Saturday, January 4, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, January 4, 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 4…
Ramona J. Allen Wells
Mary I. Goodlove Nielsen
Victor ". Henderson
Ides Luel Gutfrajnd
Eldon C. Smith
Susanna Smith Preston
Sarah P. Vance Hale
Moses P. Winans
January 4; Genesis 10:1-5 This is the account of Shem, Ham and Japheth, Noah’s sons, who themselves had sons after the flood.
2The sons of Japheth: Gomer, Magog, Madai, Javan, Tubal, Meshech and Tiras.
3The sons of Gomer: Ashkenaz, Riphath and Togarmah.
4The sons of Javan: Elishah, Tarshish, the Kittim and the Rodanim. (From these the maritime peoples spread out into their territories by their clans within their nations, each with its own language.)
Genesis 10:6-20
The sons of Ham: Cush, Mizraim, Put and Canaan.
7The sons of Cush: Seba, Havilah, Sabtah, Raamah and Sabteca. The sons of Raamah: Sheba and Dedan.
8Cush was the father of Nimrod, who grew to be a mighty warrior on the earth. He was a might hunter before the Lord: that is why it is said “Like Nimrod, a might hunter before the Lord.” 10The first centers his kingdom were Babylon, Erech, Addad and Calneh, in Shinar. 11From that land he went to Assyria, where he built Nineveh, Rehoboth Ir, Calah 12and Resen, which is between Nineveha dn Calah; that is the great city.
13Mizraim was the father of the Ludites, Anamites, Lehabites, Naphtuhites, Pathrusites, Casluhites (from whom the Philistines came) and Caphtorites.
15Canaan was the father of Siodon his first born. And of Hittites, Jebusites, Amorites, Girgashites, Hivites, Arkites, Sinites, Arvadites, Zemarites and Hamathites.
Later the Canaanite clans scattered and the borders of Canaan reached from Sidon toward Gerar as far as Gaza, and then toward Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah and Zeboiim, as far as Lasha.
20These are the sons of Ham by their clans and languages, in their territories and nations.
1 Chronicles 1:17-27
17The sons of Shem: Elam, Asshur, Arphaxad, Lud and Aram.
The sons of Aram: Uz, Hul, Gether and Meshech.
18Arphaxad was the father of Shelah, and Shelah the father of Eber.
19Two sons were born to Eber:
One was named Peleg, because in his time the earth was divided; his brother was named Joktan.
20Joktan was the father of Almodad, Sheleph, Hazarmaveth, Jerah, 21Hadoram, Uzal, Diklah, Obal, Abimael, Sheba, 23Ophir, Havilah and Jobab. All these were sons of Joktan.
24Shem, Arphaxad, Shelah,
25Eber, Peleg, Reu,
26Serug, Nahor, Terah
27and Abram (that is, Abraham).[1]
January 4, or January 24, 41: The Praetorian Guard killed the Roman Emperor Caligula. Caligula is one of those vile figures whose behavior is dismissed as the acts of crazy person. As far as the Jews are concerned, Caligula had no use for them as a people. His attempts to have them worship his image led to anti-Jewish riots in Alexandria, among other places. His death avoided a collision between the Jews and Rome because Caligula had ordered that the Jews begin worshipping him as god at
their Temple in Jerusalem.

January 4, 1680: :**. Mary Taliaferro9 [Sarah Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1686 in Powhatan Plantation, Essex Co. VA / d. abt. 1780 in Snow Creek, Essex Co. VA) married Col. Francis Thornton (b. January 4, 1680 in Gloucester Co. VA / d. June 28, 1738 in Essex Co. VA) on September 3, 1703 in Snow Creek, Essex Co. VA.

