Friday, December 27, 2013

This Day in Goodlove History, December 27, 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, and including ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, Teddy Roosevelt, U.S. Grant, Benjamin Harrison “The Signer”, Benjamin Harrison, Jimmy Carter, Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, William Taft, and John Tyler (10th President), James Polk (11th President)Zachary Taylor, Abraham Lincoln

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 27, 175 BCE (Tevet 3585): This day marked the completion of the Septuagint translation of the Bible into the Greek language. According to a letter from Aristeas to Philocrates, 72 sages, (six from each Israelite tribe) were brought to by Ptolemy II Alexandria to translate the Bible into Greek. Based on the legend, each sage was isolated and wrote a separate translation, but when all 72 were compared, they were all identical. The text of the Septuagint and the Tanach are not the same. Some viewed this translation as a positive event because it showed an interest of Greek intellectuals in Jewish thought and philosophy. Others contend that this translation was necessary because the Jews of Alexandria had such limited knowledge of Hebrew that they could no longer read the text in the original.[1]



172-162 BC: Menelaus, High Priest of Israel, 172-162 BC.[2]



Onias IV, son of Onias III, fled to Egypt and built a Jewish Temple at Leontopolis (closed in 66 CE). [3]



171 BCE: The Hellenized Jewish intelligentsia embraced, and many excused, his campaign as the price to pay for modernizing an outdated religion. This process accelerated after Antiochus’s ally, Menelaus, took over as the Jewish high priest in 171 BCE. [4]



He raised taxes and, in a fateful move, replaced Mosaic Law with secular statutes. Believing they had wide public support, Antiochus and Menelaus converted the Jewish Temple into an ecumenical place of worship for all the local citizens, which meant adding a statue of the Olympian Zeus.[5]

170 B.C. The Seleucid king, Antiochus Epiphanes IV, king of Syria, plundered Jerusalem and forced the Jews to stop worshiping the God of Israel, and to worship the pagan gods of the Greeks. During this time, many Jews followed Greek customs and became Hellenized.

When Antiochus Epiphanes IV esecrated the temple by sacrificing a pig on the altar of Gad and forced the Jewish people in the towns and villages to do the same, this was too much for some religious Jews.[6]

168 BCE: In 168 cultural discontent flared into open rebellion in 168 B.C. when Antiochus IV Epiphanis, the Seleucid ruler of Syria, came to Jerusalem and flagrantly polluted the Temple.The old shrines began to be converted to the worship of new Hellenistic gods, and the population was threatened with adoption of new Greek observances.[7]

168 BCE: A priest named Mattathieas and his sons rose up in protest.[8]

December 27, 90 A.D.: John of Patmos


Saint John of Patmos

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/68/Alonso_Cano_001.jpg/250px-Alonso_Cano_001.jpg
John on Patmos, by Alonso Cano (c. 1640)


Seer, Theologian, Eagle of Patmos


Died

Patmos (?)


Honored in

Christianity (usually identified with John the Evangelist or John the Apostle or both)


Feast

December 27 - Roman Catholic (as John the Evangelist)


Attributes

Depicted sitting on the Isle of Patmos


Major work(s)

Book of Revelation


John of Patmos is the name given by some modern scholars to the author of the Book of Revelation, the apocalyptic text forming part of the New Testament. The text of Revelation states that the author is called John and that he lives on the Greek island of Patmos, where by some, he is considered to be in exile as a result of anti-Christian persecution under Roman emperor Domitian.[1][2] Traditionally, the John who is the author of Revelation is considered to be John the Apostle, author of all the Johanine works, that is the Gospel of John, the first, second, and third epistles of John, as well as Revelation. However, in the case of Revelation, many modern scholars agree that it was written by a separate, otherwise unknown, author, to whom they have given the name John of Patmos.[3][4]

In most Christian traditions, he is considered a saint and is also referred to as John the Divine, John the Revelator, John the Theologian, Eagle of Patmos[5] and John the Seer.[9]

December 27, 1539: Anne of Cleves arrived at Dover.[10]

December 27, 1571: Johannes Kepler


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d4/Johannes_Kepler_1610.jpg/220px-Johannes_Kepler_1610.jpg
A 1610 portrait of Johannes Kepler by an unknown artist


Born

(1571-12-27)December 27, 1571
Free Imperial City of Weil der Stadt near Stuttgart, HRE (now part of the Stuttgart Region of Baden-Württemberg, Germany)


Died

November 15, 1630(1630-11-15) (aged 58)
Regensburg, Electorate of Bavaria, HRE (now Germany)


Residence

Germany


Nationality

German


Fields

Astronomy, astrology, mathematics and natural philosophy


Institutions

University of Linz


Alma mater

University of Tübingen


Known for

Kepler's laws of planetary motion
Kepler conjecture


Signature
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/62/Unterschrift_Kepler.svg/128px-Unterschrift_Kepler.svg.png


Johannes Kepler (German: [ˈkʰɛplɐ]; December 27, 1571 – November 15, 1630) was a German mathematician, astronomer and astrologer. A key figure in the 17th century scientific revolution, he is best known for his eponymous laws of planetary motion, codified by later astronomers, based on his works Astronomia nova, Harmonices Mundi, and Epitome of Copernican Astronomy. These works also provided one of the foundations for Isaac Newton's theory of universal gravitation.[11]

December 27, 1586: He is at length admitted to the queen's presence at Greenwich palace. At this audience he renews his protests, and concludes them by saying that the king his master had ordered him

to declare that he felt himself in a special manner insulted, by the manner in which the Queen of England had slighted his remonstrances and entreaties. Elizabeth, highly offended by this declaration, demanded that M. de Bellièvre should deliver her a copy of it, signed by himself. [12]

December 27, 1657: Three years after the first Jews arrived in New Amsterdam and dealt with the bigotry of Peter Stuyvesant, a group Englishman living in the Dutch colony submitted a petition to the Governor-General requesting the lifting of the ban on Quaker worship. Known as the Flushing Remonstrance, they were greeted with even greater hostility by Stuyvesant than he had shown to the Jews.[13]

December 27, 1663:


Christine Marie, Duchess of Savoy

February 12, 1606

December 27, 1663

Married Victor Amadeus I, Duke of Savoy, in 1619.




[14]

December 27, 1744”: Children of COLONEL CRAWFORD and HANNAH VANCE are:
45. ii. JOHN25 CRAWFORD, b. December 27, 1744, Frederick County, Virginia; d. September 22, 1816, Adams County, Ohio.
iii. OPHELIA "EFFIE" CRAWFORD, b. September 02, 1747.
iv. SARAH "SALLY" CRAWFORD, b. Abt. 1749; d. November 10, 1838, Fayette County, Pennsylvania; m. (1) MAJOR WILLIAM HARRISON; m. (2) URIAH SPRINGER, JR..

Notes for MAJOR WILLIAM HARRISON:
Accompanied his father-in-law, William, on the Sandusky battle.

