722. Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pgs. 312-313


[3] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 120.)




[4] Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[5] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail by Charles Bahne, page 30.


[6] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail by Charles Bahne, page 4.


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


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




[9] Photo by Jeff Goodlove, November 14, 2009.


[10] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail by Charles Bahne, page 32.


[11] Photo by Jeff Goodlove, November 14, 2009


[12] The Complete Guide to Bostons Freedom Trail by Charles Bahne page 33.


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


[14] It was written in the fall of 1773.


[15] Washington-Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield


[16] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003


[17] Yorktown Victory Center, Yorktown Virginia, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 2008.


[18] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/earthquake-causes-fluvial-tsunami-in-mississippi


[19] http://penningtons.tripod.com/jepthagenealogy.htm


[20] Saul Henkle


[21] Wikipedia


[22] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[23] Descendents of Elias Gotleben, Email from Alice, May 2010.


[24] Nazi Collaborators, The Zealot, MIL. 12/16/2022


[25] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1775


[26] Mission for Mussolin, Military Channel, 6/9/2009


[27] http://colorantshistory.org/GAFFreyermuth.html


[28] US New and World Report, Secrets of Christianity, April 2010. Page 6.


[29] US New and World Report, Secrets of Christianity, April 2010. Page 6 and 7.


[30] Egypt: Land of the Gods 4/2/2

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