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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
Birthdays on March 7…
John L. Bacon (husband of the 2nd great grandaunt)
Amy L.C. Buis Mitchell (wife of the 5th great grandnephew of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)
Wesley E. Gatewood (half 4th cousin 3x removed)
Edwin P. Gilbert (husband of the 3rd great grandniece of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)
Charles W. Goodlove (2nd cousin 2x removed)
Thomas L. Moore (husband of the 5th great grandaunt)
Cammie M. Nix (9th cousin 2x removed)
David B. Nunemaker (3rd cousin)
Ann Taylor Bacon (wife of the 3rd great granduncle)
March 7, 161: Roman emperor Antoninus Pius passed away. He was the handpicked successor of Hadrian. Antonious undid the anti-Jewish decrees of his predecessor and when he died the Jewish people lost one of the few friends they ever had sitting on the throne in Rome.[1]
March 7, 161: Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus are named co-Emperors of the Roman Empire following the death of Antonious Pius. Marcus Aurilius had little understanding or appreciation of the Jewish people. He described them as “stinking and tumultuous” when he traveled through Judea. He reportedly said that he preferred the company of Germanic barbarians to that of Jews.[2]
Antonine Plague
165 – 180 AD
The Antonine Plague (also known as the Plague of Galen, who described it), was an ancient pandemic, of either smallpox or measles, brought back to the Roman Empire by troops returning from campaigns in the Near East. The epidemic claimed the lives of two Roman emperors — Lucius Verus, who died in 169, and his co-regent who ruled until 180, Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, whose family name, Antoninus, was given to the epidemic. The disease broke out again nine years later, according to the Roman historian Dio Cassius, and caused up to 2,000 deaths a day at Rome, one quarter of those infected. Total deaths have been estimated at five million. Disease killed as much as one-third of the population in some areas, and decimated the Roman army. The epidemic had drastic social and political effects throughout the Roman Empire, particularly in literature and art. Pictured above is a plague pit containing the remains of people who died in the Antonine Plague.[3]
167 CE: Earliest known accusation of deicide (the notion that Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus) made in a sermon ‘On the Passover’ attributed to Melito of Sardis.[4]
90-168 CE: In the ancient view of the solar system, that is, the five planets seen by the naked eye, Saturn appears as the most distant from the sun. In the ancient period, well before the heliocentric revolution, the planets vast distance from the earth was the key. As Ptolemy (90-168 CE) observed Saturn is the farthest planet from the Earth and moves on the largest spheres around the center of the zodiac. To the ancient observer, then, Saturn’s supposed orbit around the earth marked the outermost boundary and limit of our planet. In spatial terms, then if one wanted to convey the message that the ten tribes were located outside the earth’s outer most boundary, they would be placed beyond Saturn, beyond the Sambatyon. [5]
170 BETH SHEARIM (Eretz Israel)
Became the new center of learning under Judah HaNasi.[6]
C. 170 MELITO, BISHOP OF SARDIS (Asia Minor)
Published a sermon "On the Passion" in which he blamed the Jews for the persecution and death of Jesus and absolved Pontius Pilate and the Romans from any guilt. Although there was much evidence to the contrary his stand served to rid the Romans of any responsibility or shame and thus encourage them to convert. This is one of the first times the Jews were officially accused of deicide. [7]
March 7, 1745: Born at "Arcadia" plantation in Kent County, Maryland, on March 7, 1745. He later migrated to Tyrone Township, in Fayette County, Pennsylvania and married Mary Harrison.[8] Commissioned a lieutenant in November, 1776 and eventually promoted to captain. Took Oath of Allegiance at Valley Forge. Served until January, 1780. Following the Revolutionary War, he served with George Rogers Clark in Illinois. In 1802, Moore retired from the Kentucky Militia with the rank of major. Died in 1823 and buried in the Lindsay-Moore Cemetery, Harrison County, Kentucky.[9]
March 7, 1745
The following notes are submitted as a supplement to an article contributed by Forrest P. Wood of Seattle, Washington,. which appeared in the April, 1967, issue of Kentucky Ancestors (Vol. 2, No. 4). Mr. Wood’s article discussed the Lindsey—Moore Cemetery located near Poindexter in Harrison County. This cemetery was marked as a state historical site on April 17, 1969.