13 Jun 1782, Killed during the retreat of the Expedition against the Sandusky Indians.

JOHN25 CRAWFORD (COLONEL WILLIAM24, VALENTINE23, WILLIAM22, MAJOR GENERAL LAWRENCE21, HUGH20, HUGH19, CAPTAIN THOMAS18, LAWRENCE17, ROBERT16, MALCOLM15, MALCOLM14, ROGER13, REGINALD12, JOHN, JOHN, REGINALD DE CRAWFORD, HUGH OR JOHN, GALFRIDUS, JOHN, REGINALD5, REGINALD4, DOMINCUS3 CRAWFORD, REGINALD2, ALAN1) was born December 27, 1744 in Frederick County, Virginia, and died September 22, 1816 in Adams County, Ohio. He married (1) FRANCES BRADFORD 1774 in Westland County, Pennsylvania. He married (2) EFFIE GRIMES November 30, 1797 in Monroe Township, Adams County, Ohio, daughter of ELIZABETH GRIMES.

Notes for JOHN CRAWFORD:
Buried at Wesleyan Cemetery. Inscription reads:
Col John Crawford
Indian Wars
1-27-1827
Ra 26, Gr 2, Sec 12
Military service: Lt. Revolutionary War

John accompanied his father, William, on the Sandusky battle.

Children of JOHN CRAWFORD and EFFIE GRIMES are:
i. MARY26 CRAWFORD, d. 1836, Caruty, Kentucky.
ii. WILLIAM CRAWFORD, b. Abt. 1772, Westmoreland County, Virginia; d. Abt. 1840, Adams County, Ohio; m. NANCY DIXON, January 26, 1801, Adams County, Ohio.
iii. MOSES CRAWFORD, b. Abt. 1776, Westmoreland County, Virginia; d. 1806, Adams County, Ohio.
iv. RICHARD CRAWFORD, b. Abt. 1777, Pennsylvania; d. 1822, Lewis County, Kentucky.
v. SARAH "SALLIE" CRAWFORD, b. Abt. 1782; m. WILLIAM ROWLAND.
50. vi. GEORGE WASHINGTON CRAWFORD, b. June 04, 1790, Kentucky; d. September 20, 1871, Monroe Township, Adams County, Ohio.
vii. HANNAH PAMELIA CRAWFORD, b. 1797, Adams County, Ohio; d. July 16, 1826.


John Crawford


Birth:

December 27, 1744
Virginia, USA


Death:

September 22, 1816


Description: http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
The Cemetery is on the land that his father Colonel William Crawford willed to him in 1792

son of William & Hannah (Vance)Crawford

John was a Lieutenant in the American Revolutionary War- after the war he sold his farm in Fayette County, PA and settled in Ohio.

husband of Frances Bradford
and 2nd wife Mary Margaret King

father of seven children

Family links:
Children:
Moses Crawford (1776 - 1808)*
Hannah Pamelia Crawford (1797 - 1826)*

*Calculated relationship

Note: age 66 yeas 1 month 3 days



Burial:
Crawford Farm Cemetery
Wrightsville
Adams County
Ohio, USA



Created by: OhioSearcher
Record added: Oct 15, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 78493831





[15]





The Old Crawford Cemetery

This Cemetery was located on the Stephenson farm, along the Ohio River, east of Manchester. A power company bought the land and moved the bodies and monuments to the cemetery in Manchester, OH. H. Marjorie Crawford saw the new markers and took pictures of them in the summer of 1979.



Gravestone Inscriptions as copied in old Crawford Cemetery by H, Margorie Crawford, September 4, 1949:

1. All on one big stone which has fallen over:

Jno. Crawford, died September 22, 1816. Aged 66 1/3 years.

Effy Crawford, died November 22, 1822

Hannah P. Crawford, died July 16, 1826

Moses Crawford, died 1808

Sarah Rowland, late Sarah Crawford, died----

Thomas, son of Sarah Rowland, died---



2. Near the first stone and still standing:



William Rowland, born December 25, 1775, died November 27, 1856.



3. Some distance from the first two markers:

Infant, February 15, 1865, February 28, 1865

Infant, February 14, 1862, February 20, 1862.

Sons of C. and M. Taylor.



4. On opposite sides of what had been a tall monument. The top fallen off, these inscriptions on the square base:

Geo. W. Crawford, born June 4, 1790, died September 20, 1871.



Winnie, wife of George W. Crawford, born March 4. 1801, died August 6, 1871.



Harriet, dau. of G. and Winnie Crawford, died August 26, 1860. Aged 26 years, 24 days.



Richard Crawford, son of G. and Winnie Crawford, b. November 28, 1833.



5. Mrs. Emahiser says that in 1958 she saw a marker:

Julian Crawford, 21 years, died 1851. [16]



· December 27, 1744: Name: John Vance Crawford

· Surname: Crawford

· Given Name: John Vance

· Prefix: Lt.

· Sex: M

· Birth: December 27, 1744 in , Frederick Co., Virginia

· Death: September 22, 1820 in Monroe Twp., Adams Co., Ohio

· Burial: Kline Farm, Adams Co., Ohio

· _UID: 40FF4C06FF80DC41BBC364CDBE46AF0F9E79

· Note:

! (1) "A History of Adams Co., Ohio," by Nelson Evans & Emmons Stivers (E.B. Stivers, West Union, OH, 1900) p.667.
(2) "Thompson's Historical Collections of Adams Co., Ohio," by Carl N. Thompson (Adams Co. Historical Soc., 1982) Vol. II, p.145, 148. Cites: (a) "Crawford's Campaign against Sandusky," by C. W. Butterfield, p.90, 115, 117-188, 247, 249, 295-296. (b) Adams Co., OH, Vol. 17, p.200. (c) Will of William Crawdord, Westmoreland Co., PA. (d) 59th NS DAR, Hazel B. Williams, Wilmington, OH and Mrs. W.F. McCormick, Seaman, OH.
(3) "Billings-Gross," by Linda Hobbs (http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com, 08032008 databaase, 3 Aug 2008).

! Birth: (1) Brother of Col. William CRAWFORD. (2) s/o Col. William CRAWFORD of Trymochtee fame. (2,3) s/o William CRAWFORD/Hanna VANCE. (2) 1751. (3) December 27, 1744. Frederick Co., VA.
Marriage to Frances BRADFORD: (2) (3) 1764. VA.
Marriage to Effa GRIMES: (2) (1) November 30, 1797. (3) Abt. 1773. Westmoreland Co., VA.
Death: (2) September 22, 1866. [NOTE: Source 2 states he was age 66 1/2. If b. 1751, the death date would be ca. 1818. Date must be misprint.] (3) 1820. (3) Monroe Co., Adams Co., OH. (2) Age 66 1/2 years. [NOTE: If age is correct, he was b. Mar 1800, not 1751.]
Burial: (2) Kline Farm, 1 1/2 miles west of Brush Creek, 3/4 miles south of U.S. 52.

(2a) Lieutenant, Revolutionary Army.
(2a) 1782, May-Jun: Served in the Upper Sandusky Campaign in OH. He was reported killed in the retreat after the battle, but escaped the Indians and later made his way home.
(2a) 1782: Was living on the Youghiogheny River in what is now Fayette Co., PA, then a part of Westmoreland Co.
(2a) Emigrated to OH, settling on land bequeathed to him by his father at the mouth of Brush Creek in the Ohio River bottoms of Adams Co., OH.
(1) Had 4 sons and 2 daughters.
(2b) 1836, 3 Feb: William CRAWFORD heirs received Bounty lands for his service.

