Friday, January 17, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, January 17, 2014


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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.



Birthdays on January 17….



Edna Godlove



Earl G. LeClere (1st cousin 3x removed)



Margaret P. LeClere Cooley (1st cousin 3x removed)



Essie A. Newman Kruse (great grandmother)



Brandon R. Oestern (3rd cousin 1x removed)



Lydia A. Rodgers Harrison (wife of the 3rd cousin 4x removed)



Julie A. Short (4th great grandniece of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)



Emily Stewart Rullman (4th cousin 1x removed)



Sarah Thrap



Harmanus van Antwerp (6th great grandfather of the exwife)



January 1541: Several other members of the Howard family were sent to the Tower, including Norfolk's stepmother, the Dowager Duchess of Norfolk.[9] However the French ambassador Marillac wrote on January 17, 1541 that Norfolk had not only escaped punishment, but had apparently been restored to his 'full former credit and authority'.[2][1]



January 17, 1567: On the accusation of Joseph Riccio and other officers of her household, who charge Lutyni with having stolen their money and jewels, Mary (9th cousin 13x removed) writes to the marshal of Berwick, entreating him to cause him to be arrested.^[2] [3]







January 17, 1583: Antoinette of Bourbon, Duchess-dow^ager of Guise, and grandmother of Mary, dies at Join ville.







The Duke of Anjou, who for a considerable time had entertained the plan of seizing upon the best places of Flanders by a single blow, had ordered the commanders of the French troops to make themselves



masters of the different towns in which they were quartered ; and he had appointed the January 17 for the execution of this plan. The plot was successful at Dunkirk^ at Bergues, and some other towns ; but failed in many, especially at Antwerp. The Duke of Anjou in person strove in vain to expel the forces of the States-General from this important city. The burgesses came to their assistance ; and, in a few hours, the French lost nearly fifteen hundred men. The duke was compelled to retire precipitately to Berchem, and thence to Duffel. [4]







January 17, 1587: They take leave of the queen, protesting, in the name of the king their master, against all which she might do against the life of Mary. [5]







January 17, 1670 In Metz, Burghers of the city decided that it was financially beneficial to expel the Jews, and so concocted a ritual murder libel. Raphael Levy, a respected member of the community, was arrested, tortured and burned alive. The Royal Council later called it "Judicial Murder" and the Jews were not expelled.[6]







January 17, 1754: The route of George Washington‘s (grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) October 31, 1753 to January 16, 1754 journey to Fort Leboeuf is shown on the map (Figures 0432, 0437) that accompanied the January 17, 1754 ―Journal to the Ohio‖ that George Washington wrote from his trip notes. The purpose of the trip is described in the 1760 edition of Smollett‘s ―Continuation of the Complete History of England…‖ as follows:



The French having in a manner commenced hostilities against the English, and actually built forts on the territories of the British allies at Niagara, and on the lake Erie…in the mean time the French fortified themselves at leisure, and continued to harass the traders
belonging to the British settlements. Repeated complaints of these encroachments and depredations being represented to Mr. Dinwiddie, governor of Virginia, he, towards thelatter end of this very year, sent major Washington with a letter to the commanding officer of a fort which the French had built on the Riviere au Beuf, which falls into the Ohio, not far from the lake Erie. In this letter Mr. Dinwiddie expressed his surprize that the French should build forts and make settlements on the river Ohio, in the western part of the colony of Virginia, belonging to the crown of Great Britain. He complained of
these encroachments, as well as of the injuries done to the subjects of Great Britain, in open violation of the law of nations, .and of the treaties actually subsisting between the two crowns. He desired to know by whose authority and instructions his Britannic majesty‘s territories had been invaded; and required him to depart in peace without further prosecuting a plan, which must interrupt the harmony and good understanding which his majesty was desirous to continue and cultivate with the most Christian king.[7]

Sunday, January 23, 2005 (2)

George Washington, Colonel of the Virginia Regiment. [8]

January 1754. — Washington lands on Wainwright's Island in the Allegheny river. — Recommends that a fort be built at the "Forks of the Ohio." [9]


William Trent‘s January 1754 appointment reads as follows:
Rob‘t Dinwiddie Esq‘r His Majesty‘s L‘t Gov‘r Comd‘r in Chief and Vice Admiral of his Colony and Don‘n of Virg‘a —


To WM, TRENT, ESQ‘R:

Whereas certain Persons pretending to be Subjects of his most X‘n Majesty of the King of France, and that they act by his Como, have in a hostile Manner invaded the Territories of our Sovereign His M‘y King George the 2d, King of Great B. &c. and have committed divers Outrages and Violence on the Persons and Goods of His M‘y‘s Subjects, in direct violation and infract‘n of the Treaties at present subsisting between the two Crowns, and
Whereas these Acts of hostility and depredations have been perpetrated in that Part of His Majesty‘s Dom‘s w‘ch are under my Gov‘t; In order therefore to the reservation of the Peace and Good understanding between the two Crowns and the Preservation of our Sovereign‘s undoubted rights and the Protection of his Subjects as much as in me lies, I have thought fit to appoint and by Virtue of the Power and Authority to me given as Com‘d‘r in Chief of this Colony, I do hereby constitute and appoint You Wm. Trent Esq‘r to be Com‘d‘r of such and so many of His M‘y‘s Subjects not exceeding 100 Men as You can immediately raise and enlist, and with the s‘d Comp‘a and the Assistance of our good and faithful Friends and Allies the Ind‘s of the Six Nat‘s and such others as are in Amity with them and Us, to keep Possession of His M‘y‘s Lands on the Ohio and the Waters thereof and to dislodge and drive away, and in case of refusal and resistance to kill and destroy or take Prisoners all and every Person and Persons not Subjects of the King of G.
B. who now are or shall hereafter come to settle and take Possess‘n of any Lands on said River Ohio, or on any of the Branches or Waters thereof. And I do hereby require the s‘d Men who shall so enlist themselves and every of them to obey You as their Com‘d‘r and Capt‘n &c. and You are to constitute such and so many Officers under You as the Service shall require, not exceeding 1 Capt. and 1 Lieut‘t.

Given under my Hand and the Seal of the Colony at W‘msburg the — Day of Jan‘y in the 27 Year of His M‘y‘s Reign, annoq Dom. 1754.[10]


[11]



January 17, 1754: The earliest written use of the phrase ―Turkey Foot‖ that we have encountered is on the maps that accompanied George Washington‘s January 17, 1754 ―Journal to the Ohio‖. Washington composed his journal from notes he took during a journey with Christopher Gist to the French forts. The journey took place from October 31, 1753 to January 16, 1754. He went to deliver a message and to survey the French forts.