More about Francis Thornton
1st Justice of Caroline Co; Justice of Essex in 1723-26 and Burgess for Spotsylvania Co. VA. Col. of his Majesty's Militia for Spotsylvania Co. maybe January ,4 1682 from Family Bible Records.
A. Children of Mary Taliaferro and Francis Thornton
+ . i. Francis Thornton (b. 7 Apr 1704 in Essex Co. VA / d. 1749)
+ . ii. Alice Catlett Thornton (b. 1707 in Essex Co. VA)
+ . iii. Elizabeth Thornton (b. 1710 / d. 1774)
. iv. Sarah Thornton
. v. William Thornton
+ . vi. Mary Thornton (b. 1706 / d. 1757)
+ . vii. Mildred Thornton (b. abt. 1721)
. viii. Eliza Thornton
+ . ix. John Thornton (b. 1712 / d. 1777)
. x. Reuben Thornton (b. 1712 / d. 1768)
January 4, 1727: On October 9th of the same year (1715) they marched to attack the Earl of Sutherland, who however declined an engagement and retired to Bonar, where his force dispersed. Soon after this the Chevalier appeared amongst his adherents at Perth, but lost heart at seeing the paucity of their numbers. and advising them to seek safety by retreating northwards in a body under General Gordon (which they did in admirable order), fled himself to France on February 4th, 1716, and the Rebellion was at an end. The chief of MacKinnon was attainted for the part he took in the rebellion, but received a pardon on January 4th, 1727.

Clan Mackinnon
Crest badge

Crest: A boar's head erased, argent, holding in its mouth a deer's shankbone, proper.[1] A Mackinnon legend that is supposed to explain the chief's crest is of a Mackinnon who was hunting on the shores of Loch Scavaig in Skye. After becoming separated from his hunting party the Mackinnon spent the night in a cave for shelter. While preparing some venison which he was about to cook over an open fire he was attacked by a wild boar which charged into the cave. Mackinnon then drove the butchered deer's leg into the mouth of the boar, jamming it open, before killing the wild animal.[2]

Motto: AUDENTES FORTUNA JUVAT (translation from Latin: "Fortune assists the daring" or "Fortune favours the bold").[3]

Slogan: Cuimhnich bas Alpein (translation from Gaelic: "Remember the death of Alpin").[2]

Profile
Plant badge
Scots Pine.[1]


Chief



Madam Anne Gunhild Mackinnon of Mackinnon
38th Chief of the Name and Arms of Mackinnon.[4]




January 4, 1739: Susannah Smith (b. January 4, 1739 / d. June 19, 1823).
No. 33.—Colonel William CRAWFORD TO General HAND. January 4, 1778.
DEAR GENERAL:—Yours, by Captain Harrison, came safe to hand, and I am sorry I could not wait on YOU sooner; but I have got the itch, and I am now curing for it. I shall be down toward the last of the week.
Any plan you may judge most expedient to carry into execution, I shall do everything in my power to assist you in. The badness of the road and weather I believe will prevent the ladies from visiting Fort Pitt at this time. I shall, if I can, bring down the hounds with me.
I am, etc.
1802 - January 4 - Benjamin Harrison of the Province of Louisiana, conveyed to Robert Scott of Harrison County, Ky., 200 acres in Harrison County. Corner to Jane Curry and Samuel Rawlings, Scott's line, corner to Samuel Anderson, etc. Consideration £60. Acknowledged in Harrison County, Jan. 4, 1802, by Benjamin Harrison.
January 4, 1808: Winans, Hiram W., farmer, P.O. Springville; was born October 4, 1830, in Miami Co., Ohio; son of Moses P. and Susan Simmons-Winans. He married May 27, 1852, to Priscilla A., daughter of John B. and Elizabeth Persinger Hollingshead; she was born November 24, 1832, in Shelby Co., Ohio; moved here in 1852, have four children-Moses W., born January 8 1854; Ella E., born May 16, 1856; Myrtle May, born May 1, 1867; Ivy D., born November 10, 1872; the first was born in Johnson Co., Iowa, and the others here. Mr. Winans served in Co. H, 24th I. V. I., over eighteen months, and until the close of the war. Members of the M. E. Church. He is a Republican. His father was born January 4. 1808; son of Lewis and Lydia Winans.
Susan Simmons Winans born at Fort Dearborn Chicago…
Line of MOSES PRYOR WINANS JOHN-JOHN-LEWIS-JOHN-LEWIS-MOSES (1-5-5-1-1-4)