· Change Date: 26 Jul 2010 at 01:00:00









Father: William Crawford b: 1722 in , Westmoreland Co., Virginia
Mother: Hannah Vance b: April 11, 1723 (sb 1732 JG) in , Frederick Co., Virginia

Marriage 1Frances Bradford b: in , Fauquier Co., Virginia
•Married: 1764 in ,, Virginia

Children
1.Has No ChildrenWilliam Crawford
2.Has No ChildrenMoses Crawford
3.Has No ChildrenRichard Crawford


Marriage 2Effie (Effa) Grimes
•Married: November 30, 1797 in , Adams Co., Ohio

Children
1.Has No ChildrenSarah Crawford[17]

2.December 27, 1744: John Crawford, William Crawford’s first son, was born December 27, 1744.[18] John was born in the northern part of the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, in the same year his father and mother were married, (January 5, 1744).[19]

3. 1745: " Let the Clan of gray Fingon, whose offspring has given Such heroes to earth and such martyrs to Heaven, Unite with the race of renowned Rorri More, To launch the long galley, and stretch to the oar."

4. Song–”Gathering of the Clans” (at Glenfinnan, A.D. 1745) [20]

5. 1745

6. The MacKinnons supported in force Bonnie Prince Charlie during the 1745 rising and accompanied him throughout his campaigns. The bulk of the MacKinnon army was not at the Battle of Culloden and instead stationed near Inverness. They were among the last to remain at arms.[21] The MacKinnons have been throughout the majority of their history a small clan with a strong sense of honor, even to a fault as as evidenced with their conviction to the Jacobite cause in 1715 and 1745 after which they were dispossed of their lands. [22]

THE country (now parish) of Strath is known to have been the property of the MacKinnons as far back as five hundred and fifty years. when however, the clan took a prominent part in the turbulent Proceedings of 17I5 and 1745 (which will be elsewhere recorded in detail), the chief at the latter period was taken prisoner and confined in the Tower and Tilbury Fort for nearly twelve months, when, in consideration of his advancing years, he was set at liberty.[23]

1745: England was the best customer of the Landgrave. Through a large part of the eighteenth century she had Hessians in her pay. Some of them were with the army of the Duke of Cumberland during the Pretender's invasion in 1745; but it is stated that they refused to fight in that campaign for want of a cartel for the exchange of prisoners (Letter of Sir Joseph Yorke to the Earl of Suffolk, quoted in Kapp's Soldatenhandel," 1st ed. p. 229.)[24]

7. 1745; Jews expelled from Moravia.[25]

8. 1745

9. Lawrence Harrison was a witness to a suit in 1745.[26]

10.

11. Between 1745 and 1753:

12. Other evidence of Virginia traders at Pickawillany

13. William Trent was on his way to Pickawillany to deliver a present from Virginia when he

14. learned of the French attack on Pickawillany. Jacob Piatt Dunn‘s 1919 book ―Indiana and Indianans‖ supports the fact that Virginians traded with Pickawillany, stating:

15. …between 1745 and 1753 there were more than fifty Pennsylvanian and Virginian licensed traders engaged in the trade with the Miami towns, among whom were such well known frontier characters as Conrad Weiser, George Croghan[27], Hugh Crawford, Michael Cresap[28], Christopher Gist, Jacob Pyatt, and William Campbell.[29]



December 27, 1753:
16. Description: http://www.thelittlelist.net/connequenessingcreek.jpg

17. Description: http://www.thelittlelist.net/connequenessingpond.jpg

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

19. 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. On December 27, 1753 at a spot on the east side of this creek an Indian took a shot at Washington—missing him from around fifteen steps distance. Gist wanted to kill the Indian, but Washington declined—evidently deciding it would antagonize Indians he wanted to maintain on a friendly basis.

This was one of the major creeks to be crossed on the Venango Path.

Description: http://www.thelittlelist.net/connoque.jpg

20. Major George Washington. DAR memorial 1.8 miles north of Evans City in Butler County on PA 68. Photo by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged photo

21. "On the flats of the east side of Connoquenessing Creek, one hundred rods east of this spot, Major George Washington, then a youth of twenty-one years of age, narrowly escaped death, being shot at by a hostile Indian, less than fifteen steps distance, on the evening of December 27th, 1753, as he and Christopher Gist were returning to Virginia from Washington's historical visit to St. Pierre, commandant of the French forts, Le Boeuf (Waterford) and Venango (Franklin), as agents of Governor Dinwiddie of Virginia in delivering to St. Pierre the protest of Governor Dinwiddie against encroachment of the French on territory claimed by the English. Washington and Gist were following the course of the Venango Indian Trail, which crossed the highway at this spot. It followed an almost north and south line from the forks of the Ohio (Pittsburgh) to Venango (Franklin), and was one of the most important of the Indian Trails.

22. "Erected 1925 by the General Richard Butler Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution."[30]

1754 or 1756
23.A cousin Barbara (Cutlip) Porter spent her summers researching court
24.> records in W.Va. and Va. She was able to deduce that most Cutlip can
25.> trace themselves back in one instance to two brothers in Stauton or
26.> Staunton, Va. which is east of Braxton, County, W.Va. She said that
27.> their father's name was George. The older brother fought in the French
28.> and Indian War. His name escapes me, but the younger brother was named
29.> Malichai, a good West Country English name. The Methodist church is big
30.> in Devon and they used to like Biblical names. Anyway Malichai fought
31.> in the Revolutionary War. She said Court Records indicated that George,
32.> the father, bought 50 acres of land on the Shenandoa River for 90
33.> English pounds in 1754 or 1756. At the time we were corresponding, she
34.> said that she was unable to find anything past 1754.[31]
35.
36. 1754
37.More recently, another cousin, Betty (Cutlip)Ersh, took the advice of
38.> George Cutlip of Clarksburg and contacted a gal name Sylvia Blott in
39.> Portsmouth, England who supposedly has the data on the European side of
40.> the equation. It appears that a Cutlip sometime ago became or married a
41.> Mormon and thus put the Cutlip name in the Mormon Genealogy databank.
42.> Anyway, as I recall, George apparently left England in 1754, came back
43.> got his wife Mary (Murphy) and left again in 1756 for America.[32]



December 27, 1504: Moscow witnessed the first inquisitional burning stakes in Russia. Ivan Kurizin, Dimitry Konopliov, Ivan Maksimov, and others were burned in wooden cages. Old Ivan III, his son Tzar Vasily, Metropolitan Simon, other bishops, and all the church council had accused them of Judaizing and sentenced them to death.