January 1756

As will be seen in chapter on Winchester, the town was fully established when Maj. Washing ton appeared before the court in Jan., 1756, with his authority to organize the Militia, and anounce his plans. he necdcd officers to form companies for his expedition against the In­dians; and after stating tile emergency, the Court, upon this recommendation, designated the following, men to serve as Captains in the Virginia Regiment; George Mercer, Robert Stewart, Thomas Cocke, William Bronaugh, Joshua Lewis, John Mercer, William Peachy, and David Bell. Walter Stewart, John Williams, and Augustine Brockenbraugh, were Lieutenants; and Charles Smith, Lehaynsius DeKeyser, and William Crawford, Ensigns. This is more fully treated in the sketch of the French and Indian War. All took the required oath to His Majesty the King of England.



The sudden disclosure to the Justices caused consternation; and as stated elsewhere, they ordered an adjournment to the house of Enoch Pearson. The Grand Jury failed to appear, owing to the Indian forays in the mountain sec­tions to the West; they were excused. Follow­ing November Court, Captains Thomas Swearingen, William Cocke, John Funk, Cornelius Ruddell, and William Vance presented claims before the Court for public services for them­selves and detachments sent under their command on an expedition to protect outlaying settlements. The court promptly allowed their payment. Some of the officers mentioned here figured in the Revolution. [12]

Zachariah Connell, a son of James & Ann Williams Connell, married (1) Rebecca Rice and (2) Margaret Wallace. He died in 1813 and is buried on a hill overlooking Connellsville. Many of his descendants moved west, but there are still Connell’s in Connellsville.[13]



1759 MAP OF THE COUNTRY BETWEEN WILLS CREEK AND FORT DUQUESNE, from The Grand Magazine of Universal Intelligence and Monthly Chronicle of Our Times, January 1759, London: R. Griffiths & J. Hoey. This map is based upon a drawing by Capt. William Orme, an aide-de-camp to General Braddock, showing the march to the French Fort Duquesne (Pittsburgh) in 1755 that ended in disaster. It includes southwestern Pennsylvania, northern Virginia and western Maryland. Wills Creek is at Cumberland, Maryland, and the Virginians built a fort there that was the jumping off point for expeditions to the west. Numbers along the route of march refer to an explanatory table on a larger scale version of this map which was eventually published in Thomas Jeffrey's A General Topography of North America and the West Indies (1768), along with several others made by Orme. These maps are illustrated in Swift and also in Schwartz (1994). The map has a cartouche with a hanging vine and a compass rose. Longitude is west from Philadelphia, unusual for a map published in England, and indicates the map was prepared in America. Blank verso. Scale:1"=17 miles. Size: 8 x 5 inches. [14]







1759



At this period John of Mishinish resided at the family estate of that name in the northern part of the Island of Mull. He is said to have died there circa. 1759 but there is some reason to suppose that he followed his sons across the Atlantic.[15]







1759







"Among the earliest known records in America concerning the Reverend Daniel McKinnon (5th great grandfather), are those of Trinity Church, New Haven (now Connellsville), Pennsylvania, wherein, in the year 1880, which marked its hundredth anniversary, the 16th of December was set apart to hold a commemorative service. There were present... the Reverend W. G. Stonex, who read a paper, the subject of which was “Ministers Who Have Officiated In Trinity Church, 1780-1880." In connection with that early day (1759), we meet the name of the Reverend D. Allison (note: Law. Harrison Dr. married an Allison), who is referred to as "the Chaplain of a small detachment of 100 men" who were sent out to open a road-way to this region. This person, who was an undoubted clergyman of the church, and held regular Sunday services, could not have been the first christian minister in these parts. At a later day than this, yet still before the Revolutionary War, we are made aware, that there came to this vicinity, as a Church Clergyman, the Reverend Daniel McKinnon, tho "where he resided cannot be ascertained, nor do we know at what points he ministered, except that his name and labors are associated with the Church at Beaver." [16]


1759: In 1759 the disciples of the strange and sinister prophet Jacob Frank followed the example of their Messiah and converted en masse to Christianity, adhering to Jadaism in secret. [17]


January 17, 1775: At a Court Con'd and held for Augusta County at Pittsburgh, January 17th, 1775, According to an Ordinance of Convention held at Richmond :


Pres't Edward Ward, Dorsey Penticost, John Cannon, John
McColloch, Geo Vallandigham, Wm Goe



(69) On the Motion of Rich Willis, it is Ord that his mark be recorded, a Crop in the near Ear and a Swallow fork in the off Ear.







On the Motion of James Wright, Ord that his Mark be re-



corded, a Swallow fork in the Off Ear.







On the Motion of Daniel Harris, It is Ord that his Mark, a



Swallow fork in Each Ear.







On the Motion of Thos. Glenn, Ord that his Mark, a Crop



in Each Ear and under slit in Each.







On the Motion of Thomas Crooks, Ord that his Mark, a



Crop in the Near Ear.







On the Motion of Thos. ' Atkinson, Ord that his Mark, a



Crop and Slit in the Crop in the right Ear, and the left Ear



slit down and one half Cropt off.







P. Thos Smallman.







Thos. Atkinson, being bound over to this Court on the



Complt of Fras. Maines, Appeared ; no prosecutor appearing,



It is Ord that he be dis'd.







Samuel Mcbride is app a Constable in the room of Razon



Virgin, and It is Ord that he Summoned.







Francis Morrison Mark be record, a Crop in the near Ear



and a hole in the off.







Wm Hawkins Mark be record, a Crop off the left and a slit



in the right.







Pet Hillibrand Mark be record, a^Crop in the left Ear and a



Swallow fork and under slit in the right.







Or that the Court be adjorned until the Court in Course.







Edw'd Ward. [18]







January 1776



After eight months of such one-sided precision rifle fire, and evergrowing artillery fire, the British abandoned Boston. As quickly as they left, however, Gen. George Washington disbanded most rifle companies to fill his smoothbore-armed infantry regiments, and with good reason.



The Revolutionary War rifle was agonizingly slow to reload, requiring as many as two minutes to pour powder, force a ball down its constricted bore, charge its powder pan and get off an aimed shot. By contrast, the smoothbore musket was that era’s arm of choice despite its inherent inaccuracy; what the smoothbore lacked in range it compensated with firepower, offering up to four rounds per minujte. Eighteen century tacticians believed smoothbore aremed infantry men won battles by advancing shoulder to shoulder and maintaining drilled discipline while they fired volley after volley after volley.



