Friday, January 31, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, January 31, 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.

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.



Barbara A. Adams (half 6th cousin 1x removed)

Mark L. Armstrong (3rd cousin)

Charles P. Crawford 4th cousin 4x removed)

Massey W. Harrison Farrar (4th cousin 3x removed)

Faye V. HOLDER

Helen Marris Bateman (wife of the 3rd great grandnephew of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

Anna B. Matter Huck

Christy R. Whalen (6th great grandniece of the wife of the 3rd great grand uncle)



January 31, 439: Promulgation of the Code of Theodosius II in the Byzantine Empire. This was the first imperial compilation of anti- Jewish laws since Constantine. Jews were prohibited from holding important positions involving money including judicial and executive offices and the ban against building new synagogues was reinstated. Theodosius was the Roman emperor of the East (408–450) The Code was readily accepted as well by Western Roman Emperor Valentinian III (425-455).[1]

448 CE: It is clear that the Khazars were closely connected to the Huns, who themselves are an ethnic mystery. The Byzantine rhetorician Priscus, who was part of an embassy to Attila the Hun’s court in 448 CE, reported that a people known as the “Akatzirs” or “White Khazars” were subjects of the Huns. According to Koestler (1976, p. 23), “Priscus’s chronicle confirms that the Khazars appeared on the European scene about the middle of the fifth century as a people under Hunnish sovereignty, and may be regarded, together with the Magyars and other tribes, as a later offspring of Attila’s horde.” After the collapse of the Hunnish Empire following Attila’s death, the confederation of tribes known as the Khazars eventually gained supremacy in the southern half of Eastern Europe, retaining control of this region for nearly four centuries. [2]




450A.D.: Volcano, Ilopango

Central America Volcanic Arc

6

450[3]




450A.D. The Council of Chalcedon in 451 was repudiated by the far larger congregations of Monophysites in Egypt and in Syria.[4]

451CE: Sassanid ruler Yazdegerd II of Persia’s decree abolishes the Sabbath and orders executions of Jewish leaders, including the Exilarch Mar Nuna.[5]

451: Ecuminical councils of bishop, Chalcedon, 451.[6]

451A.D.: As the western empire grew weaker, the popes gained greater power over both religious and secular life. Then the Huns threatened Rome in 452, for example, it was Pope Leo, rather than the western emperor, who convinced their leader Attila not to attack the city. [7]

455 A.D. Attila the Huns reign of terror in the Baltic has just ended. The mysterious drawings are etched into the arid Peruvian landscape.[8]

455 CE: Using Carthage and modern day Tunisia as their base, the Visigoths launched raiding missions and in 455 CE they sailed into the Mediteranian, up the Tiber river and did the unthinkable, they sacked Rome. In days they looted the city of its riches including the temple treasure. [9]

January 31, 1253: Henry III (22nd great grandfather) of England ordered that Jewish worship in Synagogues must be held quietly so that Christians should not have to hear it when passing by. In addition Jews were not to employ Christian nurses or maids, nor was any Jew allowed to prevent another Jew from converting to Christianity.[10]



January 31, 1419: Pope Martin V issued a Bull that abolished the oppressive laws promulgated by antipope Benedict XIII and granted the Jews those privileges which had been accorded them under previous popes.[11]



January 31, 1493: Jews fleeing Spain were no longer allowed to enter to enter Genoa. During the previous year Jews fleeing Spain were allowed to land in Genoa for three days. As of this date the special consideration was cancelled due to the “fear” that the Jews may introduce the Plague.[12]



January 31, 1504: – Treaty of Lyons. Signed by Louis XII (Husband of the 7th cousin 15x removed) of France and Ferdinand of Aragon. Spain were given control of Naples, Sicily and the southern Italian states while France were given control of Italian states north of Milan. End of second Italian war. [13]

January 31, 1510: Catherine (wife of the 7th cousin 15x removed) gave birth prematurely to a stillborn daughter. [14]

January 31, 1773: Preached at Laury Irwin’s-the week past Mr. F. came to see me. Saw a large Indian fortification at Stewart’s Crossings. Saw an Indian, Joseph Wapee, who informed me, that the forts in the Ohio country were places of retreat and defence, made by the ancient inhabitants, against the Catawbas[15].