Buried in the L1ndsey-Moore Cemetery are the Revolutionary War officer, Captain Thomas Moore (1745—1823), and his wife, Mary (Harrison) Moore (1761—1836), their eldest son, William Moore, his wife, Eleanor (Dawson), and other descendants. The cemetery was included in a tract of land originally owned by David Lindsey, but sold to Thomas Moore after 1800.
Thomas was born at “Arcadia” plantation, St. Paul’s Parish, Kent County, Maryland, on March 7, 1745, the youngest son of William Moore and his wife, Rachel (Medford).1 He migrated to Tyrone Township~ Fayette County, Pennsylvania, in i76~~ where he married Mary Harrison born 1761 in Orange County, Virginia, youngest child of Lawrence Harrison and his wife Catherine (not proved is the name Marmaduke).3 Mary Harrison was a sister of Colonel Benjamin Harrison, for whom Harrison County was named, first sheriff of Bourbon County, and, as senator from Bourbon, a delegate to the Constitutional Convention at Danville in l792. Thomas Moore was commissioned lieutenant in the 13th Virginia Regiment commanded(led by Colonel Benjamin Harrison, and captain in the Ninth Virginia Regiment.4 Following the Revolutionary War; he served with George Rogers Clark in Illinois under the command of ‘Colonel Uriah Springer, who had married Sarah (Crawford), widow of Major William Harrison, another brother of Mary (Harrison) Major William Harrison had been massacred at the Battle of Sandusky. In 1802 Thomas Moore was retired from the Kentucky Militia with the’ rank of major. According to William Perrin’s History of Bourbon, Scott, Harrison, Nicholas Counties, Kentucky, Thomas Moore and his wife had been among the second party of settlers in Harrison County. He received a patent for 2,000 acres of land.[10]
March 7, 1757: It was a tough winter, and Burd was beset with many difficulties, including delayed payments to his troops (along with the threat of Indian attacks, snow, cold, illness and resulting desertions). On March 7, 1757 he delivered a pep talk to the troops in which he berated some for their complaining and extolled the virtues of a few loyal determined souls who did their job without complaint. Among the latter, he cited Sergeant George Gotlieb for continuing duty beyond the date of his required enlistment. Not all of Burd's journal is included, but in that which is published, I find no further mention of George Gotlieb; [11]
March 7, 1771: George Washington Journal: (grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) At my Brothers all day writing Instructions & dispatches for Captn. Crawford (6th great grandfather) the Surveyor of our 200,000 Acs. of Land.
William Preston[12] to George Washington, March 7, 1774
FINCASTLE[13] March 7th. 1774
SIR
I recd. your Letter Inclosing a Warrant for 2000 Acres, & a Certificate of Mr. Crawford’s for 2050 Acres in the Fork of the great Kanhawa and Cole River, by favour of Mr Young.
Be assured Sir that nothing could have given me greater Pleasure than to have complied with your Request had it been in my Power; and the rather as I see nothing in it that is unreasonable or unprecedented. When I was last at Wms.burg his Lordship presented me with two Platts of 2000 Acres each one for Doctr. Connilly & the other for one Warrenstaff and requested, nay even urged me to sign them; as they had been Accurately Surveyed by Mr. Douglas, an Assistant to Capt. Bullet who had been regularly appointed by the College, I with some Reluctance Signed the Certificates by which those Gentlemen immediately obtained Patents. This Transaction has made a great deal of Noise; & indeed it is the Opinion of many good Judges that the Patents are altogether illegal. This alone is my Reason for not complying with your Request, and the promise I then made to Col. Lewis on your Behalf; for at that Time I could not foresee any ill Consequence that could attend such a Step.
I have Advertized the Officers who obtained Warrants from Lord Dunmore to meet my Assistants at the Mouth of New River the 14th. of April. Two of (?) the Assistants will go from hence down the River, and not far from the mouth of Cole River they intend to provide Canoes to proceed down the Ohio. I can think of no better Method than what Col. Lewis has proposed; which is, that one of them on his way down shall Survey the Land and by the first Opportunity send me the Plan to
be recorded. Col. Lewis says he will endeavour to persuade his Son to go, or send a Surveyor, to lay off the Tract you have in Botetourt, & that he will return from thence imediately: Should the Col. Succeed in this, then my Assistant could send up the Plan, & by that Means & Mr. Lewis & myself might have it in our Power to send you the Certificates before the rising of the next Session of Assembly.--If Mr. Lewis can neither go, or send down the River at that Time, I shall leave no method in my Power unattempted to have your Survey made and returned to you before the Assembly rises, or to Col. Bassett afterwards, who I suppose will transact the Business for you.--In the mean time I shall Enter the Land on my Book & send you a Copy this I suppose will secure it to you untill it can be legally Surveyed.