In contrast to the modern sniper, no matter how carefully a Revolutionary War rifleman stalked, no matter the cleverness of his camouflage or subtlty of his firing position, once he fired, his location was instantly detected. For the second a blackpoder sharpshooter pulled the trigger, his muzzle spewed a six foot sooty plume that lung in the air. Spotting this conspicuous signature, his anamies had almost tow minutes for eight volleys and a quick bayonet assault before the rifleman could reload and fire. Further, unlike a smoothbore musket, the rifle lacked a bayonet, forcing the rifleman to rely on his trusty tomahawk to take on his assaulting foes “Indian-style.”This was no small disadvantage.[19]



General Washington well understood these strengths and weaknesses. Therefore, with Boston secured, he transferred most riflemen to his under-strength smoothbore musket regiments, retaining a few detachments to scout or defend the frontier from British Indian raids.[20]







January 1776



After raising a regiment at his home at Stewart’s Crossings in the Youghiogheny, then in the county of Westmoreland, William Crawford (6th great grandfather) did not immediately secure a but was commissioned lieutenant-colonel of the Fifth Virginia in January, 1776. The regiment took the field early in 1776.[21]







The armada arrived at Pensacola on January 17, 1779. The first Waldeckers to be taken prisoner fell into the hands of the Spaniards on Lake Pontchartrain because they were ignorant of the state of war between Spain and



England. When Baton-Rouge capitulated, the first 53 prisoriers were joined by nearly half of the 1400-man garrison. [22]







January 1781- At the start of this year, a mutiny broke out in the rebel army. Between 2,000 and 3,000 men, under the command of General [Henry] Know, left their winter quarters at Morristown in New Jersey. These malcontents moved from Morristown towrd Elizabethtown, took a sevure position on a height, and demanded their many monthes back pay, in hard cash, better uniform items, and better provisions. Therefore, three Hessian and two British grenadier battalions, the Jaegers, and two British light infantry battalions were transferred from Long Island to Staten Island today, in order to be nearer these malcontents. General Clinton himself went to Staten Island, and commenced a correspondence with them. Reportedly our side promised them all their back pay, if they came over to us. However, they refused this offer, as it was never their intention to cross over to us, but they would remain neutral; and return to their homes. These malcontents have been reconciled with Congress and General Washington, and rejoined the rebel army again as the result of promises, exhortations, and being given part of their pay.[23]







When Nathanial Green arrived in Charlotte, North Carolina to take command of the so called Grand Army of the Southern Department of the United States of America, he found only 1500 men. It was, Green reported “but the shadow of an army, in the midst of distress, wretched beyond description.” Barely half the men were properly clothed or equipped, and when Green arrived they had exactly three days supply of food. For every sorry scarecrow Green could muster, Cornwallis had three well fed regulars. Green responded to his predicament, with the most daring strategy of the revolution. Already outnumbered three to on e, he decided to split his force. By the books this was suicide, but Green believed the gamble would save his army. He sent the frontier general west with six hundred men, while he went east with the rest of the army.







When Cornwallis learned that learned that Green had split his pathetic force, he didn’t believe it, but he took the bait and split his army. On New Years Day (January 1), 1781, he sent Tarlton and 1000 men to find Daniel Morgan and crush him. Morgan was near the Broad River in South Carolina when an express rider brought word from General Green.



“Colonel Tarlton is said to be on his way to pay you a visit. I doubt not that he will have a decent reception.”



For several days Morgan let Tarlton pursue him, then he turned and made his stand in a place called the Cowpens. It was a sparcely wooded pasture. It looked like the worst possible place for foot soldier to take on cavalrymen. Cowpens also backed up against the Broad River, leaving his men no retreat. But Morgan had chosen this trap on purpose. Almost half his men were raw militia, likely to run at the first pop of a gun. As Morgan observed, “Men fight as much as they find necessary, and no more. When men are forced to fight, they will sell their lives dearly.”



Daniel Morgan invented a new way to teach how to fight to militiamen and it was to know who could do what and then never ask a men to do more than he was physically capable of doing.[24]







January 17, 1781



Commander in chief of the Southern Army, Major General Nathaniel Greene had decided to divide Patriot forces in the Carolinas in order to force the larger British contingent under General Charles Cornwallis to fight them on multiple fronts—and because smaller groups of men were easier for the beleaguered Patriots to feed. Daniel Morgan took 300 Continental riflemen and 740 militiamen with the intention of attacking the British backcountry fort, Ninety-Six.[25]



On the morning of January 17, 1781, an hour before daylight scouts reported that the British were just five miles away and closing fast. Morgan formed his men in three lines, 150 sharpshooters in front, the militia in the middle, 450 steadfast Continentals. [26]



In response, Cornwallis dispatched Tarleton with 1,100 Redcoats and Loyalists to catch Morgan, whom he feared might instigate a broad-based backcountry Patriot uprising. Morgan prepared for the encounter with Tarleton by backing his men up to a river at Cowpens, north of Ninety-Six.[27]



The riflemen fired first, then the militia fired their two volleys as ordered and withdrew. Mistaking their withdrawal for a retreat Tarlton ordered a charge, and they slammed straight into the line of continentals. When the American line stood fast, Tarleton sent in his Highlanders. Now the Continentals fell back. Tarleton, seeing another apparent retreat, pursued. Suddenly, at a deadly range, the entire American line turned and fired. [28]







The Americans just blew Tarleton away and that is the reason Cowpens is such a great tactical victory for Americans because it is one of the few times in the war you can actually see that the Americans effectively used the linear tactics, and beat the British at their own game. [29]







Daniel Morgan in the space of about 35 or 40 minutes, just delivered, after Washingtons victory at Trenton, the second most decisive battlefield defeat on the British of the Revolution. He has smashed an elite British force and totally crippled them. [30]







Morgan captured or killed nearly 800 men, 90% of Tarleton’s force. [31] American rifles, scorned by Britain's professional soldiers, proved devastatingly effective in this engagement. The British lost 110 men and more than 200 more were wounded, while an additional 500 were captured. The American losses totaled only 12 killed and 60 wounded in the first Patriot victory to demonstrate that the American forces could outfight a similar British force without any other factors—such as surprise or geography—to assist them.[32]







Joseph C. Vance,(1st cousin 8x removed) a Virginian whose Scotch Irish forebears had emigrated to Virginia long before the Revolutionary War, had fought during the war under General Daniel Morgan, married in 1781, and not long after started West, dwelling for a time at several places along the way. About 1801 he moved into Ohio from May’s Lick, Kentucky, finally settling on a farm two and a half miles north of Urbana.[33] In December of 1807 he married Sarah Wilson and they had ten children. Their son Joseph Vance became the Governor of Ohio in 1836. Joseph Coleville Vance who married Sarah Wilson died May 16, 1809 in Champaign County, Ohio. He is the compilers first cousin, 8 times removed.







The Battle of Cowpens, January 17, 1781 was Morgan’s last battle before retiring. It may have been Joseph C. Vance’s as well.