January 31st, 1780: a heavy fog arose, forcing the admiral to put to sea again because a storm might develop. [16]


January 31, 1799: Children of Catherine Gottleab and Henry Keck are:
i.Ester Keck, b. January 31, 1799, d. date unknown. [17]





January 31, 1863

August S. Merrimon to Zebulon Baird Vance (3rd cousin 6x removed)

Asheville N.C.



Gov. Z. B. Vance



Governor;

The Arms &c. have at length reach Asheville and I have turned the whole over to Col. W. R. Young,[18] in persueance of your instructions. I have forwarded his recp’t. to Maj. T. D. Hogg.[19]

I learn that the Laurel expedition is about over. I can’t give you any of the details of the affair. I suppose the proper officers will report to you. I learn that a number of prisoners were shot without any trial or hearing whatever. I hope this is not true, but if so, the parties guilty of so dark a crime should be punished. Humanity revolts at so savage a crime. Our Militia had nothing to do with what was done in Laurel. I am glad of this. It turns out that the Militia were not really needed. So I thought in the outset and advised our people, but they & Genl. Polk[20] Could not be satisfied without calling our the Militia.

Nothing new-All well.



I Am &c Yrs. Truly,

A.S. Merrimont[21] [22]



January 31, 1863

William H. Richardson to Zebulon Baird Vance

Adjutant Generals Office



To His Excellency Z B. Vance

Governor of North Carolina



Sir

Pursuant to the instructions of the Governor of Virginia, I have the honor to transmit herewith, orders for the officers referred to in your letter of the 27th. Inst. To the Governor. And as the proper address of these officers is not known here, to request that your Excellency will cause them to be delivered.

These proceedings were without authority and unknown to the Governor, who begs your Excellency to be assured that no officer of the State of Virginia will be permitted to do any act in the State of North Carolina which is not sanctioned by yourself



I have the honor to be

With high respect

Your obt. Servt.

Wm. H. Rchardson A. G. V. [23]



Sun. January 31, 1864:

Mrs Harvey widow of gov of Wisconsn proprietors of soldiers home at [24]

(William Harrison Goodlove 2nd great grandfather)

mrs. harvery small.JPG (88175 bytes)

January 31st , 1865 The duty is heavy on the regiment just now. The men has to go on picket every other day or on patrols. The rest of the time they have to work on the breastworks.[25]




02_19_004

Lutheran Cemetery, was situated about one hundred and fifty yards northwest of the railroad depot. The exact number of graves of Union soldiers buried in this Cemetery could not be ascertained, on account of the indiscriminate burial of rebels in the same ground; also on account of the irregularity of the graves, and of the want of head-boards.



In this (Lutheran Cemetery, North Carolina) Cemetery were buried fourteen (14) Union soldiers, who, upon taking the oath of allegiance to the rebel government, were admitted into the rebel hospital, where they afterwards died. There is no record of State, regiment, or arm of service of these men; no head-boards at their graves; and therefore they cannot be identified.



The bodies from this Cemetery, and some others from the vicinity of Salisbury, estimated in all at about one hundred (100) in number, are now being re-interred in the principal Cemetery.[26]
100_2605[27]

Jacqulin Goodlove (daughter) at the Salisbury Cemetery in search of her 3rd great granduncle who died at the prison camp in 1865 along with an estimated 11,700 other union soldiers

January 31, 1868: ANN "ANNIE" CRAWFORD, 2nd cousin 6x removed) b. December 22, 1798, Buncombe County, North Carolina; d. January 31, 1868, Turtletown, Polk County, North Carolina.

ANN "ANNIE"26 CRAWFORD (GEORGE WASHINGTON25, VALENTINE24, VALENTINE23, WILLIAM22, MAJOR GENERAL LAWRENCE21, HUGH20, HUGH19, CAPTAIN THOMAS18, LAWRENCE17, ROBERT16, MALCOLM15, MALCOLM14, ROGER13, REGINALD12, JOHN, JOHN, REGINALD DE CRAWFORD, HUGH OR JOHN, GALFRIDUS, JOHN, REGINALD5, REGINALD4, DOMINCUS3 CRAWFORD, REGINALD2, ALAN1) was born December 22, 1798 in Buncombe County, North Carolina, and died January 31, 1868 in Turtletown, Polk County, North Carolina. She married WILLIAM KIMSEY August 06, 1817 in Haywood County, North Carolina, son of THOMAS KIMSEY and NANCY MCCLURE.

