Sunday, January 19, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, January 19, 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, John Tyler (10th President), James Polk (11th President)Zachary Taylor, and Abraham Lincoln.


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Birthdays on January 19...

William Godlove

George W. Moreland (husband of the 3rd cousin 4x removed)

Frank Sauer (husband of the 2nd cousin 1x removed)

Chester E. Smith (3rd great grandnephew of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

Tolbert T.". Stephenson (half 3rd cousin 5x removed)

Melissa L. Steves (6th
great grandniece of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)
Wilson Vance (husband of the 2nd cousin 7x removed)

January 19, 639: Dagobert I, the first of the French kings to be buried in the royal tombs at Saint Denis Basilica passed away. During his reign, he proposed driving all Jews who would not accept Christianity from his domain.[1]

January 19, 1180: In France, Phillip August seized all of the Jews living on his estates and imprisoned them. He freed them in exchange for a ransom of fifteen hundred silver marks.[2]



1181: Jews expelled from France.[3] Philip Augustus annuls all loans made by Jews to Christians and takes a percentage for himself. A year later, he confiscates all Jewish property and expels the Jews from Paris.[4] First Varthusian monastery in England at Witham.[5]

Assize of Arms of 1181, concerning the obligations of certain classes of persons to have arms, and of their obligation to swear allegiance to the king.[6] Keeping and Bearing of Arms By the English & the Colonial Americans
Assize of Arms (1181) Definition of Militia

In medieval Europe the law defined a militia as "the whole body of freemen" between the ages of fifteen and forty years, who were required by law to keep weapons in defense of their nation.[7]

January 19, 1419: During the Hundred Years' War, Rouen surrenders to Henry V (4th cousin 18x removed) of England completing his reconquest of Normandy.[8]

January 19, 1470: Shortly after her husband's execution by Warwick, Thomas Wake, a follower of Warwick’s, accused Jacquetta of witchcraft. Wake brought to Warwick Castle a lead image “made like a man of arms . . . broken in the middle and made fast with a wire,“ and alleged that Jacquetta had fashioned it to use for witchcraft and sorcery. He claimed that John Daunger, a parish clerk in Northampton, could attest that Jacquetta had made two other images, one for the king and one for the queen. The case fell apart when Warwick released Edward IV from custody, and Jacquetta was cleared by the king’s great council of the charges on January 19, 1470.[1] In 1484 Richard III in the act known as Titulus Regius[2] revived the allegations of witchcraft against Jacquetta when he claimed that she and Elizabeth had procured Elizabeth's marriage to Edward IV through witchcraft; however, Richard never offered any proof to support his assertions.

January 19, 1547: On January 12, 1547 Norfolk acknowledged that he had "concealed high treason, in keeping secret the false acts of my son, Henry Earl of Surrey, in using the arms of St. Edward the Confessor, which pertain only to kings", and offered his lands to the King. Norfolk's family, including his estranged wife, his daughter Mary, and his mistress, Elizabeth Holland, all gave evidence against him. Surrey was beheaded on January 19, 1547,[10] and on January 27, 1547 Norfolk was attainted by statute without trial.

January 19, 1547: Henry Howard, The earl of Surrey is executed but Norfolk remains in prison. [9]

Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey



Henry Howard


Earl of Surrey


Henry Howard Earl of Surrey 1546.jpg


Spouse(s)

Frances de Vere


Issue

Jane Howard
Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk
Margaret Howard
Henry Howard, 1st Earl of Northampton
Catherine Howard


Noble family

House of Howard


Father

Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk


Mother

Lady Elizabeth Stafford


Born

c. 1517
Hunsdon, Hertfordshire


Died

January 19, 1547 (aged 29-30)
Tower Hill, Tower of London, London


Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, KG (1516/1517 – January 19, 1547), was an English aristocrat, and one of the founders of English Renaissance poetry.[10]

January 19, 1567: Pope Pius V issued “Cum nos nuper,” a bull that forbids Jews from owning real estate. This would not be the last of the anti-Semitic Bulls issued by Pius V.[11]