In the same winter, Ivan Rukavov, the Archimandrite of the Yr’evsky monastery, Kassian and his brother Ivan, Gridia Kvashnia, Dimitry Pustoselov, and other less-known “heretics” were burned because of their beliefs. These people were for the inauguration of Dimitry as the rightful tzar and were present at Vasily’s trial; but now they were condemned as criminals because of their beliefs. Even though the Novgorod-Moscow movement suffered heavy losses among the upper classes, it remained very popular in the lower classes. By 1511, Tzar Vasily was under pressure to increase the persecution of the “heretics,” lest they destroy the Orthodox Church in Russia. Thus, the Reformers were swept out of the Kremlin.[34] [33]



December 27, 1755

William Crawford to George Washington, December 27, 1755, Virginia Colonial Militia Accounts

Rec. Twenty five pounds for recruting for which I oblige myself to account with Col. Washinton when required, Wm Crawford




December 26, 1767: Nancy Anne Crawford Connell Mounts

•Memorial







Birth:

December 27, 1767
Westmoreland County
Pennsylvania, USA


Death:

February 28, 1842
Switzerland County
Indiana, USA


Description: http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
Daughter of James Connell and Anne Crawford

Married Thomas Mounts 1785 Fayette County, PA



Burial:
Lostetter Cemetery
Switzerland County
Indiana, USA



Created by: Jackie W.
Record added: May 24, 2008
Find A Grave Memorial# 27043732









Description: Nancy Anne Crawford Connell Mounts
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Bob Shannon








[34]





1768 – Treaty of Hard Labour with the British Indian Superintendent; Cherokee ceded land in southwestern Virginia.[35] In 1768, the Iroquois Confederacy (often called the Six Nations) and the Cherokee signed the Treaty of Hard Labour and the Treaty of Fort Stanwix, relinquishing their claims on the territory between the Ohio River and the Alleghenies to the British.[36]



1768
PIC-0203

Indian Tribes, 1768[37][38]
1113111411

1768

John Stephenson was William and Valentine Crawford's half brother. After the death of the Crawfords' father, their mother, Onora Grimes Crawford (d. 1776), married Richard Stephenson, by whom she had five sons and one daughter[39]. John Stephenson had served in the French and Indian War and settled in the vicinity of the Great Crossing of the Youghiogheny about 1768. He was involved from time to time in the Crawfords' land activities.[40]



1767-1768

If the McKinnon family tree is correct that Daniel McKinnon was born “in 1767”, then Daniel’s parents were also settlers about the same time as Harrisons, because the Fayette history (Ref#33­) states “The Harrisons were settlers here in the spring of 1768 when the Rev. John Steele and his associates came to inspect the settlements in the Youghiogheny and Monongohela Valleys. The Harrison lands ad- joining those of Crawfords were entered at the land office that year.”

Lawrence Harrison and Catherine were married in Orange County, Virginia, the same county in which William Crawford was born. According to a “Family Group Sheet” located in the Frankfurt Genealogy Library the present location is Berkeley County, Virginia. (Ref 31.2)

The entwining of the family trees of the Harrisons and Crawfords is displayed in other reports located in Frankfort. (Ref 31.1, 31.2, 31.3, 31.4. 31.5 and 31.6) Please note that an earlier report on the Harrisons (Ref 31.6) states that a “Samuel Murphy remembered that John Stephenson, William Crawford, and the brothers Lawrence Harrison and Charles Harrison crossed the mountains (Alleghenies) at the same time. Murphy had been reared in the home of Crawford’s mother and second husband, Stephenson. “John” was a half brother to William Crawford.[41]



1768

In 1768 Daniel appears to have again returned to England and was ordained by the Bishop of London in 1768, (Maryland State Archives, MSA SC 5200, School Teachers of Early Maryland, Robert Bames.) Hardly something that would have been done if Daniel had been divorced. Thus it suggests that Ruth may have died.[42]



1768



In 1768, the Reverend Steel[43] was sent to the Redstone Settlement, the object of his mission being to persuade the settlers there to abandon the lands on which they had “squatted”; A meeting of settlers was held at Gist‘s plantation, and among the names of those who met there with the Reverend Steel, were Richard and Lawrence Harrison. [44]



1768

The Youghiogheny River has its upper waters in Fayette Co PA and its lower waters in Westomoreland. It meets the Monongahela River at McKeesport in Allegheny Co PA. Oliver Crawford came to set up a ferry at Muddy Creek on the Monongahela in 1768, one year after William Crawford settled in the area as an Indian trader. This seems too much of a coincidence for them not to be related somehow.[45]



1768: Haidamaks massacre the Jews of Uman, Poland.[46]



1768…Norborne Berkeley, 4th Baron Botetourt



The Lord Botetourt


Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/52/Norborne_Berkeley_Baron_de_Botetourt.jpeg/230px-Norborne_Berkeley_Baron_de_Botetourt.jpeg


Colonial Governor of Virginia


In office
1768–1770


Preceded by

Francis Fauquier


Succeeded by

John Murray, 4th earl of Dunmore


Personal details


Born

c. 1717
Stoke Gifford, Gloucestershire, England


Died

October 15, 1770
Governor's Palace, Williamsburg, Virginia


Spouse(s)

never married

Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3e/StokeParkStokeGifford.jpg/200px-StokeParkStokeGifford.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.20wmf8/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Stoke Park in 2011, viewed from south, as visible from the northbound carriageway of the M32 motorway which now cuts across the former parkland. Now known as "The Dower House" and split into private apartments. Rebuilt by Norborne Berkeley in 1750 it eventually became used as a dower house by the Dukes of Beaufort at nearby Badminton House

•Norborne Berkeley, 4th Baron Botetourt (c. 1717 – October 15, 1770), was a courtier, member of parliament, and royal governor of the colony of Virginia from 1768 until his death in 1770.


Life

Norborne Berkeley was born about 1717. He was of the family of Berkeley of Stoke Gifford in Gloucestershire, descended from Maurice de Berkeley (d. 1347), who had acquired the manor of Stoke Gifford in 1337, the second son of Maurice de Berkeley, 2nd Baron Berkeley (1271–1326). In 1726, Berkeley was admitted to Westminster School. His political career began in 1741 when he was elected to the House of Commons as a knight of the shire for Gloucestershire, a seat he held until 1763. Considered a staunch Tory, Berkeley's fortunes were boosted considerably on the accession of George III in 1760. In 1764, he successfully claimed the title of Baron Botetourt as the lineal descendant of Maurice de Berkeley (d. 1361) and his wife Catherine de Botetourt, sister & co-heir of John Botetourt, son and heir of Sir John de Botetourt (d. 1324), baron by writ 1309-15. Maurice (d. 1361) was the son and heir of Maurice de Berkeley (d. 1347 at the Siege of Calais), who had acquired the manor of Stoke Gifford, Gloucestershire, in 1337, the second son of Maurice de Berkeley, 2nd Baron Berkeley (1271–1326). He thus took a seat in the House of Lords as the 4th Baron de Botetourt, and in 1768 was appointed governor of Virginia. He died in Williamsburg on October 15, 1770, after an illness lasting several weeks. Botetourt never married and left no direct heirs.[1][2][3][4]

Statues

A statue of Botetourt was placed in the Capitol in Williamsburg in 1773. The Capital of Colonial Virginia was located in Williamsburg from 1699 until 1780, but at the urging of Governor Thomas Jefferson was moved to Richmond for security reasons during the American Revolution. In 1801 the statue of Botetourt was acquired by the College of William and Mary and moved to the campus from the former Capitol building. Barring a brief period during the Civil War when it was moved to the Public Asylum for safety, it stood in the College Yard until 1958 when it was removed for protection from the elements, and then in 1966 was installed in the new Earl Gregg Swem Library, in the new Botetourt Gallery. In 1993, as the College celebrated its tercentenary, a new bronze statue of Botetourt by the William and Mary alumnus Gordon Kray was installed in the College Yard in front of the Wren Building, in the place occupied for generations by the original.[5]

Legacy

Botetourt County, Virginia, was named in Botetourt's honour. Historians also believe that Berkeley County, West Virginia, and the town of Berkeley Springs, both now in West Virginia, were also named in his honour, or possibly that of another popular colonial governor, Sir William Berkeley.[6]