Notes for ANN "ANNIE" CRAWFORD:
Buried, February, 1868, Zion Hill Cemetery, Polk Co., TN

Children of ANN CRAWFORD and WILLIAM KIMSEY are:
i. THOMAS G.27 KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1818.
ii. GEORGE C. KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1820.
iii. JOHN D. KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1822.
iv. JAMES BIARS KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1824.
v. HUMPHEY POSEY KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1826.
vi. SARAH ANN KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1828.
vii. MARY A. KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1830.
viii. MARGARET ANNA KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1832.
ix. NANCY KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1834.
x. WILLIAM JEPTHA KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1836.
xi. HARRIET HAZELTON KIMSEY, b. Abt. 1838. [28]

January 31, 1872: Zane Grey, author of Riders of the Purple Sage, is born in Zanesville, Ohio.

The son of a successful dentist, Grey enjoyed a happy and solid upper-middle-class childhood, marred only by occasional fistfights with boys who teased him about his unusual first name, Pearl. (Grey later replaced it with his mother's maiden name, Zane.) A talented baseball player as teen, Grey caught the eye of a scout for the University of Pennsylvania college team, who convinced him to study there. In 1886, he graduated with a degree in dentistry and moved to New York to begin his practice.

Grey's interest in dentistry was half-hearted at best, and he did not relish the idea of replicating his father's safe but unexciting career path. Searching for an alternative, Grey decided to try his hand at writing; his first attempt was an uninspiring historical novel about a family ancestress. At that point, Grey might well have been doomed to a life of dentistry, had he not met Colonel C. J. "Buffalo" Jones in 1908, who convinced Grey to write Jones' biography. More importantly, Jones took him out West to gather material for the book, and Grey became deeply fascinated with the people and landscape of the region.

Grey's biography of Jones debuted in 1908 as The Last of the Plainsmen to little attention, but he was inspired to concentrate his efforts on writing historical romances of the West. In 1912, he published the novel that earned him lasting fame, Riders of the Purple Sage. Like the equally popular Owen Wister novel, The Virginian (1902), the basic theme of Riders revolves around the transformation of a weak and effeminate easterner into a man of character and strength through his exposure to the culture and land of the American West. Grey's protagonist, the Ohio-born Bern Venters, spends several weeks being tested by the rugged canyon country of southern Utah before finding his way back to civilization. Venters, Grey writes, "had gone away a boy-he had returned a man."

Though Riders of the Purple Sage was Grey's most popular novel, he wrote 78 other books during his prolific career, most of them Westerns. He died in 1939, but Grey's work continued to be extraordinarily popular for decades to come, and by 1955, his books had sold more than 31 millions copies around the world. With the possible exception of Riders, today Grey's books are little read, and most modern readers find them insufferably pompous, moralizing, and sentimental. Nonetheless, Grey played a pivotal role in creating the Western genre that, in the hands of more recent authors like Louis L'Amour, continues to charm many dedicated fans.[29]

January 31, 1885: John H. Smith (6th cousin 5x removed) (b. May 6, 1866 in GA / d. January 31, 1885).[30]

January 31, 1901: Jackson Burch. Jackson married Ella Cadle (b. January 31, 1901 / d. October 31, 1983)[31]

January 31, 1907: The death of Eliezer Roos - 28 years of Jewish teachers in Werneck (1907)