January 19, 1570: – The earl of Moray is assassinated. [12]

January 19, 1616: In Worms, under orders of the Bishop of Speyer and with the backing of Frederick's troops, the Jews were readmitted to the city.[13]

January 19, 1769: "McKinnon, Daniel, Jan. 19, 1769. Money Book 51-49. Clergy ordained and licensed to preach for the Maryland Colony, 1699-1710." [14]



January 19, 1775

The first Continental Congress presents its petitions to the British Parliament.[15]



January 19, 1776: At a Cald Court for West Augusta for the Examination of

Edward Armstrong for Horse Stealing, this 19th January,

1776, one the Prop of Geo Sly and the other of Jas Royal.



Pres't, Edward Ward, John Cannon, Geo Vallandigham,

Dorsey Penticost, Thos Smallman.



The above named Edward Armstrong was led to the barr,

and upon Examination denied the fact wherewith he stands

Charged ; whereupon Several Witnesses were sworn and Ex-

amined ; on Consideration of which the Court are of Opinion

that there is not at this time Surf Evidence to prove the fact ;

It is Ord that he be discharged.



Then the Court did rise

Edw'd Ward. [16]



January 19, 1777

*To CAPTAIN EDWARD SNICKERS



Morris Town in New Jersey, January 19, 1777. Dear Sir: We are in want of a Waggon Master Genl. to the Army. If you Incline to accept of that Office I will appoint you to it, in this case, do not delay a moments time in repairing to the Army, or to Genl. Mifflin, the Quarter Master Genl, from whom you will receive your Orders; At any rate, send word by return of the bearer (who comes express to you) whether you will, or will not accept, as the exigency of the Service will not admit either of doubt or delay.[17]

You will have the pay of Colonel allowed you, that is,Twenty two pounds ten shillings pr. Kalender month; Dollars at Six Shillings. I am etc.

P. S. You will be allowed a Clerk for keeping your acct& and doing the necessary Writing.[18][19]



January 19, 1777: The names of the signers had been kept secret until January 19, 1777, when they were released, due to an order by Congress the day before which stated that “authenticated copies, with the names of the members of Congress subscribed to the same, be sent to each of the United States and that they be desired to have same put upon record.”



January 19, 1795: The Batavian Republic was proclaimed in the Netherlands bringing to an end the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands. The Batavian Republic was a genuine expression of Dutch nationalism but it was also a product of the French Revolution. Following in the path of that revolution, the creation of the Batavian Republic brought total emancipation for the Jews of the Netherlands.[20]

January 19, 1807: Robert Edward Lee was born on January 19, 1807 in Stratford Hall, his families ancestral home along the Potomac River. [21]

January 19, 1820: King George IV, became prince regent. The remaining nine years of George III's life were passed in insanity and blindness, and he died on January 19, 1820. [22]



January 19, 1829:

Jackson departed for Washington.[23]




January 19, 1855: Tolbert Tipton “Tip” Stephenson: Born on January 19, 1855 in Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri. Tolbert Tipton “Tip” died in Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri on November 29, 1935; he was 80. [24]



January 19, 1861

Georgia secedes from the Union.[25] Georgia joins South Carolina, Florida, Mississippi, and Alabama in secession as a special state convention votes 208-89 to leave the Union.[26]

Georgia Secession Convention

Ordinance of Secession


Facsimile of the 1861 Ordinance of Secession signed by delegates to the Georgia Secession Convention at the statehouse in Milledgeville, Georgia January 21, 1861

Facsimile of the 1861 Ordinance of Secession signed by delegates to the Georgia Secession Convention at the statehouse in Milledgeville, Georgia January 21, 1861


In 1861, Crawford was elected as a delegate from Richmond County, Georgia to the state's Secession Convention. The delegation elected Crawford president of the convention by a unanimous vote[6] and he oversaw the state's vote of secession. As the convention's president, Crawford is considered the author of Georgia's Ordinance of Secession, the official document announcing the state's formal intent to secede the federal Union—originally as an independent republic, ultimately to join the Confederate States of America.