January 1783



January, 1783. The peace is concluded, and the United States have been declared independent. Adjutant General Stapleton4 was sent to the Congress to bring about as soon as possible the return of the prisoners of war, who are scattered around the entire country. The American pris­oners of war are to be set free at once.[34]







In January 1785, the representatives of the two sides met at Fort McIntosh at the confluence of the Ohio and Beaver Rivers. The tribes ceded all claims to land in the Ohio Country east of the Cuyahoga and Muskingum rivers. The tribes also ceded the areas surrounding Fort Detroit and Fort Michilimackinac to the American government and gave back captives taken in raids along the frontier.



Problems with the new treaty soon arose. Connecticut's Western Reserve extended west of the Cuyahoga River into the reservation lands. Connecticut had already granted large tracts of land, later to be nicknamed the "Firelands", in the region to Revolutionary War veterans and Patriots who had lost their homes in the war.



Conflict between the tribes and the new settlers soon broke out. Further complicating the matter was that Great Britain also continued to claim part of the region and would do so until the Jay Treaty was signed in 1794. Some British agents in the region, still stinging from their defeat in the Revolution, encouraged tribes to attack American settlements.



The American government sent General Arthur St. Clair into the Ohio Country to reestablish peace. He had been instructed to offer back to the tribes some lands north of the Ohio River and east of the Muskingum River in exchange for the disputed territory. St. Clair however defied orders and instead threatened and bribed several pliable chiefs into a one sided agreement. [35][36]



January 1789: Morgan assembled an expedition of about seventy farmers, artisans, tradesmen, etc. The expedition probably began at Pittsburgh and picked up additional people during the trip down the Ohio River. It may have been during this initial trip that Benjamin Harrison joined Morgan's project. In the spring of 1789, New Madrid was a busy scene. Surveyors were at work, stores were built and fields were cleared. In May, with everything running smoothly, Morgan went to New Orleans to discuss routine colony business with Miro who was to be his immediate superior. During his absence, Benjamin Harrison was to be in charge of surveying a thousand farms.



When Morgan reached New Orleans, he found that Miro was not at all in agreement with Gardoqui regarding the establishment of a colony of Americans on Spanish land. And also, another American had presented to Miro a scheme which might better serve the Spanish King's interests. General James Wilkinson of Kentucky had proposed to bring Kentucky out of the United States and over to Spanish rule. Miro was not totally opposed to the New Madrid project particularly since it was well under way. But Miro would not stand for all the liberal policies that Gardoqui had assumed would be acceptable. Morgan could only be an assistant to a Spanish commander. This commander would be Pedro Foucher. Only the Catholic Church would be permitted in New Madrid. No self-government would be tolerated. Also, land was not to be sold but granted free. Another objection was the name of the colony. It was not to be called New Madrid but rather "L'Anse a la Grasse".



At about the time of Morgan's meeting with Miro, Morgan learned that he had inherited the estate of his late brother. He may have been more interested in the estate, or he may have been disappointed by the limitations placed on him by Miro. What ever the reason was, Morgan never returned to New Madrid but instead returned to Pennsylvania to live. After Pedro Foucher took charge of New Madrid, he replied to a petition from Benjamin Harrison (5th great granduncle) saying that new settlers would not have to pay for land. Some of these settlers were Indians. Many were French whose ancestors had lived in Illinois under French rule during and before the French and Indian War.



Benjamin Harrison also left New Madrid for reasons unknown.[37]







January 1795: Grace Louisa Francis Smith (4th cousin 7x removed)(b. January 1795 in Elbert Co. GA)[38]





January 17, 1801:




Elizabeth Hay, Countess of Erroll

January 17, 1801

January 16,1856

Married William Hay, 18th Earl of Erroll, had issue.




January 17, 1821: Moses Austin received grant of land in Texas for settlement.[39]



January 17, 1823 (Conrad Goodlove, 3rd great grandfather)







Sunday, October 02, 2005 (3)



Sunday, October 02, 2005 (4)



January 17, 1839: Hair Conrad Cherokee detachment departed August 23, 1838 Arrived January 17, 1839 729 departed, 654 arrived, 57 deaths. [40]



DETACHMENT DEPARTED ARRIVED DEPART ARRIVE DEATHS



John Benge September 28, 1838 January 17, 1839 1200 1132 33[41]









January 17, 1841: RODGERS, Lydia Ann (wife of the 3rd cousin 4x removed) b: January 17, 1841 in Ross County, Ohio



m: December 24, 1861 in Fayette County, Ohio d: February 07,



1922 in Madison County, Ohio[42]



January 1857:Constitution Hall State Historic Site











































Constitution Hall 2006



Constitution Hall, erected by Samuel Jones in 1856, became the place were the Kansas Territorial Government convened. In the fall of 1857 (October 19), the Lecompton Constitutional Convention met and drafted a pro-slavery constitution in the upper story of the building. The downstairs was rented as the federal land office and private law offices.



During 1857 this building was one of the busiest and most important in Kansas Territory. Thousands of settlers and speculators filed claims in the United States land office on the first floor. They sometimes fought hand-to-hand for their share of the rich lands that were opening for settlement. The government was removing the Native Americans from Kansas to make their lands available to whites.



Upstairs the district court periodically met to try to enforce the territorial laws. Most free-state people refused to obey these laws because they had been passed by the pro slavery territorial legislature. This resistance made law enforcement nearly impossible for territorial officials. Time after time the territorial governors called out federal troops from Fort Leavenworth or Fort Riley to maintain order.



In January 1857 the second territorial legislative assembly met on the upper floor. Although still firmly pro slavery, this group removed some of the earlier laws that their antislavery neighbors opposed.[43]



January 17, 1862: John TYLER (11th cousin 1x removed of the wife of the nephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed)(10th President of the USA) was born on March 29, 1790 in Greenway, Charles City County, Virginia. He served as as President of the United States from 1841 to 1845. He died on January 17, 1862 in Richmond, Richmond County, Virginia. He was buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. Parents: John TYLER and Mary Marot ARMISTEAD.



Spouse: Letitia CHRISTIAN. John TYLER (10th President of the USA) and Letitia CHRISTIAN were married on March 29, 1813 in Cedar Grove, New Kent County, Virginia. Children were: Mary TYLER, Robert TYLER, John TYLER, Letitia TYLER, Elizabeth TYLER, Ann Contesse TYLER, Alice TYLER, Tazewell TYLER.