Lord Botetourt High School in the unincorporated town of Daleville in Botetourt County, Virginia, is also named for him, as is the Botetourt Dorm Complex at The College of William and Mary. Two statues also adorn the campus of The College of William and Mary. Gloucester County, Virginia has an elementary school named for governor. Both Richmond, Virginia and Norfolk, Virginia have streets named in his honour.[47]

In 1768 Mason and Dixon, two eminent civil engineers from London, ran a line known by their name as the Pennsylvania and Maryland boundary, from the circle twelve miles distant from New Castle on the Delaware as a center, to the second crossing of Dunkard Creek in the present County of Greene, where they were stopped by the Indians about thirty-six miles from the point where the line should have terminated. That line, extended subsequently to its full distance, is our

southern boundary to-day.[48]



December 27, 1774: Joseph Howard Jr. is himself listed on Page 9 in the 1776 Census. Margery married Henry Hall on
December 27, 1774 and they are listed on Page 4 of the 1776 Census. Joseph Howard Sr.'s wife,
Margaret Williams died about 1762 shortly after the birth of their youngest son Benjamin. Based on
the foregoing the 1776 Census should only show three individuals for Joseph Howard Sr. (Joseph Sr.,
Benjamin, and Margaret) instead of the five that are listed. No data can be found which explain these
additional persons in the 1776 Census for Joseph Howard Sr. Could the additional male and female
listings be Eleanor and her half-brother Daniel (who married in Anne Arundel County in 1777)?(67) [49]

December 27, 1779: St. John the Evangelist Day – George Washington Celebrated with American Union Military Lodge at Morristown, NJ[50]

Court met according to adjournment December 28th, 1779.

Present Edward Ward, Benjaman Kuykendab Joshua Wright Oliver Miller, Gent. Justices.Ordered that Joseph Beeber be recommend as Col, of the First Batalion of Militia in the stead of John Stephenson who bath resigned, the sd. Joseph being Col, of the sd. Battalion.

William Harrison is recornmd. to the Governor as a proper person to serve as Lieut. Col, of sd. Battalion in the sd. Of the sd. Joseph Beeber, the sd. William being Majr. of sd. Batta.[51]



December 27, 1774: Joseph Howard Jr. is himself listed on Page 9 in the 1776 Census. Margery married Henry Hll on December 27, 1774 and they are listed on Page 4 of the 1776 Census. Joseph Howard Sr.s wife Margaret Williams died about 1762 shortly after the birth of their youngest son Benjamin. Based on the foregoing the 1776 Census should only show three individuals for Joseph Howard Sr. (Joseph Sr., Benjamin, and Margaret) instead of the five that are listed. No data can be found which explain these additional persons in the 1776 Census for Joseph Howard Sr. Could the additional male and female listings be Eleanor and her half-brother Daniel (who married in Anne Arundel County in 1777? [52]



December 27, 1776



Head Quarters, Newton, December 27, 1776.



I have the pleasure of Congratulating you upon the success of an enterprize which I had formed against a Detachment of the Enemy lying in Trenton, and which was executed yesterday Morning. The Evening of the 25th. I ordered the troops intended for this service to parade back of McKonkey’s Ferry, that they might begin to pass as soon as it grew dark, imagining we should be able to throw them all over, with the necessary Artillery, by 12 O’Clock, and that we might easily arrive at Trenton by five in the Morning, the distance being about nine miles. But the Quantity of Ice, made that Night, impeded the passage of the Boats so much, that it was three o’clock before the Artillery could all be got over, & near four, before the troops took up their line of march.

This made me despair of surprizing the Town, as I well knew we could not reach it before the day was fairly broke, but as I was certain there was no making a retreat without being discovered, and harassed on repassing the river, I determined to push on at all Events. I formed my detachments into two divisions one to March by the lower or river road, the other by the upper or Pennington Road. As the divisions had nearly the same distance to march, I ordered each of them, immediately upon forcing the out guards, to push directly into the Town, that they might charge the enemy before they had time to form. The upper division arrived at the enemy’s advanced post, exactly at eight oclock, and in three minutes after I found from the fire on the lower road that, that division had also got up. The Out guards made but small opposition tho’ for their numbers, they behaved very well, keeping up a constant retreating fire from behind houses. We presently saw their main body formed, but from their motions, they seemed undetermined how to act.

Being hard pressed by our troops, who had already got possession of part of their Artillery, they attempted to file off by a road on their right leading to Princeton, but perceiving their intention, I threw a body of troops in their way which immediately checked them. Finding from our disposition that they were surrounded, and that they must inevitably be cut to pieces if they made any further resistance, they agreed to lay down their arms. The number, that submitted in this manner, was 23 Officers and 886 Men. Col. Rall the commanding officer with seven others Were found wounded in the town. I dont exactly know how many they had killed, but I fancy not above twenty or thirty, as they never made any regular stand. Our loss is very trifling indeed, only two officers and one or two privates wounded.

I find, that the detachment of the enemy consisted of the three Hessian Regiments of Lanspatch, Kniphausen and Rohl amounting to about 1500 Men, and a troop of British light horse, but immediately upon the begining of the attack, all those who were not killed or taken, pushed directly down the Road towards Burdentown. These would likewise have fallen into our hands, could my plan have been compleatly carried into execution. Genl. Ewing was to have crossed before day at Trenton ferry, and taken possession of the bridge leading out of town but the quantity of Ice was so great, that tho he did every thing in his Power to effect it, he could not get over.

This difficulty also hindered General Cadwallader from crossing with the Pennsylvania militia, from Bristol, he got part of his foot over, but finding it impossible to embark his artillery, he was obliged to desist. I am fully confident, that could the troops under Generals Ewing and Cadwallader have passed the river, I should have been able, with their assistance, to have driven the enemy from all their posts below Trenton. But the number I had with me, being inferior to theirs below me, and a strong battalion of light infantry at Princeton above me I thought it most prudent to return the same evening with my prisoners and the artillery we had taken. We found no stores of any consequence in the Town. In justice to the officers and men, I must add, that their behaviour upon this occasion, reflects the highest honor upon them. The difficulty of passing the river in a very severe night, and their march thro’ a violent storm of snow and hail, did not in the least abate their ardour. But when they came to the charge, each seemed to vie with the other in pressing forward, and were I to give a preference to any particular corps, I should do great injustice to the others.

Colonel Baylor, my first Aid de Camp, will have the honor of delivering this to you, and from him you may be made acquainted with many other particulars; his spirited behaviour upon every occasion, requires me to recommend him to your particular notice. I have

the honor to be with great respect Sir your most Obedt. Servt.

G. WASHINGTON

P.S. Inclosed you have a particular list of the prisoners,

artillery and other stores.