The delegation approved the ordinance January 19, 1861 with 208 voting in favor of secession and 89 opposed. The delegates signed the document in celebratory fashion two days later in the public square in front of the statehouse in Milledgeville where the convention was assembled. Crawford survived to witness the consequences of enacting the ordinance, lamenting its cost in the shed blood of Georgia citizens rallied by the convention's call.

Crawford was to be tried for inciting a rebellion due to his role in presiding over the state's secession and was excluded from eligibility for both Lincoln's and Johnson's amnesty proclamations because of his leadership status. Crawford escaped the harsh consequences of an adjudication of guilt in 1865 when Johnson approved his direct application for amnesty thereby restoring Crawford as a citizen of the United States in good stead—with full protection of his person and property against all forms of reprisal.[11] [27]

January 19, 1863: and we set sail on the 19th for Helena. The weather was unusually severe during the entire period for this climate, and much suffering was experienced by the troops. The regiment could hardly have suffered more in loss
of men in an ordinary engagement than it did from the effects of this severe and unaccustomed exposure to cold and rain. Many who had withstood all former changes and exposures unscathed, fell under this. [28]



Tues. January 19, 1864:

Went to camp at davenport via Iowa city

January 19th., 1865: We still lay at anchor in the bay at an entrance of the Savannah River. It was a rainy day and night.[29]

January 19, 1876:


21

1090

"Speeches of Hon. Carter H. Harrison of Illinois in the House of Representatives on Democratic Music May 23, 1876, and on Centennial Celebration of our Nation's Independence, January 19, 1876," 1876 [30]


January 19, 1889: JAMES GILMORE CRAWFORD, b. May 04, 1832, Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina; d. January 19, 1889, Macon, North Carolina. [31]

January 19, 1890: HARRISON, Batteal b: November 06, 1839 in Madison / Fayette

County, Ohio d: January 19, 1890 in Range Township, Ohio

January 19, 1896: Short stories by L. Frank Baum "Who Called 'Perry?'" (January 19, 1896).[32]

January 19, 1900: Short stories by L. Frank Baum "The Loveridge Burglary" (January 1900).[33]

January 1914: The Department of Public Instruction’s first attempt to stimulate interest in rural school consolidation in Delaware County came in early January 1914 when James A. Woodruff, assistant state superintendent of public instruction, was a featured speaker in the first Country Life conference held in the county. The conference was organized by Gilbert J. Chalice, the pastor of the Buck Creek Methodist Episcopal Church, a rural church in Union Township in the southern part of the county. It consisted of a series of three two day seminars held at the Buck Creek Church, at the Methodist Episcopal Church in Delaware, and jointly at the Methodist Episcopal and Congregational churches in Earlville.[34]



January 1917: As 1917 began, the politics of accommodation, which previously characterized the operation of the country schools in the area, gave way to a different kind of politics, Precisely what that politics would be was not yet clear, but, whatever its parameters might eventually become, it would rest on some idea of community constructed around the activities of the Buck Creek Church. From about this time onward, all families in the area, Catholics and Protestants alike, realized that efforts were under way to make Buck Creek a Methodst place, to make Buck Creekers of everyone in the area.[35]



January 1919: First Palestinian (Arab) Congress advocated incorporation of Palestine into greater Syria.[36]

January 1919: Prohibition took effect in January 1919. Nine months later, Congress passed the Volstead Act, or National Prohibition Act, over President Woodrow Wilson's veto. The Volstead Act provided for the enforcement of prohibition, including the creation of a special unit of the Treasury Department. Despite a vigorous effort by law-enforcement agencies, the Volstead Act failed to prevent the large-scale distribution of alcoholic beverages, and organized crime flourished in America. In 1933, the 21st Amendment to the Constitution was passed and ratified, repealing prohibition.[37]