MOSES PRYOR was b January 4, 1808 at Stanton Twp., Ohio d August 5 or 25, 1871 at Springville, Iowa md September 11, 1828 Susan Simmons b February 12, 1812 at Fort Dearborn, Chicago, Ill. d April 27, 1900 at Santa Ana, Calif. She was the dau of John and Susan (Millhouse) Simmons.
Ref: IW., JB., Mrs. Lila Hamilton Finne of Torrance, Calif.
See articles.
1-5-5-1-1-4-1 LEWIS WINANS b June 29, 1829 In Miami Co., Ohio d August 1890 in Santa Ana, Calif. unmarried.
*1-5-5-1-1-4-2
HIRAM WEBSTER WINANS b October 4, 1830 in Miami Co., Ohio md May 27, 1853 at Quinsey, Ohio Priscilla Ann Hollingshead.
1-5-5-1-1-4-3 JOHN SIMMONS WINANS b July 11, 1832 in Miami Co., Ohio d February 28, 1869 at Springville, Iowa md Matilda Kemp. No further data.
AMY WINANS b September 19, 1834 in Shelby Co., Ohio d March 31, 1929 at Los Angeles, Calif. buried at Santa Ana, Calif. md May 15, 1853 at Quincy, Ohio James Dotson Cornell b January 13, 1831 at Quincy, Logan,

January 4, 1814: The Commissioner met agreeable to adjournment present David Vance & George Fithian and proceeded to business.

The Court allowed David Vance, Stephan Reeder and George Fithian Six days each being in full for their Services as Commissioners until January 4th 1814.

The Grand Jury are allowed three days each for their Services at Janusry termn 1814 whose names are as follows wit
John Lafferty
Job Sharp
George Robinson
Daniel Jones
James Steel
John Forsy
Wm Cummins
John Pence
John Taylor
Jesse Johnson
John Garwood
David Bay
John Humphries
Abraham Powell
Nathan Norton

William Kenton Jr. Constable

The above are given in an order to David Vance Sherriff.


January 4, 1821: To John Caldwell Calhoun

Division of the South
Head Quarters
Nashville January 4th, 1821

Sir
I have just received your report on the reduction of the Army conformably to a resolve of Congress of May last, accompanied by your polite note of the 16th, ultimo; for which received my thanks.
I have read your report with great attention and much pleasure, and am happy to find it not only realizing my own expectations and that of your friends; but also those of every description of character here. Since its appearance the enemies of the army are dumb. It has given to the army a character and importance which I have no doubt will convine every mind wishing our prosperity and independence as a nation, that we cannot be secure without an army organized as you have proposed. It is calculated for peace. It is a good basis to build on in war. In it there is system and stability, and in the alternate change from war to peace, the system remains stable and entire. Had such a system exised at the commencement of the late War, thousands of men and millions of treasure would have been saved to the nation. Canada would have been ours, and we would not have met disaster, disgrace and defeat. Our national character would not have been humbled and disgraced by silence the little members of Congress who have the reduction of the army their riding horse for some years.
This able system the result of your labour, has raised a debt of gratitude upon your country, which I trust it will soon repay, I have the honor to be Very Respy. Yr. Mo Obt. Servant.

(Signed) Andrew Jackson
January 4, 1830 – A party of thirty warriors under Major Ridge expels several families of white squatters who’d taken over the farmsteads of Cherokee emigres to the west in a detached section of Cherokee land inside southern Georgia.
January 4, 1832: Margaret Laughlin Vance, b. April 22, 1744, Winchester, Frederick, VA, USA130, d. January 4, 1832, Abingdon, Washington Co., VA.
January 4, 1838: Elijah Hicks party of Cherokee arrives which left on September 1, 1838, arrives on January 4, 1839. 858 departed, 744 arrived, 54 deaths.
January 4, 1842: GODLOVE FAMILY
The first person in the county to file his intention to become a naturalized citizen of the United States was Emanuel Godlove. The record of his intention is as follows...."Be it remembered that on this 4th day in the Year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty-Two, personally appeared in open Court, Emanuel Godlove, a native of Kingdom Bayrne (Bavaria-Bayern, German spelling) and made oath upon the Evangelist of Almighty God that it is bona fide his intention to become a Citizen of the United States and to renounce and abjure forever all allegiance and fidelity to every foreign prince, potentate, State or Sovereignty whatever and particularly all allegiance and fidelity to the King of Bayrne of whom he was last a subject."
January 4, 1858: Kansas voters, having the opportunity to reject the constitution altogether in the referendum, overwhelmingly rejected the Lecompton proposal by a vote of 10,226 to 138.[4] And in Washington, the Lecompton constitution was defeated by the federal House of Representatives in 1858. Though soundly defeated, debate over the proposed constitution had ripped apart the Democratic party. Kansas was admitted to the Union as a free state in 1861.
Lecompton Constitution- 1857

ARTICLE V.