Werneck Israelit 31011907.jpg (128092 Byte)Article in the magazine "The Israelite" by January 31, 1907: "Frankfurt am Main, January 30 (1907)." A man of rare values, a Talmid Chacham (scholar), in the deepest sense of the word is been snatched us: Eliezer Roos, who is son of well known Secretary of the Pekidim in Amsterdam, Rabbi Jakob Roos - the memory of the righteous is the blessing - at the 11 Schwat blessed the temporal. Born in Amsterdam, was it the Heimgegangenen vergönnt to the feet of the greatest of his time. Rabbi Jakob Ettlingers and Rabbi Israel Hildesheimer for the true students of the wise to mature, and as a living example to the power of the Jewish teaching zeitigende wisdom and character size, Eliezer Roos has proved in a silent and yet richly blessed life. Twenty-eight years he has in a Bavarian rural town in Werneck, had taught in his community not only, but also in the circle of his colleagues a focus on lively intellectual striving, founder and promoter of the Bavarian State Teachers Association, the actual creator of the Jewish Hospital in Würzburg, but especially the father of a Jewish House, seemed to have taken the philanthropy in person in their place. The Unhappiest all unfortunate, the Jewish inmates of the State lunatic asylum in Werneck, know to tell. In the atmosphere of his sons and daughters have grown under the care of a spouse-worthy mother the Heimgegangenen, that understood it in life, to carry his father's ideals. To be near them, the departed moved eight years ago here to Frankfurt, where he ward loved and honored in the like-minded circle of the Israelite religious society as one of the best and most real Torageistes. Now he is been dismissed suddenly after a happy successful operation in terms that healed in his home to return. On his grave, Mr Rabbi Dr. Breuer in poignant words marked the importance of Heimgegangenen son of Torah, as a character, as one from a circle of auserwählten pious (?), which are unfortunately less and less with us. Mr dedicated words of worship and Thanksgiving Rector Falk called the Bavarian country teachers Association. " His soul is bound up in the Covenant of life."[32]


January 31, 1927: LEONIDUS F. CRAWFORD, b. January 11, 1850, Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina; d. January 31, 1927, Haywood County, North Carolina. [33]



January 31, 1934

Congress passes the Farm Mortgage Refinancing Act, providing easier credit terms to farmers.[34]



January 31, 1938: The Palestine Post reported that Romania officially denounced the Minorities Treaty intowhich it had entered upon gaining independence at the Peace Conference at Versailles, and claimed that the Jewish question was now "a purely internal matter" over which the League of Nations had no more jurisdiction. This meant that Romania now felt free to implement still more severe anti-Semitic discriminatory measures.[35]

1938: The Palestine Post reported on the rise of anti-Jewish feelings and vandalism in Yugoslavia including the fact that "local Nazis" had smashed the windows out of the Sephardic synagogue of Belgrade.[36]



January 31, 1941: Three thousand Jews were taken from their villages and moved into the Warsaw Ghetto. Another 70,000 Jews would be uprooted and moved into the Warsaw Ghetto by the end of March.[37]



January 31, 1942: Einsatzgruppe A commanding officer, Franz W. Stahlecker, sent a detailed report about activities in the Baltic and White Russian countries. It stated that between July 23 and October 15, 1941, 135,567 Jews were killed. Eichmann sent out a letter making official the conclusions of the Wannsee Conference, "The evacuation of the Jews . . . is the beginning of the final solution of the Jewish problem."[38]

January 31, 1942: Yorktown, Enterprise, and their respective task forces parted ways, and early the next morning swept across the International Date Line into January 31. With less than 24 hours remaining before their first offensive mission of the war, the men of Enterprise and her Air Group prepared. Fighting Six installed homemade armor - literally made of boilerplate - behind the seat of each Wildcat, a vital if weighty addition their Japanese counterparts would never consider. Halsey ordered each ship rigged for towing and for being towed, not wanting to waste a minute should any ship need help escaping after the raid. Navigators and airmen poured over aged maps, picking out reefs and targets. At 1830, Task Force 8 began its final run-in to the launching point, the ocean waves hissing past hulls at 30 knots, each of Enterprise's four 13-ton propellers revolving 275 times a minute. [39]

Howard Snell (Uncle) was on board the Enterprise.

January 31, 1943

German General Paulus surrenders his army to the Soviets in Stalingrad.[40]

January 31, 1950: U.S. President Harry S. Truman publicly announces his decision to support the development of the hydrogen bomb, a weapon theorized to be hundreds of times more powerful than the atomic bombs dropped on Japan during World War II.

Five months earlier, the United States had lost its nuclear supremacy when the Soviet Union successfully detonated an atomic bomb at their test site in Kazakhstan. Then, several weeks after that, British and U.S. intelligence came to the staggering conclusion that German-born Klaus Fuchs, a top-ranking scientist in the U.S. nuclear program, was a spy for the Soviet Union. These two events, and the fact that the Soviets now knew everything that the Americans did about how to build a hydrogen bomb, led Truman to approve massive funding for the superpower race to complete the world's first "superbomb," as he described it in his public announcement on January 31.