Spouse: Julia GARDINER. John TYLER (10th President of the USA) and Julia GARDINER were married on June 26, 1844 in The Church of Ascension, New York, New York County, New York. Children were: Gardiner David TYLER, John Alexander TYLER, Julia Gardiner TYLER, Lachlan TYLER M. D., Lyon Gardiner TYLER, Robert Fitzwalter TYLER, Pearl TYLER.[44]



January 17-21, 1863: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Moved to Youngt’s Point, La., January 17-21, and duty there till March. [45]



Sun. January 17, 1864



Packed up my goods a pleasant day[46]



William Harrison Goodlove (2nd great grandfather)



January 17th. At 2 o’clock the morning of the 17th our Steamer stopped. We saw flashes of canons and heard heavy firing. At first it was supposed to be a vessel in distress. It was afterwards supposed to be our gun boats off Charleston or Wilmington. At this time the sea was heavy and very windy.[47]



January 17, 1865: General William T. Sherman's army is rained in at Savannah, Georgia, as it waits to begin marching into the Carolinas.



In the fall of 1864, Sherman and his army marched across Georgia and destroyed nearly everything in their path. Sherman reasoned that the war would end sooner if the conflict were taken to the civilian South, a view shared by President Lincoln and General-in-Chief Ulysses S. Grant. Sherman's men tore up railroads, burned grain stores, carried away livestock, and left plantations in ruins. The Yankees captured the port city of Savannah just before Christmas, and Sherman paused for three weeks to rest his troops and resupply his force.



After his rest, he planned to move into the Carolinas and subject those states to the same brutal treatment that Georgia received. His 60,000 troops were divided into two wings. General Oliver O. Howard was to take two corps and move northeast to Charleston, South Carolina, while General Henry Slocum was to move northwest toward Augusta, Georgia. These were just diversions to the main target: Columbia, South Carolina.



As Sherman was preparing to move, the rains began. On January 17, the Yankees waited while heavy rains pelted the region. The downpour lasted for ten days, the heaviest rainfall in 20 years. Some of Sherman's aides thought a winter campaign in the Carolinas would be difficult with such wet weather, but Sherman had spent four years in Charleston as a young lieutenant in the army, and he believed that the march was possible. He also possessed an army that was ready to continue its assault on the Confederacy. Sherman wrote to his wife that he "...never saw a more confident army...The soldiers think I know everything and that they can do anything."



Sherman's army did not begin moving until the end of the month. When the army finally did move, it conducted a campaign against South Carolina that was worse than that against Georgia. Sherman wanted to exact revenge on the state that had led secession and started the war by firing on Fort Sumter. [48]



January 17, 1916: Unknown date of Publication







W. H. GOODLOVE (Died January 17, 1916)







For a period of forty-three years W. H. Goodlove has been continuously identified with the development and improvement of his farm, which is a productive tract comprising two hundred and forty acres, situated on sections 27 and 28, Maine township. During this time his labors have not only advanced his individual interests but have also done much toward public progress and improvement in the locality which has long been his home.



He was born in Clark county, Ohio, October 22, 1836, a son of Conrad and Katharine (McKinnon) Goodlove, the former born in West Virginia and the Iater in Kentucky. They became early settlers of Ohio and in that state the father enlisted for service in the war of 1812. The year 1854 witnessed the arrival of the family in Linn county, Iowa, the father purchasing land in Marion township. His wife had died prior to his removal here, her death occurring in the Buckey state in 1849. He was not long permitted to enjoy his new home in Linn County for his death occurred here in 1861. His family numbered six children only two are now living, the sister of our subject being Mary Ann, of Columbus, Ohio.



W. H. Goodlove was reared in the state of his nativity and acquired his education in the common schools. He had reached mature years when he accompanied his father and the other members of the family on their removal to Linn county and here he assisted in establishing a home in what was then a comparatively new district. He remained with his father until the latter's death and at the outbreak of the Civil war enlisted for service as a member of Company H, Twenty-fourth Iowa Infantry, with which he served for two years. He participated in a number of hotly contested engagements, and, after making a most creditable military record, was mustered out at Davenport. He then returned to Linn county began farming on the old homestead but in 1867 bought the farm on which he has since made his home, embracing two hundred and forty acres on sections 27 and 28, Maine township. He has made the improvements which are now seen on the farm, including a comfortable country residence, a substantial barn and ontbuildings for the shelter of grain and stock. His fields annually yield abundant harvests, for his land is in a productive state, while in the pastures are seen good grades of stock, for he has always made a specialty of raising stock in addition to general farming. He has become a prosperous man, owing to the capable management and unfaltering enterprise which he displays in the conduct of his business interests.



On the 22d of June, 1866, was celebrated the marriage of Mr. Goodlove and Miss Sarah C. Pyle, who was born in Clark county, Ohio. May 15. 1844 and prior to her marriage engaged in teachng. Her parents, John and Catherine Myers) Pyle, were both natives of West Virginia, whence they removed to Ohio in pioneer times, the father there passing away in 1846. The mother made her home with her daughter Mrs. Goodlove, until her death in 1894, when she departed this life at the age of eighity eight years. Mrs. Goodlove is the youngest in their family of six children.



Unto our subject and his wife have been born six children, three daughters and three sons, as follows: Nettie I., the wife of Richard Gray, a resident of San Antonio, Texas; Willis R., of Maine township; Oscar S.; Cora A., the wife of Thomas Wilkinson, also of Maine township. Earl L., who also resides in the same township; and Jessie P., the wife of Richard Boudish, of Maine township.



The parents are members of the Methodist Episcopal church. Mr. Goodlove is a republican in his political views and has served as township trustee and as member of the school board. He is a member of Milon Mills Post, No. 212, G.A.R. He is as loyal to the interests of his country today as he was in the dark days of the Civil war when he followed the old flag on southern battle fields. He is now one of the few remaining veterans and, having spent an upright and honorable life, receives the veneration and respect which should ever be accorded to one of his years.[49]











William Harrison Goodlove (Bk. I, F- 114) was born Octo­ber 22, 1836, in Moorefield Township, Clark County, Ohio, son of Conrad and Catherine (McKinnon) Goodlove. (Bk. II, F.85) William died January 17, 1916 and is buried at Jordan’s Grove Cemetery. William’s first wife was Ester J. Winans, sister of H. W. Winans, who later served with William in Company H, 24th Infantry during two years of the Civil War. Williaim and Ester were married November 5, 1857. Ester was born in 1836 and died August 7, 1864. No children were born to this union.



In 1862, William enlisted in the service of the Union Army. During his term of service he kept a diary which is very interest­ing. After his discharge at Davenport, Iowa, he returned to his former home until he married Sarah Catherine Pyle, June 20,



1866, in Hastings, Minnesota. Sarah was born May 15, 1844, in Moorefield Township, Clark County, Ohio, daughter of John Ingraham Pyle and Catherine (Myers) Pyle. Sarah died Jan­uary 6, 1929 and is buried at Jordan’s Grove. Prior to her mar­riage, Sarah was a school teacher. To their union was born seven children: Nettie, Willis, Oscar, Cora, Earl, and Jessie, whose twin died at birth.