The effect on both civilian and Army morale was electric. Men whose terms of enlistment were to have expired at the end of the year agreed to stay on for another six weeks to see the campaign through.[53]



Sources include a report from Washington to John Hancock, December 27, 1776:

“I ordered the troops intended for this service which were about 2400 to parade back of McConkey’s Ferry.” GW, 7:454. Henry Knox’s estimate was a little higher: “a part of the army consisting of about 2500 or three thousand pass’d the River on Christmas night with almost infinite difficulty, with eighteen field pieces.” The source is a letter from Henry Knox to Lucy Knox, December 28, 1776, in William S. Stryker, The Battles of Trenton and Princeton (Boston, 1898), 371. Cadwalader wrote to Washington, probably on December 27, “we had about 1800 rank and file including artillery.” Cadwalader had first written 1,700, then crossed it out and wrote 1,800. GW, 7:445. In another letter dated December 26 at nine o’clock he wrote that “General Putnam was to cross at Philada to day, if the weather permitted. with 1000 men; 300 went over yesterday & 500 Jersey militia are now there as Col. Griffin informs me to day.” The source is a letter from Cadwalader to Washington, 2[7?] Dec. 1776. The date of this letter is mutilated in manuscript; editors of the Washington Papers believe that it was sent on December 26; I think that it would have been December 27, 1776. GW, 7:442. [54]



December 27, 1777

[3NN8.J

A general return of troops stationed at Fort Pitt under the command of General Hand, Dec. 27, 1777:



One colonel; Captain Harrison and company, 46; Captain Sullivan and company, 54; Captain Heath and company, 67; Captain O’Hara’ and company, 40—total 208. Captain Sullivan appears to have been absent. Included in the number were two fifers and one drummer.[55]



December 27, 1779: St. John the Evangelist Day – George Washington Celebrated with American Union Military Lodge at Morristown, NJ[56]

Court met according to adjournment December 28th, 1779.

Present Edward Ward, Benjaman Kuykendab Joshua Wright Oliver Miller, Gent. Justices.

Ordered that Joseph Beeber be recommend as Col, of the First Batalion of Militia in the stead of John Stephenson who bath resigned, the sd. Joseph being Col, of the sd. Battalion.

William Harrison is recornmd. to the Governor as a proper person to serve as Lieut. Col, of sd. Battalion in the sd. Of the sd. Joseph Beeber, the sd. William being Majr. of sd. Batta.[57]

1780

It would appear from a fragmentary record, that as early as 1780, Protestant Episcopal Church services were held in Dunbar Township and the neighborhood, by the Reverend Mr. Mitchel, and further, that he preached in the vicinity from 1780 to 1790, as an Episcopal Missionary. Who Mr. Mitchel was, or where he came from, or just where he preached, are matters upon which the recorder is silent. At some time previous to the Revolutionary War, the Reverend Daniel McKinnon, as Englishman and an Episcopalian., preached in the neighborhood of Connellsville. Upon the outbreak of hostilities he sailed for England, and was subsequently reported to have been lost at sea. One of his daughters married Thomas Rogers, one of Dunbar’s early settlers. The first meetings (Trinity Church) were held in a log building that stood upon the site now occupied by the Connellsville Public School. Services were held on that side of the river until 1832, when a house of worship was built in New Haven. That house is still used. Mrs. Daniel Rogers donated the ground; and beyond that, liberal aid towards the building enterprise was given by Daniel Rogers. A handsome memorial window in the church, commemorates the grateful spirit with which the kindly deeps of Mrs. Rogers are cherished. To the gifts mentioned, James McIlvaine, brother of Robert McIlvaine, added later, those of a church bell and parsonage.[58]



1780

…The currency of the land was almost worthless, five years afterit was issued a Continental dollar was worth about a penny. In Philadelphia, beef cost fifteen times what it had a year earlier. A horse sold for twenty thousand dollars. “A wagon load of money”, wrote George Washington “will scarcely purchase a wagon load of previsions.” [59]


http://doclindsay.com/pictures_logos_stuff/lindsay_cemetery_marker.jpg[60]

http://doclindsay.com/pictures_logos_stuff/car_tracts_to_cemetery.jpg
http://doclindsay.com/pictures_logos_stuff/cemetery_fence.jpg[61][62]

December 27, 1792: St. John the Evangelist Day – George Washington Celebrated with Solomon's Lodge No. 1, Poughkeepsie, NY.[63]

December 27, 1813: The Grand Lodge of Tennessee was granted its own Constitution. Andrew Jackson was the sixth Grand Master of Masons of Tennessee, serving from October 7, 1822 until October 4, 1824. [64]

December 27, 1817

General Andrew Jackson takes command of American troops, during the First Seminole War.[65]



1817



The opening of the Erie Canal in 1817.[66]



1818 Francis Godlove signed consent for daughter’s marriage as “Francis Gotlob” JF

1818

In the Recorder’s Office in Fairfield County, Ohio, in 1818, a lease under the name of Moses McCormick has been discovered. Book M, page 42. Moses McCormick is reputed to be a descendant of William and Effie (Crawford) McCormick. He is possibly a grandson to the couple mentioned above, since he is not mentioned in the above mentioned will.

Note: Since many of the soldiers and officers of the American Revolutionary War were unable to procure their bounty lands, for a number of reasons, an assignee or Power of Attorney was hired or appointed. This usually happened when the soildier or officder died or was killed. Then, the heirs would necessarily, be represented in this order. Perhaps several branches ofr one family were represented; each with a different and separate Power of Attorney. This creates complications in tracing family records, due to the fact, each separate assignee and Power of Attorney, must be traced as well as the family in question.[67]

1818

Death of George Rogers Clark in a small cabin near present day Louiville, KY, seemingly forgotten. [68]

1818: The Bank of Cynthiana was chartered, Wm. C. Moore, Pres.: Henry Brown, Cashier; Capital $25,000.00 its office was in a frame houise on the McMillen lot, where, later, the Faerber House was built. The bank closed in 1820, and finally paid off 80% in 1830. From 1830 umntil 1857 there were no banks in Cynthiana.[69]



The 1818 National Road further cemented Cumberland‘s status as a transportation center.

Cumberland‘s importance was elevated by the discovery of vast natural resources in the Jennings Run and Georges Creek basins, including coal and fire clay.[70] At the beginning of the 1800s, is once ahgain the focus of the worlds attention. During Jerusalem’s past 3,000 years of history, the population figures attest to the fact the numbers of inhabitants flourished under Jewish and Chritian rule, but dceclined under Moslem rule.[71]



1818: Since 1818 the Jewish population has been the religious majority in Jerusalem. Today, over 70 percent of Jerusalem’s 700,000 residents are Jewish. Jerusalem, a dusty forgotten city with less than 15,000 inhabitants at beginning of the 1800s, is once again the focus of the world’s attention. During Jerusalem’s past 3,000 years of history, the population figures attest to the fact the numbers of inhabitants flourished under Jewish and Christian rule, but declined under Moslem rule.[72]

1818: Reform Judaism is the religious movement which arose in early nineteenth century Germany with the aim of reinterpreting (or reforming) Judaism in the light of Western thought, values and culture where such a reinterpretation does not come into conflict with Judaism’s basic principles. (Orthodox Judaism maintains that the very principle of Reform is in conflict with the basic principle of faith that the Torah is immutable.)

Emancipation and the Impulse to Reform Judaism



After the Emancipation and the emergence of the Jew into Western society, the need for a degree of adaptation of the traditional faith to the new conditions of life was keenly felt. The Haskalah movement of Enlightenment, of which Moses Mendelssohn was the leading figure, grappled with this very problem but tended to leave the traditional norms more or less intact. It was left to Reform to introduce various innovations in the synagogue service and in other areas of Jewish religious life.









Reform, however, did not, at first, become organized as a separated movement. A number of cultured laymen in various German cities tried their hand at creating liturgy and format which they believed was more keeping with Western ideals. The first Reform congregation was established in Hamburg in 1818, in the Hamburg Temple.