January 31, 1971: MINNIE ELIZABETH WHITSETT (6th cousin 2x removed), b. June 01, 1886, Jackson County, Missouri; d. January 31, 1971, Kansas City, Missouri. [41]

MINNIE ELIZABETH30 WHITSETT (LEANDER (LEE)29, LAURA F.28 CRAWFORD, JEPTHA M.27, VALENTINE "VOL"26, JOSEPH "JOSIAH"25, VALENTINE24, VALENTINE23, WILLIAM22, MAJOR GENERAL LAWRENCE21, HUGH20, HUGH19, CAPTAIN THOMAS18, LAWRENCE17, ROBERT16, MALCOLM15, MALCOLM14, ROGER13, REGINALD12, JOHN, JOHN, REGINALD DE CRAWFORD, HUGH OR JOHN, GALFRIDUS, JOHN, REGINALD5, REGINALD4, DOMINCUS3 CRAWFORD, REGINALD2, ALAN1) was born June 01, 1886 in Jackson County, Missouri, and died January 31, 1971 in Kansas City, Missouri. She married WILLIAM EDWARD PENNINGTON 1906 in Jackson county, Missouri, son of CICERO PENNINGTON and ALMEDA GRUBBS. [42]

January 31, 1984 the Grand Lodge of Utah repealed its long standing anti-Mormon resolution.[43]

January 31, 1971: Lola Jane Burch (8th cousin 3x removed) (b. June 18, 1890 / d. January 31, 1971 in CA).[44]

January 31, 2012:
1.Ancient finds

Journalists and policemen enter the Sednaya monastery built in 547 AD, north of Damascus, January 31, 2012, during a tour organized by the Ministry of Information to see the damage caused by a shell fired at the monastery on Sunday. Officials say the shell was fired by rebels causing a one-meter hole in the wall of one of the convent's rooms.[45]





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


[2] http://www.jogg.info/11/coffman.htm


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


[4] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 12.


[5] www.wikipedia.org


[6] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 59.


[7] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 59.


[8] Who really discovered America, HIST, 6/22/2010.


[9] Chasing Temple Booty, The Naked Archaeologist, HISTI, 4/30/2008


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


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


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


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


[14] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_of_Aragon


[15] Catawba. Southern Indian tribe. Living in piedmont area of Virginia south to South Carolina (Catawba River). Other Southern Indians—see Cherokee, Chickasaws, Choctaws, and Seminoles. With the exception of the Cherokees, the Southern Indians spoke a Muskogee language (also given as Muskhogean). Catawbas and Delawares were long-time enemies. This enmity was used to the colonist’s advantage when fighting the Delaware. Another Catawba enemy was the Iroquois who traveled south from NY on the “Catawba Path” on war parties. The Catawba Path generally started at Olean, NY (on the upper Allegheny River) and south through Indiana, PA and Uniontown, PA, south to Morgantown, WVA and on south. Some historians view the Catawba as a confederation of small tribes combining due to losses from disease and fights against the settlers. This combining would have taken place around 1650. The “Catawba” is a name given to the group by the European settlers. The word Catawba is from the Choctaw.

Another story has it that the Catawba were formed from remnants of the Erie Nation. When the Erie were defeated by the Iroquois in the 1650s many were chased south and came to rest in northwestern South Carolina. The Iroquois spoke of the Catawba as being “bad Indian” or “devil Catawba.” In the 1700s when the Iroquois would treat with Virginia officials they would always insist on rights to travel through the colony on their way to fight the Catawba. Fighting the Catawba seemed to be a right of passage for an Iroquois warrior.



Catawba War Path. County Route 39, Mason-Dixon Historical Park. West Virginia Memory Project - Highway Markers. Photo by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged photo

"Branch of Warrior Trail of the Great Catawba Indian War Path located here where Mason and Dixon Survey crossed Dunkard Creek for third time. Guide, Six Nations Indians' chief, declared he 'would not proceed one step further,' because hostile Delaware and Shawnee Indians had ordered them to halt. On Oct. 18, 1767, western end of original Mason-Dixon Line was set on the next high peak, Brown's Hill."

This area is in Monongalia County, WV and is located southwest of Mt. Morris in Greene County, PA and a few miles east of Blacksville, WV on County Road 39. At the intersection leading to the park is a marker titled: "Border Heroine." The inscription is "During the Indian raids in 1779 upon the settlements on Dunkard Creek, savages attacked the cabin of John Bozarth. Armed only with an axe, in a brief hand-to-hand fight, Mrs. Bozarth; killed three of the men." (See Anna Bozarth.)