Early January 1920: A large delegation from the Buck Creek Brotherhood attended Professor Macyu Campbell’s keynote address on rural school consolidation at the Farmers Institute held in Manchester. Campbell was a professor at the Iowa Teachers College and the state’s leading proponent of consolidation not in the employ of the DPI. The Buck Creek delegation was not disappointed by what they heard. As the Manchester Press editor put it, “Mr. Macy Campbell…gave a rattling good talk on “The Rural School Problem.’ …Mr. Campbell believes, and we believe with him, that the country boy or girl ought to have just as excellent educational facilities as the boys and girls of the towns and cities, and Mr. Campbell says that so far as Iowa is concerned there is nothing to prevent it except ‘human nature,’ for the farmers of the state have twice as much wealth per capita as the town dweller.”[38]

January 1920: Members of the Buck Creek delegation spoke with Campbell after his address and obtained his tentative agreement to give a lecture on consolidation at the Buck Creek Church soon after a date for the consolidation election had been set. From mid-January onward, Buck Creek Church leaders organized an intensive word of mouth campaign in the parish designed to solidify support and to determine where they could best place the boundaries of the proposed district. Grant gave regular reports on the progress of the movement at church functions. He also made sure that his parishioners received pamphlets on consolidation produced by the State Teachers College and the DPI. Indeed, the campaign became a virtual crusade. Slowly, members of the church were swung over to support the issue, at least in principle. However, to have any chance for success, most church members needed assurance that a thoroughly modern consolidated school could be built and operated at Buck Creek at about the same total cost as other consolidated districts in the county. This practically guaranteed that the district would have to be large territorially and take in more Catholic neighborhoods than had been envisaged earlier.[39]

A few elders in the church, however, remained unconvinced of the plan’/s merits. Some thought that the country school was superior to the consolidated school “in the grades.” Others thought that the new contractual arrangement between Lenox College and Hopkinton would result in a better high school program, and one provided at a much lower cost, that any that could be provided in Buck Creek. A few, like their Catholic neighbors, also objected to the formation of a consolidated district at Buck Creek because it would coerce a large number of Catholic families in the area into paying taxes for a Methodist controlled school that few if any Catholics felt they needed or wanted.[40]

In an apparent effort to gauge public opinion on the issue, the Brotherhood leaked word that they were considering the possibility of consolidation all the Union Township subdistricts plus the three easternmost subdistricts in Hazel Green Township, the equivalent of almost forty sections. The clamor that arose from the residents of Union subdistricts Nos. 1,4,5,7, and 8 and Hazel Green subdistricts Nos. 1, 6, and 7, few if any of whom had ever considered themselves as members of the Buck Creek neighborhood, so reverberated throughout the area that among older residents it is still a topic of conversation even today, over seventy five years later. Union No. 8 subdistrict was the first to be removed from the plan. John Beitz protested its inclusion because for at least part of the year the only passable roads for a school wagon (or bus) to use in transporting students from this area to and from the Buck Creek crossroads went through Hopkinton. This simple spatial logic was compelling, and the River Valley neighborhood was removed from the proposed district. Residents and landowners in the Hazel Green No. 1 subdistrict viewed their neighborhood, focused as it was at a crossroads where a general store, a country school, and the small Hazel Green Creamery were located, as the Hazel Green neighborhood. [41] They argued that to destroy one neighborhood to build up another contradicted a core rural value that people in the Buck Creek Church claimed they had upheld in retaining their rural church. Once it was realized that none of the Congregationalist and Catholic families of this neighborhood could be persuaded to join in the campaign for the consolidated school, it was quietly dropped from the plan. It contained no active members of the Buck Creek Church anyway.[42]\



January 1921: The story of the growth of the Klan in Oregon is mosty enlightening as illustrating Klan methods and suggesting what may be the future of the Klan movement. The Klan in Oregon is an importation from California and was organized in Medford, Jackson County, January 1921. The enforcement of the prohibition law against the boot-leggers was then a live issue in the county, and manyu joined the Klan for the avowed purpose of assisting trhe officers of the law. Racial and religious antagonisms seem to have played no part at the birth of the Klan in Oregon.[43]