In 1867, William and Sarah moved to their new farm in Sec­tions 27 and 28 of Maine Township, Linn County, Iowa. It is located three miles southwest of Central City at what is now known as 3974 Pleasant Valley Road. This farm embraced 240 acres, which they farmed until retirement four years prior to William’s death. They moved to their new home in Central City, Iowa, November 7, 1912.



Their retirement home at what is now #53, 5th St., was built by Paul Sigmund, a respected carpenter of those years, at a cost of $2,800. That house stands today with few alterations, as does the house on their farm.



The family was of Methodist faith, having been members of the Prairie Chapel Church and then transferring to the Meth­odist Church in Central City, upon retirement.



William and Sarah’s children were:



1. Nettie Illini, was born July 18, 1867, married Richard H.



Gray, September 13, 1893, at her parents home. Nettie died



September 15, 1911. Nettie and Richard were both doctors in



Anamosa, Iowa before moving to Texas, where their daughter,



Ruth Johnson lives today. They had a son, Richard, who died



at the age of 6 in July 1908, while the family was visiting



Nettie’s parents. The boy is buried at Jordan’s Grove.



2. Willis Ralph (March 22, 1869-April 8, 1953) married



Myrtle Isabelle Andrews, March 4, 1896. She died August 29,



1962, at age 86 years. Both are buried at Jordan’s Grove Cem­etery (Bk. II, F-87). Their children were: Wallace Harold (Bk.



II, F-88), Ethel Vinetta, Bessie Marie, Wilma Laura, Mary lone,



William Paul, Gladys Lavona, and Kenneth Ivan.



3. Oscar Sherman was born October 28, 1871 and married Margie Jenkins on November 16, 1892, at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Jenkins. To this union were born a son, Ralph, December 14, 1893, and a daughter, Rachel, born March 1, 1896.



4. Cora Alice (November 1, 1876-December 14, 1960) mar­riedThomas Wilkinson, April 4, 1907, at the home of the bride’s parents. Thomas died February 1968. Both are buried at Jordan’s Grove. They had three daughters, Nelevene Illini, Kathryn, Dor­othy, and one son, Thomas E. "Wendell", who farmed south of Springville for several years.



5. Earl L. (September 27, 1878-December 14, 1954) mar­ried Fannie Vesta McAtee, daughter of Frank McAtee (Bk. I, F-il), who lived east of the old Kearns later Pleasant Valley (Bk. II, Schools).



6. Jessie Pearl (July 15, 1882-August 24, 1967) married Ri­chard Allen "Dick" Bowdish, September 17, 1908, at the home of the bride’s parents. Richard died in 1967. They had a daugh­ter, Mary Catherine, born October 13, 1915, and a son Albert, born May 1, 1918. Dick and Jessie lived on the home farm of her parents, which they bought in 1913, until their retirement to Colorado. They wanted to be near the home of their daugh­ter and husband, Merrill Jordan (Bk. I, F-32). Albert married Pearl Engstrom and both were missionaries in India until re­tirement. They now live in Oklahoma (Bk. II, F-18).



It is interesting to note here that William’s son, Willis, mar­ried the granddaughter of Levi Brown Andrews who had also served in the Civil War. (Bk. IL, F-3). Also to note that George B. Aikin (Bk. II, F-I) had also served in the Civil War and to wonder if the paths of these three men had ever crossed or had they ever met during their enlistments. George B. Aikin and William FL. Goodlove were great grandfathers, respectively, of Winton Goodlove, and Levi B. Andrews was his great, great, grandfather.[50]



Died January 17th, 1916







Member of Co. H, 24th Iowa Inft.







Whereas, Our heavenly Father, the Great Commander, has called from our ranks our late comrade and friend, Wm. H. Goodlove, a member of Co. H, 24th Iowa Infantry, and



Whereas, It is but just that his many virtues and sterling qualifications should be recognized, therefore



Resolved: By Marvin Mills Post No. 212, Central City, Iowa, that while we bow in humble submnission to the will of the Most High, we do none the less mourn the loss of our comrade and friend.



Resolved: That in the death of Wm. H. Goodlove this post laments the great loss of one who was ever ready to proffer the hand of aid and the voice of sympathy to the needy and distressed, and whose utmost endeavors were ever exerted in doing good to his comrades and fellowmen.



Resolved; That it is but a just tribute to the memory of the departed to say that in deeply regretting his removal from our midst, we sincerely mourn for one who was worthy of our kindest regard.



Resolved: That we tenderly condole with the family of our comrade in this their hour of trial and great sorrow, and commend them for consolation to our Heavenly Father.



Resolved: That our post charter be draped in mourining for a period of thirty days, that these resolutions be spread upon the records of Marvin Mills Post, that they be published in the Central City News-Letter, and also that a copy be sent to the members of the family of our deceased comrade.







Committee Willard Butters, W. F. Budd, Alex. McDonald.[51]







PASSED AWAY AT RIPE OLD AGE







Wm. H. Goodlove, Another Old Soldier and Settler, Died Jan. 18 A Sketch of His Life







The hand on the dial of life had entered into the section which marked the eightieth year of Wm. Goodlove, who came to the home of Corad [Conrad] and Catherine Goodlove, Oct. 22, 1836 in Clark county, O. He helped to make merry the play life of the two brothers and three sisters and one half‐brother, who had already come into that home. One by one these play mates of childhood days, except one sister, Mary A. Davis of Columbus. O., who has reached the mark of 87 years, have preceeded [preceded] the deceased into the other room of the many mansioned home. The first sixteen years of his life were spent romping over the familiar spots in his native state. In company with his father and step‐mother he came to West Union, Fayette county, Iowa, at the age of sixteen. Only a year were they at that point when they removed to Wild Cat Grove near Marion in 1853. At the time of his majority he took for a life companion Miss Esther J. Winans, Nov. 5 1857. But this life companionship was not to continue long, for during the seventh year of their wedded life and while he was serving his country as one of her bravest and best, she was called to the endless life. He alone survived her. In 1862 Mr. Goodlove put his life on his country’s altar and enlisted in Co. 24, Iowa Infantry. Here as a private soldier he put his characteristic energy and faithfulness into his duties as a true patriot, which terminated in a broken health. About a year after the close of the war he sought the hand and heart of Sarah C. Pyle, and on June 20 1866, in Hastings, Minn. They plighted their faith to each other. To make glad their home six children came: Nettie, Oscar, Willis, Cora, Earl and Jessie. The first to break the ties of the happy group was Nettie, who had married Mr. Gray of San Antonio, Tex., when she departed this life, in September, 1911. Scarcely four years have slipped away since the deceased and his beloved companion came to make Central City their home. They brought their church letters with them and united with the Methodist church by transfer from the Prairie Chapel organization. When a young man, Mr. Goodlove experience conversion and gave his sincere and earnest efforts to the work of the church which he loved and to which he was faithful till death called him to a higher service January 17, 1916. For several weeks past he has been grappling with a disease which he was unable to combat. He fought a good fight, and has gained the crown laid up for those who love the lord. His service to his country in the Civil War endured him to the boys in Blue, and this fellowship which remained till the last, was shown by his loyalty to the Marvin Mills Post of which he was a member. Mr. Goodlove’s christian profession was exemplified in his daily life. He was a true companion to his help mate who was the recipient of his thoughtful and unselfish kindness. His children have the joy and blessing of a loving father to linger with them. He leaves to glory over his victorious life a faithful wife, five children, 20 grandchildren, two great grandchildren, and a host of good friends. The service was held at the M. E. Church Wednesday afternoon in Central City in charge of a former pastor, Rev. Chas. E. Luce, assisted by Rev. Chas. G. Fort. Burial took place a Jordans Grove cemetery.