Note: Catawba grapes are light-red in color and grow in the Carolinas as well as on the Lake Erie Islands and Sandusky area of Ohio. A light, dry wine is made from this grape. If you're in the area of Put-in-Bay, Ohio—visit the winery on Catawba Avenue. (JC)




[16] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs.191-196.


[17] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/k/e/c/Robert-Keck-Pa/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0711.html


[18] William R. Young, commander of 108th Regiment, Novth Carolina Militia, Hohnston, Papers of Vance, I:341n.


[19] Thomas Devereux Hogg, chief commissary of the Subsistence Department of North Carolina, Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, s.v. “Hogg, Thomas Devereux.”


[20] Leonidas Polk, corps commander, Army of Tennessee. Dictionary of American Biography, s.v. “Polk, Leonidas.”


[21] Augustus Summerfield Merrimon, lawyer and future U.S. senator and chief justice of the state supreme court. As solicitor of the Eighth District, he prosecuted the marauders who raided Marshall. Dictionary of North Carolina Biography. This letter was the first news that ZBV received of the Shelton Laurel massacre. See also ZBV to Merriomon, February 9.


[22] Zebulon Baird Vance, Governors Papers, State Archives, Division of Archives and History, Raleigh


[23] Zebulon Baird Vance, Governors Letter Books, State Archives, Division of Archives and History, Raleigh


[24] Mrs. Cordelia A. P. Harvey


Among the women whom the Civil War brought to the front as leaders, such as Louisa Lee Schuyler, Dorothea Dix, and Anna Dickinson, Mrs. Cordelia A. Perrine Harvey from Wisconsin, deserves a place.

In some respects she was a national flgure, one of the great army-nurses whose work was not limited by state lines.


Early Life

The early life of this remarkable woman did not differ from that of other Wisconsin women of her day, who spent their lives in small towns, busy with the daily routine. She lived for many years in Kenosha, where her father's family, the Perrines, were prominent in the decade of the forties.
The Perrine's were Huguenots that had settled in New Jersey and earlier generations had fought in the Battle Of Monmouth during the Revolution as it was fought on their farm.( Rev. K. L. Schaub)
There she taught school, and there she was married to a school-teacher, Louis P. Harvey. In 1845, the young couple moved to Clinton Junction where Mr. Harvey kept a country store. Thence they removed their home to Shopiere in Rock County, where they remained until 1859, when Mr. Harvey's election as Secretary of State made his presence in Madison necessary. Mr. Harvey was a person of strong personality and political sagacity, and in 1861 the people of Wisconsin elected him Governor. From the day of the firing on Fort Sumter both he and his wife showed a deep interest in the Civil War. A company of volunteers were named for the Governor, the "Harvey Zouaves; " to each of its members Mrs. Harvey presented a Bible and a Testament; with additional remembrances for the officer.

In the busy days which followed the first call for troops, Mrs. Harvey entered with enthusiasm into work for the soldiers and their families. She was enabled to give her time, because she and her husband were boarding, and she was not ecumbered with household duties.

Governor Harvey's Death

http://secondwi.com/wisconsinpeople/mrs_louis_harvey.htm




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


[26] (U.S. Quartermaster's Department, Roll of Honor (No. XIV.) Names of Soldiers who, In Defence of the American Union Suffered Martyrdom in the Prison Pens Throughout The South., Washington: Government Printing Office 1868.)




[27] The date of 01/13/2004 is incorrectly indicated on the photographs. The date is July 23, of 2006.


[28] Crawford Coat of Arms


[29] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/author-zane-grey-is-born


[30] Proposed descendants of William Smythe.


[31] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[32] http://www.microsofttranslator.com/bv.aspx?from=de&to=en&a=http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/werneck_synagoge.htm


[33] Crawford Coat of Arms


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


[35] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com


[36] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com


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


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


[39] http://www.cv6.org/1942/marshalls/marshalls_2.htm


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


[41] Crawford Coat of Arms


[42] Crawford Coat of Arms


[43] http://www.mastermason.com/bridgeportlodge181/MASHST11.HTM


[44] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[45] http://news.yahoo.com/photos/ancient-finds-slideshow/#crsl=%252Fphotos%252Fancient-finds-slideshow%252Fancient-finds-photo-1328407686.html

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