SEC. 25. It shall be the duty of all civil officers of this State to use due.diligence in the securing and rendition of persons held to service or labor in this State, either of the States or Territories of the United States; and the legislature shall enact such laws as may be necessary for the honest and faithful carrying out of this provision of the constitution.

ARTICLE VII.

SLAVERY.

SECTION I. The right of property is before and higher than any constitutional sanction, and the right of the owner of a slave to such slave and its increase is the same, and as inviolable as the right of the owner of any property whatever.
SEC. 2. The legislature shall have no power to pass laws for the emancipation of slaves without the consent of the owners, or without paying the owners previous to their emancipation a full equivalent in money for the slaves so emancipated. They shall have no power to prevent emigrants to the State from bringing with them such persons as are deemed slaves by.the laws of any one of the United States or Territories, so long as any person of the same age or description shall be continued in slavery by the laws of this State; Provided, That such person or slave be the bona-fide property of such emigrants: And provided also, That laws may be passed to prohibit the introduction into this State of
slaves who have committed high crimes in other States or Territories. They shall have power to pass laws to permit the owners of slaves to emancipate them, saving the rights of creditors, and preventing them from becoming a public charge. They shall have power to oblige the owners of slaves to treat them with humanity, to provide for them necessary food and clothing, to abstain from all injuries to them extending to life or limb, and, in case of their neglect or refusal to comply with the direction of such laws,-to have such slave or slaves sold for the benefit of the owner or owners.
SEC. 3. In the prosecution of slaves for crimes of higher grade than petit larceny, the legislature shall have no power to deprive them of an impartial trial by a petit jury.
SEC. 4. Any person who shall maliciously dismember or deprive a slave of life shall suffer such punishment as would be indicted in case the like offense had been committed on a free white person, and on the like proof, except in case of insurrection of such slave.
BILL OF RIGHTS.

23. Free negroes shall not be permitted to live in this State under any circumstances.

SCHED ULE.

SEC. 7. This constitution shall be submitted to the Congress of the United States at its next ensuing session . . .
Before this constitution shall be sent to Congress, asking for admission into the Union as a State, it shall be submitted to all the white male inhabitants of this Territory, for approval or disapproval, as follows: . . . The voting shall be by ballot. The judges of said election shall cause to be kept two poll-books by two clerks, by them appointed. The ballots cast at said election shall be endorsed, "Constitution with slavery," and "Constitution with no slavery." . . . The president [of the convention] with two or more members of this convention, shall examine said poll-books, and if it shall appear upon said examination that a majority of the legal votes cast at said election be in favor of the "Constitution with slavery," he shall immediately have the same transmitted to the Congress of the United States, as hereinbefore
provided; but if, upon such examination of said poll-books, it shall appear that a majority of the legal votes cast at said election be in favor of the " Constitution with no slavery," then the article providing for slavery shall be stricken from this constitution by the president of this convention, and slavery shall no longer exist in the State of Kansas, except that the right of property in slaves now in this Territory shall in no manner be interfered with, and shall have transmitted the constitution, so ratified, (to Congress the constitution, so ratified,) to the Congress of the United States, as hereinbefore provided....

January 4, 1863: General Grant’s controversial Order No. 11, expelling Jews from his department, is revoked by President Lincoln.

Mon. January 4, 1864
In cedar rapids yet boarding at bevers hotel. Had a stag dance at night

January 4, 1864: Hunter, Franklin C. Age 18. Residence Linn County, nativity Ohio. Enlisted January 4, 1864. Mustered January 28, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga.

January 4, 1865
On January 4, the nineteen lucky men boarded the train bound for Iowa.

January 4, 1865 Express to Governor Zebulon Vance from Robert E. Lee

Anna Goodlove with Zebulon Vance, her 3rd cousin, 7 times removed at the North Carolina State Capital in Raleigh.

Jacqulin Goodlove Visits the Salisbury N.C. Confederate Prison.
On January 4, 1865 Guard N. Alexander, who lived near Charlotte, N.C., wrote his wife Sarah about the Confederacy's police of recruiting Catholics saying, "There is a Catholic priest here from lousana [sic] he is taking out one hundred or more every day which takes the oath to fight for the Confederacy. he has them in a camp about 3 or 4 miles from town He goes in the garrison ever morning to see how many will join him."



Final published extracts:
January 4, 1901 at Osborne House, Isle of Wight
(Queen Victoria) From not having been well, I see so badly, which is very tiresome.