Thanks for passing this along Linda!







Jeff











January 17, 1936: Sulamith Gottlieb, January 17, 1936, resided Nordhausen. Deportation: October 28, 1938, nach Bentschen. Abgeschoben. Todesdaten: Unknown[52]







January 17, 1941: Dagobert Gottlieb, born January 21, 1907 in Berlin. Resided in Berlin.



Deportation: January 17, 1941, Auschwitz[53]







Also from Berlin and Deported to Auschwitz: Grete S. Gottlieb, maiden name Wolff. Born September 14,1906 in Edenkoben Resided Berlin. Todesdaten: Unknown. Place of Death: Auschwitz, declared legally dead.[54]



January 17, 1942: Walter von Reichenau, a Wehrmacht general who cooperated with Einsatzgruppen in Russia, dies of a heart attack. [55]



January 17, 1943: Berlin Bishop Konrad Graf von Preysing, the only top German Catholic prelate who consistently opposes the German government's Jewish policies, threatens Pope Pius XII, saying he will resign unless the collaborative behavior of the other German bishops comes to an end.[56]







January 17, 1945: A death train that originated in Grodno, Poland, on January 17 erupts in violence at the Treblinka death camp when 1000 Jews armed with boards, knives, and razors attack guards. By morning thousands of Jews who had been on the train are dead, killed by Treblinka SS troops armed with machine guns and grenades.[57]







January 17, 1955: Submarine USS Nautilus began the first nuclear-powered test voyage. This marked a major milestone in Admiral Hyman Rickover’s vision of a nuclear-powered Navy.[58]



January 17, 1961



President Eisenhower warns of the power of the “military-industrial complex,” in his farewell speech.[59] A fiscal conservative, Eisenhower had been concerned about the growing size and cost of the American defense establishment since he became president in 1953. In his last presidential address to the American people, he expressed those concerns in terms that frankly shocked some of his listeners.



Eisenhower began by describing the changing nature of the American defense establishment since World War II. No longer could the U.S. afford the "emergency improvisation" that characterized its preparations for war against Germany and Japan. Instead, the United States was "compelled to create a permanent armaments industry" and a huge military force. He admitted that the Cold War made clear the "imperative need for this development," but he was gravely concerned about "the acquisition of unwarranted influence...by the military-industrial complex." In particular, he asked the American people to guard against the "danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite."



Eisenhower's blunt language stunned some of his supporters. They believed that the man who led the country to victory in Europe in World War II and guided the nation through some of the darkest moments of the Cold War was too negative toward the military-industrial complex that was the backbone of America's defense. For most listeners, however, it seemed clear that Eisenhower was merely stating the obvious. World War II and the ensuing Cold War resulted in the development of a large and powerful defense establishment. Necessary though that development might be, Eisenhower warned, this new military-industrial complex could weaken or destroy the very institutions and principles it was designed to protect. [60]



“Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But now we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense; we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security more than the net income of all United States corporations.



This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence — economic, political, even spiritual — is felt in every city, every State house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are all involved; so is the very structure of our society.



In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.



We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.”[5]



Eisenhower was speaking from the point of view of having first-hand knowledge of this ‘influence’ in the corridors of power, himself as President being unable to challenge it, and unable to do so simply in the first decade of the American Empire. He was warning against the influence of the interconnected relationship and organized power of the military, government, and industry, in that the growing influence of this ‘complex’ was so vast that it threatened to take over the government and subvert democracy itself. It was the functions of this complex that saw profit created through war and empire, and thus, there was a constant drive and impetus towards pursuing empire and resorting to war. If you build a massive military structure, you are going to use it; if it is profitable to go to war, you will go to war. [61]







[62]



May 29, 1923 – January 17, 1992




Gertrude M. Ryznar Goodlove (wife of the granduncle)











Birth:

May 29, 1923


Death:

Jan. 17, 1992


http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
w/o Dr. Donald W., parent of Duane E., Dennis J., Robert, & Vicki M.

Family links:
Spouse:
Donald W. Goodlove (1914 - 1974)



Burial:
Jordans Grove Cemetery
Central City
Linn County
Iowa, USA



Created by: Gail Wenhardt
Record added: Apr 04, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 67904090









Gertrude M. Ryznar Goodlove
Added by: Gail Wenhardt



Gertrude M. Ryznar Goodlove
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jackie L. Wolfe








[63]



1992: Mujahadeen guerillas and other Islamic rebels captured the capital city of Kabul and set up a new government. [64]







Over the next few years, rival groups fought each other for control. Civil war spread throughout the country. A new group arose, called the Taliban, a name that means “religious student.” The Taliban consisted of devout Islamic guerilla fighters and refugees returning from Pakistan. Many had studied at the Medrasas, or religious schools on the Pakistani border.[65]





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


[1] Wikipedia


[2]

* There is, in the State Paper Office, London, a letter from

Joseph Riccio to Lutyni, written at the same time, which proves

that both of them were then contriving something serious, which

they were extremely afraid Mary should discover. See History of

Scotland, by P. F. Tytler, vol. vii. p. 441, Edinburgh, 1840 ; and

in the Quarterly Review for March 1841, p. 303, an interesting

article by Lord Mahon.




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




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


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


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


[7] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, pages 67-68.


[8] Battle for a Continent, Harrison Bird


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


[10] In Search For Turkey Foot Road, Page 71-72.


[11] IN search of Turkey Foot Road, page 5.


[12] Shenandoah Valley Pioneers and their Descendants, A History of Frederick County Virginia by T.K. Cartmell pg.71


[13] Provided by the Connellsville Area Historical Society. Added to the site on February 2, 2000.