January 1922: al-Husseini was elected President of the Supreme Muslim Council which had been created by Samuel in 1921.[35] [44][45]

January 1925: Mussolini led the Fascists on a march on Rome, and King Emmanuel III, who had little faith in Italy's parliamentary government, asked Mussolini to form a new government. Initially, Mussolini, who was appointed prime minister at the head of a three-member Fascist cabinet, cooperated with the Italian parliament, but aided by his brutal police organization he soon became the effective dictator of Italy. In 1924, a Socialist backlash was suppressed, and in January 1925 a Fascist state was officially proclaimed, with Mussolini as Il Duce, or "The Leader."

January 1938: Ethel Robina VANCE was born November 22, 1909 in Morgantown, W.Va. (Greenbriar), and died February 25, 1987 in Buried in the Swingle Cemetery in Unicoi.. She married Lester Frazier HOWELL January 1938, son of Samuel HOWELL and Mary HEDRICK. He was born July 18, 1910 in Flag Pond, Tenn. (Unicoi), and died February 20, 1990.[46]



https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRG5SfaVV5s6qHNNJZkVLM7y_rjNW7Y3gb2lddfexrb_Mfiq04eQ6yWGEGRgKUmplpFFMf3iHUzbBru_a1TZuoFhcfn9ONdbnstUtctETeqjJlW7SBVve0VKWZ_08NtvC3qKcEshz5q40y/s640/white+wf+on+time.jpg



Walter White was the first African American to be featured on the cover of Time Magazine, in January 1938. (9th cousin 4x removed).




http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/LindberghStLouis.jpg/170px-LindberghStLouis.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Kennedy's friend Charles Lindbergh was an antiwar spokesman for the America First Committee.

Joseph P. Kennedy was (for a while) a close friend with the leading Jewish lawyer, Felix Frankfurter, who became an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in January 1939 and remained in this position until 1962. Frankfurter helped Kennedy get his sons Joseph Jr. and John admitted into the London School of Economics in the late 1930s, where they studied under Harold Laski, a leading Jewish intellectual and a prominent socialist.[34]

According to Harvey Klemmer, who served as one of Kennedy's embassy aides, Kennedy habitually referred to Jews as "kikes or sheenies". Kennedy allegedly told Klemmer that "[some] individual Jews are all right, Harvey, but as a race they stink. They spoil everything they touch."[29] When Klemmer returned from a trip to Germany and reported the pattern of vandalism and assaults on Jews by Nazis, Kennedy responded, "Well, they brought it on themselves."[35][47]

January 1939 : “The result (of a war) would not be a victory of Jewry, but the destruction of the Jewish Race in Europe.” Adolf Hitler [48]



January 1939: The German nuclear energy project, (German: Uranprojekt; informally known as the Uranverein; English: Uranium Club), was an attempted clandestine scientific effort led by Germany to develop and produce atomic weapons during the events of World War II. This program started in April 1939, just months after the discovery of nuclear fission in January 1939, but ended only months later, due to German invasion of Poland, where many notable physicists were drafted into the Wehrmacht.[49]



January – March 1939: St James Conference - Round-table conference on Palestine in London, with Arab countries, Zionists and Palestinian representatives. [50]



October 1940 to January 1941

The deaths of people badly cared for, undernourished, and exposed to the elements during the rigorous winters of 1940, 1941 and 1942, were in fact deliberate assassinations. The Vichy government, “anti-France”, in the words of Dr. J. Weil, whose work on concentration camps is considered authoritative, has shown itself guilty of these crimes. What other name can be given, for example, to the mortality in the camp of Gurs? There were 15 deaths in October, 1940; 180 in November; 270 in December; 140 in January, 1941…



At Gurs on November 26, 1940, Julius Gottlieb, born December 24, 1852 from Ebernburg, died.