Reform generally came to prefer the term Temple rather than synagogue for its house of prayer in the belief that the Messianic doctrine could no longer be interpreted in terms of personal messiah who would rebuild the Temple. The new opportunities presented in the West for greater social and educational advancement and for the spirit of freedom to flourish were themselves seen as the realization of the Messianic dream and it was felt that the synagogue, standing in place of the Temple, should be known as such. The Prayer Book of the Hamburg Temple omitted most of the references in the traditional Prayer Book to the return to Zion and the restoration of the Temple service. Prayers and sermons in the German language were introduced and an organ was played to accompany the prayers.

1818-1933: The size of the Jewish population in Bavaria varied relatively little fro the Napoleonic era to 1933, numbering 53,208 in 1818 and 41,939 in 1933.[73]



December 27, 1837 – Cannon’s party arrives in the Cherokee Nation West, with 18 people having died along the way.[74]

1838: Thomas Harrison Moore (1790-1842) and his brother, John, settled on tracts of land on the La Bahia Road near present LaGrange. It is recorded in the actions of the Court of Bastrop County in 1838 that Thomas H. Moore was granted permission to establish a ferry at the La Bahia crossing of the Colorado River, at what is now LaGrange. [75]

1838: Rebecca Godlove








Rebecca Godlove


khe6 (View posts)

Posted: 13 Apr 2000 4:40PM GMT


Classification:

Edited: 28 May 2003 11:31AM GMT


Surnames:


Rebecca, b. abt 1838 Hardy County, VA Daughter of Francis and Elizabeth Godlove.
According to census records, siblings include Isaac, Margaret, Nancy, Joseph, Rachel, Louise and Larella (sp?). Family lore says that the entire family (except for Rebecca) moved west and were never heard from again. Any help will be appreciated.[76]



Bottom of Form



From 1838 to 1844 Gottlober was living in Mogilev-Podolski and then wandering yet again.[77]

December 27, 1884: Henny-Klara Gottlieb, born Silber, December 27, 1884 in Mainstockheim. Resided Braunshweig. Deportation: from Gelsenkirchen-Munster-Hannover, March 31, 1942. Missing. [78]



December 27, 1891:


Ernest Bowes-Lyon

August 4, 1858

December 27,1891

Isobel Hester Drummond (1860–1945)

Capt. Hubert Bowes-Lyon (1883–1959)
Susan Bowes-Lyon (1884–1885)
Dorothea Bowes-Lyon (1886–1886)
Joan Bowes-Lyon (1888–1954)
Marjorie Bowes-Lyon (1889–1981)
Ernestine Bowes-Lyon (1891–19??)


[79]

December 27, 1902: Earnest Olen Burch (b. December 27, 1902 in AL / d. August 27, 1967 in CA)[80] Ernest Olen Burch15 [Mary Nix14, John K. 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. December 27, 1902 in Lauderdale Co. AL / d. August 27, 1967 in Quartz Hill, CA) married Mildred Emma Hufstedler (b. February 9, 1910 in Tolar, Hood Co. TX / d. January 1989 in Lubbock Co. TX), the daughter of Edward Hufstedler and Maura West, on December 24, 1925 in Farwell, TX.

A. Children of Ernest Burch and Mildred Hufstedler:
+ . i. Ernest Olen Burch, Jr. (b. June 7, 1928 in Bailey Co. TX)
. ii. Bobbie Laurence Burch (b. June 23, 1929 in Bailey Co. TX)





December 27, 1906

In the issue of December 27, 1906 is stated that the newspaper will be published as “The Central City Herald”. The Herald has absorbed the business of the “Prairieburg News” and henceforth will be the sole representative of “Central City, Prairieburg, Alburnette and that portion of the county between the Wapsie and the Buffalo on the east, the county line on the north and the Cedar River on the West. Article in Book of photocopies in…year 1906.[81]



1907


[82]


[83]



1907: Arthur Ruppin visits Palestine, reports to Zionist organization on status of settlements and is sent to open the Palestine Bureau in 1908.[84]




Chinese Famine of 1907

Chinese Famine of 1907 The Worst Droughts and Famines in History Politics & History picture

Coming in second, a brief but deadly famine hit China in 1907 and is accordingly known as the Chinese Famine of 1907. In a matter of months an estimated 24 million people were killed.[85]





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


[1] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_High_Priests_of_Israel


[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_High_Priests_of_Israel


[4] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, pages 114-115


[5] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, page 115.


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


[7] Antiquity, From the Birth of Sumerian Civilization to the the Fall the Roman Empire, by Norman F. Cantor, page 82.


[8] Introducing Islam by Dr. Shams Inati, pg 39..


[9] Wikipedia


[10] Wikipedia


[11] Wikipedia


[12] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt


[13] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[14] Wikipedia


[15] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=78493831


[16] (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett pge. 454.21)




[17] http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=adgedge&id=I57695


[18] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford By Grace U. Emahiser p. 40.


[19] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford By Grace U. Emahiser p. 189.


[20] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888


[21] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_MacKinnon


[22] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_MacKinnon


[23] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888


[24] http://www.americanrevolution.org/hessians/hess1.html


[25] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm


[26] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 452.20.


[27] George Croghan. (Pronounced CROW an—although some say CROW gun). Indian name was Anaquarunda. Born in Dublin c1720. Immigrated to PA in 1741. Died at Passaynunk, PA (Philadelphia) on August 31, 1782. Croghan traveled to the western frontier where he established trading operations with Indians in western PA and in Ohio. He established a post on the Great Miami River at an Indian village known as Pickawillany in 1749 that attracted traders for hundreds of miles in all directions. (The Great Miami River flows south through western Ohio to enter the Ohio River near present-day Cincinnati.) Croghan represented Pennsylvania (the Penn Proprietary) in several Indian relations. Owner/operator of extensive trading operations in Ohio and western PA with central facility at the foot of Pine Creek (site of Etna, PA). The French resented Croghan’s trading to the point they put a price on his head. “King of the Traders.” Croghan’s prices for goods sold to the Indians was said to be half or one-quarter that of the French. The French were never able to price their goods as cheaply as Croghan and the other “English” traders —plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose. Possibly born and baptized Roman Catholic, but converted to the Anglican Church in the colonies. Known for giving Saint Patrick’s Day parties, but also for strong anti-Catholic sentiments.



George Croghan Pike. US 522 in the Shirleysburg area of Huntingdon County. Photo by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged photo.

Compiler's note: US 522 along this stretch in Huntingdon County is alternatively known as Croghan's Pike. It passes throguh Fort Shirley, Aughwick Indian Town, Aughwick Creek and other Croghan related sites. (Aughwick. Now Shirleysburg in Huntingdon County. Location of a George Croghan trading post. On Aughwick Creek leading into the Juniata River. Tanagharison, the Half-King, died there October 4, 1954 after the unsuccessful defense of Fort Necessity. Queen Alliquippa died in Aughwick that same winter.

The word Aughwick is a variation of “achweek” having a meaning of “overgrown with brush.” “Wicker” is a slender, pliant twig sometimes used in furniture. The physical appearance of the area probably gave rise to the name.)

In 1756 Croghan was appointed Deputy Superintendent of Indian Affairs by Sir William Johnson and, as such, became Britain’s agent in the Ohio Country. This appointment displeased PA Governor James Hamilton who found Croghan to be “an intriguing, disaffected person.”