January 4, 1903: Edison Fries an Elephant to Prove His Point
By Tony Long 01.04.08

Topsy the elephant was electrocuted at Luna Park Zoo on Coney Island in 1903. Captured on film by Thomas Edison, the event was one of a string of animal electrocutions Edison staged to discredit a new form of electricity: alternating current.
1903: Thomas Edison stages his highly publicized electrocution of an elephant in order to demonstrate the dangers of alternating current, which, if it posed any immediate danger at all, was to Edison's own direct current.
Edison had established direct current at the standard for electricity distribution and was living large off the patent royalties, royalties he was in no mood to lose when George Westinghouse and Nicola Tesla showed up with alternating current.
Edison's aggressive campaign to discredit the new current took the macabre form of a series of animal electrocutions using AC (a killing process he referred to snidely as getting "Westinghoused"). Stray dogs and cats were the most easily obtained, but he also zapped a few cattle and horses.
Edison got his big chance, though, when the Luna Park Zoo at Coney Island decided that Topsy, a cranky female elephant who had squashed three handlers in three years (including one idiot who tried feeding her a lighted cigarette), had to go.
Park officials originally considered hanging Topsy but the SPCA objected on humanitarian grounds, so someone suggesting having the pachyderm "ride the lightning," a practice that had been used in the American penal system since 1890 to dispatch the condemned. Edison was happy to oblige.
This portion of Edison's film Electrocuting an Elephant is taken from a German television show.
When the day came, Topsy was restrained using a ship's hawser fastened on one end to a donkey engine and on the other to a post. Wooden sandals with copper electrodes were attached to her feet and a copper wire run to Edison's electric light plant, where his technicians awaited the go-ahead.
In order to make sure that Topsy emerged from this spectacle more than just singed and angry, she was fed cyanide-laced carrots moments before a 6,600-volt AC charge slammed through her body. Officials needn't have worried. Topsy was killed instantly and Edison, in his mind anyway, had proved his point.
A crowd put at 1,500 witnessed Topsy's execution, which was filmed by Edison and released later that year as Electrocuting an Elephant.
In the end, though, all Edison had to show for his efforts was a string of dead animals, including the unfortunate Topsy, and a current that quickly fell out of favor as AC demonstrated its superiority in less lethal ways to become the standard.
January 4, 1906
(Jordan’s Grove) Wm. Goodlove is recovering from his accident.

January 4-10, 1914: There was something wrong, and the pastor determined to discover what it was. He made use of simple religious survey blank and set out on a tour of investigation.
His discoveries were as remarkab le as they were numerous. And they were numerous enough to furnish him with sermon material for six months. But most important of all among the discoveries he made, were the reasons for the failure of so many people to attend church.
Some of the people declared that they did not attend church because of the condition of the road outside the church. That road was rather a serious menace to “pure and undefiled religion.”
“More than once I have lost my religion going home over thqat road,” one man said.
Was it necessary to make the path to church an easy one? It proved to be necessary to make the approach to God’s House as convenient as the automobile roads over which the farmers were accustomed to take Sunday rides.
“I don’t come to church because I am scared to walk over that platform,” confessed one lady. And when the pastor considered the weakness of the boards in the platform, he too, concluded that a woman who weighed two hundred pounds had some reason for being “scared.”
On the Sunday following the completion of the survey, the preacher addressed the congregation of Buck Creek Church on “How to Fill God’s House,” especially emphqasizing the value of gooed roads and church equipment. Of course, his sermon was not received with unanimous approval.
“That preacher ought to stick to his job,” vouched one good brother who could not see the relation between good roads and religion. He did not yet realize that good roads are essentioal factors in the new rural awakening, and that the business of the preacher is to remove the cause for the failure of people to attned church.
The preacher got the men together, and told them the things which he had discovered in his survey. Directly they formed a committee to wait upon the County Supervisors. They got a grant of $600.
The men of Buck Creek Church gave their time and labor, until, where there had been rocks and great ruts, there now lay a fine strip of macadam, up to the very church door. That piece of constructive work converted many a sceptic from a attitude of criticism toward the church to one of frank approval.
These same men pulled up the old wooden platform before the church door, and substituted a flight of cement steps. At least two people in the community no longer had a real excuse for not attending church!
A good live institute was put on with speakers from various universities whose talks were all on subjects of vital interest to the farmer and his family. It proved to be a great attraction. Men who had never been in the church were there.