Also at Gurs on March 23, 1941 Johanna Gottlieb born May 24, 1859, from Ebernburg, died.[51]



January 1942: Some 15,000 Jews are killed in the Lvov ghetto, which becomes a Julag (Judenlager, or camp for Jews) in January 1942.[52]

January 1942: Eventually it was assessed that nuclear fission would not contribute significantly to ending the war, and in January 1942, the Heereswaffenamt turned the program over to the Reich Research Council while continuing to fund the program. At this time, the program split up between nine major institutes where the directors dominated the research and set their own objectives. At that time, the number of scientists working on applied nuclear fission began to diminish, with many applying their talents to more pressing war-time demands.

The most influential people in the Uranverein were Kurt Diebner, Abraham Esau, Walther Gerlach, and Erich Schumann; Schumann was one of the most powerful and influential physicists in Germany. Diebner, throughout the life of the nuclear energy project, had more control over nuclear fission research than did Walther Bothe, Klaus Clusius, Otto Hahn, Paul Harteck, or Werner Heisenberg. Abraham Esau was appointed as Hermann Göring’s plenipotentiary for nuclear physics research in December 1942; Walther Gerlach succeeded him in December 1943.[53]

When it was apparent that the nuclear energy project would not make a decisive contribution to ending the war effort in the near term, control of the KWIP was returned in January 1942 to its umbrella organization, the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft (KWG, Kaiser Wilhelm Society, after World War II the Max-Planck Gesellschaft), and HWA control of the project was relinquished to the RFR in July 1942. The nuclear energy project thereafter maintained its kriegswichtig (important for the war) designation and funding continued from the military. However, the German nuclear power project was then broken down into the following main areas: uranium and heavy water production, uranium isotope separation, and the Uranmaschine (uranium machine, i.e., nuclear reactor). Also, the project was then essentially split up between a number of institutes, where the directors dominated the research and set their own research agendas.[9][16][17] The dominant personnel, facilities, and areas of research were:[18][19][20]
•Walther Bothe – Director of the Institut für Physik (Institute for Physics) at the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institut für medizinische Forschung (KWImF, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research, after 1948 the Max-Planck-Institut für medizinische Forschung), in Heidelberg.
◦Measurement of nuclear constants. (6 physicists)
•Klaus Clusius – Director of the Institute for Physical Chemistry at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
◦Isotope separation and heavy water production. (ca. 4 physical chemists and physicists)
•Kurt Diebner – Director of the HWA Versuchsstelle (testing station) in Gottow; Diebner, was also director the RFR experimental station in Stadtilm, Thuringia. He was also an advisor to the HWA on nuclear physics.
◦Measurement of nuclear constants. (ca. 6 physicists)
•Otto Hahn – Director of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Chemie (KWIC, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry, after World War II the Max Planck Institut für Chemie – Otto Hahn Institut), in Berlin-Dahlem.
◦Transuranic elements, fission products, isotope separation, and measurement of nuclear constants. (ca. 6 chemists and physicists)
•Paul Harteck – Director of the Physical Chemistry Department of the University of Hamburg.
◦Heavy water production and isotope production. (5 physical chemists, physicists, and chemists)
•Werner Heisenberg – Director of the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of Leipzig until summer 1942. Thereafter acting director of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Physik (Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics), in Berlin-Dahlem.
◦Uranmaschine, isotope separation, and measurement of nuclear constants. (ca. 7 physicists and physical chemists).
•Hans Kopfermann – Director of the Second Experimental Physics Institute at the Georg-August University of Göttingen.
◦Isotope separation. (2 physicists)
•Nikolaus Riehl – Scientific Director of the Auergesellschaft.
◦Uranium production. (ca. 3 physicists and physical chemists)
•Georg Stetter – Director of the II. Physikalisches Institut (Second Physics Institute) at the University of Vienna.
◦Transuranic elements and measurement of nuclear constants. (ca. 6 physicists and physical chemists)