[14] http://www.mapsofpa.com/antiquemaps25.htm


[15] Memoirs of Clan Fingon, by Rev. Donald D. Mackinnon M. A.


[16] (Ellis's History of Fayette Co,. PA) Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 224.3


[17] A History of God by Karen Armstrong, page 329.


[18] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt


[19] The American Rifleman, May 2009, page 41.


[20] The American Rifleman, May 2009, page 42.


[21] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, with Biographical Sketches of many of its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Edited by Franklin Ellis Vol. 1 Philadelphia; L. H. Everts & Co. 1882




[22] (Ubersetzung von Stephen Cochrane) VEROFFENTLICHUNGEN DER ARCHIVSCHULE MARBURG INSTITUT FÜR ARCHIVWISSENSCHAFT Nr. 10

WALDECKER TRUPPEN IM AMERIKANISCHEN UNABHANGIGK EITSKRIEG (HETRINA) Index nach Familiennamen Bd.V Bearbeitet von Inge Auerbach und Otto Fröhlich Marburg 1976


[23] Journal of a Hessian Grenadier Battalion, Translated by Bruce E. Burgoyne


[24] The Revolutionary War, A Harvest of Victory., Military Channel.


[25] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/battle-of-cowpens-south-carolina


[26] The Revolutionary War, A Harvest of Victory., Military Channel.


[27] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/battle-of-cowpens-south-carolina


[28] The Revolutionary War, A Harvest of Victory., Military Channel.


[29] The Revolutionary War, A Harvest of Victory., Military Channel.


[30] The Revolutionary War, A Harvest of Victory., Military Channel.


[31] The Revolutionary War, A Harvest of Victory., Military Channel.


[32] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/battle-of-cowpens-south-carolina


[33] The Ohio Historical Society, S. Winifred Smith, ohiohistory.org/onlinedoc/ohgovernment….


[34] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald


[35] Laurence M. Hauptman, Conspiracy of Interests: Iroquois Dispossession and the Rise of New York State (2001).


[36] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Fort_McIntosh


[37] The Harrison Genealogy Repository http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~harrisonrep


[38] Grace Louisa Francis Smith (b. January 1795, d. date unknown)

Grace Louisa Francis Smith (daughter of Gabriel Smith and Sarah Ann Downs) was born January 1795 in Elbert County, Georgia, and died date unknown. She married Thomas Bishop Nix on March 02, 1820 in Franklin County, Georgia, son of Joseph Nix and Martha Bishop.

Notes for Grace Louisa Francis Smith:
In a860 Grace had five children ($200/$200 property) were ennumerated in Rockdale area; in 1870 she with daughters Martha and Francis, a 27 year old male born in Alabama, $100/$100 property had Milner post office; in 1880 she and Martha were in household of son, Wiley in Halpins, Beat #13. When two properties are valued on census, the 1st is land and the 2nd is personal peroperty. Grace owned land but records may have been destroyed in the mid-1890's.


To clarify names given Grace: Grace in 1850 Census, Louisa F. in 1860 Census and Francis in 1870 and 1880 Census. Thomas is not on census after 1850.

More About Grace Louisa Francis Smith and Thomas Bishop Nix:
Marriage: March 02, 1820, Franklin County, Georgia.

Children of Grace Louisa Francis Smith and Thomas Bishop Nix are:
i.+John Ausin Nix, b. 1822, Franklin County, Georgia, d. Bet. 1865 - 1908, Randolph County, Alabama.
ii.John Nix, b. 1823, d. date unknown.
iii.Unknown Nix, b. 1825, d. date unknown.
iv.Gabriel Nix, b. 1827, d. date unknown.
v.Rebecca Sarah Ann Nix, b. 1829, d. date unknown.
vi.Vesta Nix, b. 1830, d. date unknown.
vii.Minerva Nix, b. 1833, d. date unknown.
viii.Martha A. Nix, b. 1834, d. date unknown.
ix.Mahulda Nix, b. 1836, d. date unknown.
x.Francis Jane Nix, b. 1838, d. date unknown.
xi.Jeremiah J. Nix, b. 1839, d. date unknown.
xii.Wiley A. Nix, b. 1840, Coventon, Walton County, Georgia, d. date unknown.
xiii.Grace Louisa Francis Smith (b. January 1795, d. date unknown)
xiv.Grace Louisa Francis Smith (daughter of Gabriel Smith and Sarah Ann Downs) was born January 1795 in Elbert County, Georgia, and died date unknown. She married Thomas Bishop Nix on March 02, 1820 in Franklin County, Georgia, son of Joseph Nix and Martha Bishop.
xv.
xvi. Notes for Grace Louisa Francis Smith:
xvii.In a860 Grace had five children ($200/$200 property) were ennumerated in Rockdale area; in 1870 she with daughters Martha and Francis, a 27 year old male born in Alabama, $100/$100 property had Milner post office; in 1880 she and Martha were in household of son, Wiley in Halpins, Beat #13. When two properties are valued on census, the 1st is land and the 2nd is personal peroperty. Grace owned land but records may have been destroyed in the mid-1890's.
xviii.
xix.
xx.To clarify names given Grace: Grace in 1850 Census, Louisa F. in 1860 Census and Francis in 1870 and 1880 Census. Thomas is not on census after 1850.
xxi.
xxii.More About Grace Louisa Francis Smith and Thomas Bishop Nix:
xxiii.Marriage: March 02, 1820, Franklin County, Georgia.
xxiv.
xxv.Children of Grace Louisa Francis Smith and Thomas Bishop Nix are:
xxvi.+John Ausin Nix, b. 1822, Franklin County, Georgia, d. Bet. 1865 - 1908, Randolph County, Alabama.
xxvii.John Nix, b. 1823, d. date unknown.
xxviii.Unknown Nix, b. 1825, d. date unknown.
xxix.Gabriel Nix, b. 1827, d. date unknown.
xxx.Rebecca Sarah Ann Nix, b. 1829, d. date unknown.
xxxi.Vesta Nix, b. 1830, d. date unknown.
xxxii.Minerva Nix, b. 1833, d. date unknown.
xxxiii.Martha A. Nix, b. 1834, d. date unknown.
xxxiv.Mahulda Nix, b. 1836, d. date unknown.
xxxv.Francis Jane Nix, b. 1838, d. date unknown.
xxxvi.Jeremiah J. Nix, b. 1839, d. date unknown.
xxxvii.Wiley A. Nix, b. 1840, Coventon, Walton County, Georgia, d. date unknown.
xxxviii.




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


[40] Source: New American State Papers, Vol. 2 pages 58, 59.


[41] Source: New American State Papers, Vol. 2 pages 58, 59.


[42] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/harrbios/battealHarr3466VA.htm

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