He attended and was involved in treaty-making in PA (Treaty of Easton in 1758). When PA refused to assist the western settlements against the Indians, Croghan switched his allegiance over to Virginia. In a series of agreements, he was to become owner of in excess of 200,000 acres south of the Ohio River. The “purchase” was from the Iroquois. Business partner and brother-in-law of William Trent. Some of the nicer things said about him were that he was “impudent, ill-bred, illiterate, vile, intriguing….”

He learned passable Indian dialects (his second wife was Mohawk-Iroquois), and was trusted in trading—although he was often slow in paying his suppliers in Philadelphia. He had two daughters—one from his English wife who died and one by his Mohawk wife. His daughter by his Indian wife became the wife of the Mohawk Joseph Brant.

Croghan was sent west by Sir William Johnson in 1765 to talk to Pontiac and reestablish trade relations. While traveling down the Ohio River with several Shawnees, Croghan's party was attacked by eighty Kickapoo and Muscouten warriors and he received a hatchet blow to the head. His capturers later gave him back to the Shawnee rather than risking a war with the British as well as other Indian nations. Croghan did meet with Pontiac and arranged for a meeting for him with Sir William Johnson. The meeting between Pontiac and Sir William Johnson was the beginning of the end for Pontiac. Basically, he overrepresented himself and fell out of favor with his Ottawa people.

George Washington complained of Croghan’s trading practices during the Fort Necessity encounter. Croghan died in 1782 in the Philadelphia area after being identified as a Tory sympathizer during the Revolutionary War. In spite of his many commercial ventures, he died penniless—but, remains one of the more interesting characters to have lived in western PA during the mid 1700s.

http://www.thelittlelist.net/coatocus.htm




[28] Cresap. Colonel Thomas Cresap. (1694-1790). Born in England and came to the colonies in 1718 (some sources write that Cresap was fifteen when he arrived in the colonies) . Arriving in Maryland at Havre de Grace (where the Susquehanna River flows into Chesapeake Bay), he bought a 500-acre "Maryland" land grant on the western bank of the Susquehanna (east of York). In the 1730s he shot a PA law officer (mortally wounded) and spent eight months in jail in Philadelphia. In the 1740s, Cresap and other mountain-men were in the vicinity of Wills Creek and west of the Appalachian Mountains trading with Indians. He obtained a grant on some land on the Potomac River. His trading post was on the Maryland side of the river was later called Oldtown. Oldtown was one of frontier stops of young George Washington during his surveying days as a teenager. Cresap and “Chief” Nemacolin laid-out a packhorse trail from Wills Creek (Cumberland, MD) to Gist’s Plantation and on to Redstone Fort (Brownsville, PA). Some sources believe the trail was limited to the 35 miles from Will's Creek to the Youghiogheny River.

After Braddock’s defeat in 1755, Cresap organized his own “Rangers” and did battle with various Indian groups making incursions in the area of the Braddock Road. In one of those fights, one of Cresap’s Black slaves was killed and afterwards the mountain where he died was named “Negro Mountain.”

http://www.thelittlelist.net/coatocus.htm


[29] In Search of Turkey Foote Road, page 31.


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


[31] http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/textindices/C/CUTLIP+1998+1837576+F


[32] http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ifetch2?/u1/textindices/C/CUTLIP+1998+1837576+F


[33] http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/




[34] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=27043732


[35] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


[36] http://www.polsci.wvu.edu/wv/Hardy/harhistory.html


[37] St. Charles Historical Society Museum, October 2010


[38] The Historical Museum, Utica, Illinois


[39] (BUTTERFIELD [1],93)


[40] George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799: The Diaries of George Washington. The Diaries of George Washington. Vol. II. 1766-70. Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, eds. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1976






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


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


[43] In February, 1768, Governor Penn commissioned the Rev. John Steele, of Carlisle, a Presbyterian clergyman of some celebrity, and three other citizens of Cumberland county, to visist the obnoxious settlements, distribute proclamations embodying the bloody act, and warn the settlers to quit. These envoys set out early in March, and traveled by way of Fort Cumberland and Braddock’s road.


[44] Monongahela of Old, by James Veech, p. 93.Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 323-324.


[45] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 454.51.


[46]


[47] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norborne_Berkeley,_4th_Baron_Botetourt


[48] http://www.mdlpp.org/pdf/library/1905AccountofVirginiaBoundaryContraversy.pdf


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


[50] http://www.gwmemorial.org/washington.php


[51]MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY, FIRST AT AUGUSTA TOWN NOW WASHINGTON, PA.), AND AFTER­ WARDS ON THE ANDREW HEATH FARM NEAR WEST ELIZABETH; 1776-1780.’ EDITED BY BOYD CRUMRINE, OF WASHINGTON, PA. pg. 397.


[52] (Maryland State Archives. Register of Queen Anne Parish, M 389, Page 97 original or Page 341 revised.) (http://washburnhill.freehomepage.com/custom3.html)


[53] George Washington, A Biography in His Own Words, Edited by Ralph K. Andrist


[54] Washington’s Crossing by David Hackett Fischer pg. 381


[55] Draper Series, Volume III, Frontier Defense of the Uper Ohio, 1777-1778 Wisconsin Historical Society pg. 303


[56] http://www.gwmemorial.org/washington.php


[57]MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY, FIRST AT AUGUSTA TOWN NOW WASHINGTON, PA.), AND AFTER­ WARDS ON THE ANDREW HEATH FARM NEAR WEST ELIZABETH; 1776-1780.’ EDITED BY BOYD CRUMRINE, OF WASHINGTON, PA. pg. 397.


[58] Ellis’s History of Fayette County, PA. p. 537.


[59] The Revolutionary War, Military Channel, The Dark Days,


[60] http://doclindsay.com/pictures_logos_stuff/cemetery_pictures.html


[61] http://doclindsay.com/pictures_logos_stuff/cemetery_pictures.html


[62] http://doclindsay.com/pictures_logos_stuff/cemetery_pictures.html


[63] http://www.gwmemorial.org/washington.php


[64] http://www.ebay.com/itm/ANDREW-JACKSON-DOLLAR-COIN-WITH-MASONIC-STAMP-/151064439025?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item232c2468f1


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


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


[67] Note: Since many of the soldiers and officers of the American Revolutionary War were unable to procure their bounty lands, for a number of reasons, an assignee or Power of Attorney was hired or appointed. This usually happened when the soldier or officer died or was killed. Then, the heirs would necessarily, be represented in this order. Perhaps several branches of one family were represented; each with a different and separate Power of Attorney. This creates complications in tracing family records, due to the fact, each separate assignee and Power of Attorney must be traced as well as the family in question. (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969. pg. 188.)


[68] The Long Knives, 1998, HISTI


[69] Cynthiana Since 1790 by Virgil Peddicord, page 23.


[70] In Search for Turkey Foot, page 6.


[71] Fascinating facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr. page 199.


[72] Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr. page 199.


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


[74] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


[75] The Sons of the republic. Sent by John Moreland


[76] http://boards.ancestrylibrary.com/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=1&p=surnames.godlove


[77] http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Gottlober_Avraham_Ber


[78] [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).


[79] Wikipedia


[80] Proposed Decendants of William Smythe


[81] Winton Goodlove papers.


[82] Art Museum, Austin, TX. February 11, 2012


[83] Art Museum, Austin, TX. February 11, 2012


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


[85] http://www.timelinesdb.com/listevents.php?subjid=521&title=Drought

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