The point in 1942, when the army relinquished its control of the German nuclear energy project, was the zenith of the project relative to the number of personnel devoting time to the effort. There were only about seventy scientists working on the project, with about forty devoting more than half their time to nuclear fission research. After this, the number of scientists working on applied nuclear fission diminished dramatically. Many of the scientists not working with the main institutes stopped working on nuclear fission and devoted their efforts to more pressing war related work.[21][54]

January 1942: In the wake of shock and anger following Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt pressed his military planners for a strike against Tokyo. Intended as revenge for Pearl Harbor, and an act of defiance in the face of a triumphant Japanese military, such a raid presented acute problems in execution. No working Allied air base was close enough to Japan. A carrier would have to approach within three hundred miles of the home islands for its planes to reach. Sending surface ships so close to Japan at that time would practically assure their destruction, if not from Japan's own surface forces, then from her ground-based planes or submarine forces.

Still Roosevelt insisted - demanded - that a way be found.

The first piece of the puzzle fell into place in the second week of January 1942. Captain Francis Lowe, attached to the Admiral Ernest King's staff in Washington, paid a visit to Norfolk, Virginia, to inspect the new carrier USS Hornet CV-8. There, on a nearby airfield, was painted the outline of a carrier, inspiring Lowe to pursue the possibility of launching ground-based bombers - large planes, with far greater range than carrier-based bombers - from the deck of an aircraft carrier.[55]

January 1944: During the rest of 1943, Wise did much to publicize the genocide the Nazis were perpetrating, but ultimately it was others who persuaded President Roosevelt that something could be done to rescue some of the remaining Jews in Europe. In January 1944 President Roosevelt was convinced to establish the War Refugee Board, after members of the Treasury Department presented him with a scathing report outlining the State Department's history of obstructing rescue, and after members of the radical Zionist Bergson group were winning political support in Congress for an independent government rescue agency. Some observers at the time suggested that Wise's own effectiveness may have been diminished by the fact that he shouldered too many responsibilities for the American Jewish community. Others have also criticized him for his unshakable faith that FDR would do everything within his power for Europe's Jews. Nonetheless, whatever his failings, when he died in 1949, Wise would be remembered as "one of the greatest fighters for democracy and human rights of our generation."[56]



January 1944: Lt. General James Doolittle has taken over as commander of the 8th Air Force. He brings an aggressive new attitude. To Doolittle fighters are an offensive weapon. He cuts them loose. The brand new P-51 Mustange begins to arrive. Within weeks of entering action P-51 Mustangs triple the kill ratio against Luftwaffe fighters. [57]

January 1959: In January of 1959, the Cuban Revolution ousted the military strong man and American-ally Batista, and installed the Communist government of Fidel Castro. Beginning in October of 1959, the United States began a covert bombing and strafing campaign against Cuba, and in the early months of 1960, the US even firebombed Cuban cane fields and sugar mills. The CIA had organized the Cuban exile community, largely under the leadership of former supporters of Batista, in Florida to mount an operation aimed at overthrowing the revolutionary government.[6] [58]

January 19, 1961 Eisenhower and JFK meet at the White House for a final briefing.

Eisenhower tells JFK that he must assume responsibility for the overthrow of Fidel Castro and

his dangerous government, and recommends the acceleration of the proposed Cuban invasion.

Says Eisenhower: “ . . . we cannot let the present government there go on.” AQOC

Eight inches of snow falls in Washington, D.C. tonight. Traffic is snarled all over the city.