“Oh, Christ! It is a goodly sight to see
What heaven hath done for this delicious land”
-Lord Byron in Childs Heral.

Country Life Institute

For

Delaware County

January 4-10, 1914

Ministers Co-operating:
Rev. A. B Fickle….Golden
(Congregational Church)
Rev. J. W. Westall…Delhi
(M.E. Church)
Rev. A. Winfield Wiggins…Earlville
(M. E. Church)
Rev. Carl W. Skinner…Earlville
Gilbert J. Chalice.l..Hopkinton
Secretary and Treasurer

No admission charged; nooffering taken during meetings. Undenominational. “To give visions to the common life and to inspire men for a service to common needs.”

FARMERS, DON’T MISS THIS!!
It’s worth dollars to you!!!

“Back to the farm is the Nation’s only salvation. If we would prosper as a nation we must have more aggressive and scientific farming.” James J. Hill.


Speakers: PRES. E. E. REED, D.D. Hopkinton
President of Lenox College
Subjects: Corn, Alfalfa, and Soil Fertility.”
“Education for the Farmer.”

PROF. J. A. WOODRUFF, Des Moines
Asst. State Supt of Schools
Subject: “The Value of Centralized Schools.” Illustrated with stereopticon views.

PROF. F. A. HAYS. Lenox College
Professor of Animal Husbandry
Subject: “Beef Cattle, Dairying, and Stock Judging”

MISS B MAUD ARIS, Lenox College
Professor of Househjold Economics
Subject: The Making of a Country Home.”

REV. ALBERT M. BILLINGSLEY. D.D.
Dist Supt of the M. E. Church.
Subjecgt: “The Church and Counttry Life”

REV. GILBERT J. CHALICE, Hopkinton
Pastor M. E. Church
Subject: “Financing the Country Church.”


January 4, 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.

January 4, 1962
Oswald’s Diary: Jan. 4. I am called to the passport office since my Residenceal
passport expires today, since I now have a US. passport in my possition I am given a totly
new resid. pass. called, "Pass. for Forin," and since they have given US perrmission to
leave, and know we shall, good to July 5, 1962.

January 4, 1963 The Standing Group, an NSC group that eventually replaces the
ExComm in reviewing U.S. policy toward Cuba, discusses McGeorge Bundy 's proposal of
opening communications with Fidel Castro . Bundy later notes that the "gradual development of
some form of accommodation with Castro" became a standard item in lists of policy alternatives
considered by the Kennedy administration. Nonetheless, U.S. policy toward Castro vacillates
considerably in the months after the missile crisis. Even as secret approaches to Castro are being
weighed, the Kennedy administration also contemplates Pentagon proposals for military action
against Castro, as well as a wide range of economic and covert programs to weaken the Castro
government.

January 4, 1980: Jimmy Carter gives Address to the nation on Soviet invasion of Afghanistan; sanctions announced.

Charlene Anne Sutton
September 25, 1919 - January 4, 2002


Life Legacy

Charlene Sutton age 82, of Monticello, died Friday, January 4, 2002 at the Monticello Nursing and Rehabilitation Center following an extended illness. Funeral services will be held 10:30 Tuesday morning, January 8, 2002 at the Goettsch Funeral Home, Monticello with interment in the Oakwood Cemetery. Friends may call from 4 until 8 Monday at the Goettsch Funeral Home. Rev. Edwin Moreano will officiate at the services. Surviving is her daughter, Lois (Merle) Winch, Hopkinton, 2 sisters, Helen Hoyer, Center Junction, Dorothy (Donald) Maire, Monticello, 5 Grandchildren and 8 great Grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her Parents and her husband, Chester. Charlene Rollf was born September 25, 1919 at Maquoketa, Iowa. She was the daughter of Charles Marion and Anna Louise Scott Rollf. Charlene received her education in the Monticello Community Schools graduating with the class of 1937. Charlene married Chester Sutton on July 11, 1939 at Dubuque, Iowa. Charlene was employed at Energy Manufacturing from 1950 until 1985 where she worked in the assembly department. Chester preceded her in death on November 7, 1977. Charlene was a volunteer at the Senior Home for many years.

Born: September 25, 1919
Death: January 4, 2002

This memorial provided by:
GOETTSCH FUNERAL HOME

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