After a reception, a party, and a concert at Constitution Hall, the Kennedys attend a star-studded

gala at the National Guard Armory planned by Frank Sinatra. Boxes cost ten thousand dollars

apiece, while individual seats go for one hundred dollars. JFK gets to bed about 4:00 A.M.AQOC[59]



January 1965: Scamp entered Mare Island Naval Shipyard again in January 1965 for extensive modification. [60]



January 19, 1979: Erik Jerald TITTLE, born January 19, 1979 in Johnson City, Tenn. (Wash). [61]



January 19, 1979: Deng Xiaoping visits Washington.[62]



January 1990: PART I: The People: HARRISON, WILLIAM B

PUB. DATE

January 1990

SOURCE

Alamo Defenders: A Genealogy: The People & Their Words;1990, p58

SOURCE TYPE

Biography

DOC. TYPE

Biography

ABSTRACT

This chapter features Captain William B. Harrison, one of the Alamo defenders. He was born in Ohio. Harrison was the commanding officer of the Tennessee Mounted Volunteers. He and his company landed in Bexar on or about February 9, 1836 and entered the Alamo on February 23, 1836. They defended the wooden palisade during the siege and battle of the Alamo.

ACCESSION #

19166637[63]

January 1997: Lemba.—Samples were collected from paternally unrelated but otherwise random males, identified as Lemba by the subjects themselves, on two separate occasions, in the Louis Trichardt area of Northern Province (January 1997; 90 samples) and in Sekhukuneland in Mpumalanga (October 1997; 46 samples), South Africa. Clan affiliations of 108 (.794) of the subjects were recorded. [64]

January 1997: Denise Grady. "Father Doesn't Always Know Best." The New York Times (January 19, 1997): Section 4, Page 4.



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


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


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


[4] www.wikipedia.org


[5] mike@abcomputers.com


[6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assize_of_Arms


[7] Reference: Assize of Arms of 1181 in Bruce D. Lyon, ed., A Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval England, New York: Oxford University Press; 2d ed., 1980, 273. See also The Second Amendment and the Ideology of Self-Protection, Don B. Kates Jr and Historical Bases of the Right To Keep and Bear Arms, David T. Hardy.




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


[9] http://www.tudor-history.com/about-tudors/tudor-timeline/


[10] wikipedia


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


[12] http://www.tudor-history.com/about-tudors/tudor-timeline/


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


[14] (Gerald Fothergill, A list of Emigrant Ministers to America)


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


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


[17]Captain Snickers declined on the score of advanced age.


[18]The same letter was sent to Col. Valentine Crawford in case Captain Snickess declined. Crawford had died on January 7.


[19]The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources 1745-1799, John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor, Volume 7.




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


[21] Civil War Jouirnal, Robert E. Lee, 1994, History.com


[22] http://www.nndb.com/people/948/000068744/


[23] http://www.wnpt.org/productions/rachel/timeline/1824_1845.html


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


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


[26] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/georgia-secedes


[27] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Crawford


[28] http://www.mobile96.com/cw1/Vicksburg/TFA/24Iowa-1.html


[29] Joseph W. Crowther, Co. H. 128th NY Vols.


[30] http://mms.newberry.org/html/harrison.html


[31] Crawford Coat of Arms


[32] Wikipedia


[33] Wikipedia


[34] There Goes the Neighborhoo, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 118, 9age 7-8.


[35] There Goes the Neighborhoo, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 166.


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


[37] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history


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


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


[40] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 181.


[41] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 181.


[42] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 181-181.


[43] The Ku Klux Klan, A Study of the American Mind, by John Moffatt Mecklin, Ph. D, 1924, page 43-44.


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


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


[46] http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~vfarch/Vans%20Family%20Archive.html


[47] wikipedia


[48] Obsession, Radical Islam’s War Againt the West.


[49] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_energy_project


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


[51] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 612, 619.


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


[53] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_energy_project


[54] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_energy_project


[55] http://www.cv6.org/1942/doolittle/doolittle.htm


[56] http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/holocaust/peopleevents/pandeAMEX101.html


[57]WWII in HD: The Air War, 11/10/2010


[58] http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-national-security-state-and-the-assassination-of-jfk/22071


[59] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf




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


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












[61] http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~vfarch/Vans%20Family%20Archive.html




[62] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 498.


[63] http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/biographies/19166637/part-i-people-harrison-william-b


[64] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1288118/

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