The 2000 Acres on Salt River which Capt. Bullet mentioned to you & which he laid off last year, has been Entered some Time ago by Capt. Christian. Mr. Young has a Copy of the Entry. I believe all the Salt Springs discovered in that Country have been Entered.
I am Sony it was not in my Power to comply with your Request, but for the Reasons I have given I hope you will excuse me, and the more so as I shall do all I can to have your Land Surveyed early in the Season, for which purpose I have kept Mr. Crawfords Certificate that it may be laid off accordingly.
I am with great Regard Sir
Your most Obedt. h.ble Servt.
WM. PRESTON[14]
March 7, 1775
[15]
Charles Harrison, (6th great granduncle)
March 7, 1776: British General William Howe realized Boston was indefensible to the American positions and decided, on March 7, 1776, to leave the city. [16]
March 7, 1777: A detachment of chasseurs and recruits started from Hanau on March 7th, 1777. On the 8th the boats were stopped at Mainz, and eight men were taken from them. The archbishop claimed these either as his own subjects or as deserters from his service. The English government refused to interfere, and the complaints of the Prince of Hanau were unheeded. On March 25th, at S'Gravendael, in Holland, seven men sprang overboard, and three of them escaped, with the help of sympathizing peasants.
Meanwhile, two regiments of Anspach and Bayreuth, with one hundred and one chasseurs and forty-four artillerymen (in all twelve hundred and eighty-five men), had marched from Anspach on March 7th, 1777, and were embarked at Ochsenfurth, a pretty little walled town lying on the Main about a hundred miles above Hanau, and belonging at that time to the Bishop of Wurzburg. The men were embarked towards evening, and their boats remained at anchor through the night. The poor country lads were unused to their crowded quarters, shivering with cold, and sickened by the smell of the boats, in which, in their simplicity, they thought they were to sail to America. Their grumbling grew at last into a mutiny, a poor, helpless mutiny, without a plan, without a leader. At daybreak some of the soldiers of the Anspach regiment, whose boat lay near the bank, laid a plank to the shore and walked over it. They then dragged other boats to land, and in an hour the miserable crowd of cold and hungry men was on shore, storming with anger and refusing to yield to the threats and promises of its officers. These acted prudently. They sent for food and wood to warm and feed the starving mutineers. Unfortunately the inhabitants of Ochsenfurth brought drink as well. The insubordination increased. The soldiers began to wander away; but the chasseurs still obeyed orders. They were posted on the surrounding hills and told to fire at deserters, "to frighten them." The rioters returned the fire. Several men were wounded. The burghers of Ochsenfurth shut their gates and drew up their drawbridges to keep themselves out of harm's way. Towards evening the soldiers began to get sober again, and were finally brought back into their ranks, some scores of them having succeeded in escaping. The Bishop of Wurzburg sent hussars and dragoons to help quell the riot. He was afterwards officially thanked by the English government.
Meanwhile an express had been sent to warn the Margrave at Anspach. The Margrave was startled. Here were twelve hundred men, with eighteen thousand good English pounds, and next winter's little journey to Paris, all in danger of making off at once. His Most Serene Highness threw himself into the saddle, forgetting his watch and neglecting his carpet-bag; (he had afterwards to borrow some clean shirts of his princely neighbor of Hanau). He rode quickly through the night, and early morning found him at Ochsenfurth. The regiments were drawn up and the Margrave passed from man to man. He inquired into their grievances, and promised forgiveness to all who would go to America. He announced that any man might then and there leave the service, forfeiting his home, all his property, and the princely favor. No one stirred. The soldiers were re-embarked and taken down the Main. The Margrave accompanied them. The story that he sat in one of the boats, with a cocked rifle, ready for future deserters, seems to want authority.
The flotilla arrived at Mainz. About thirty officers and men had been sent by the Bishop-Elector to visit it and take off deserters. They were recalled, however, on account of the presence of the Margrave, and of the two Hessian princes who were with him. The Elector prepared a grand dinner for these distinguished guests, but they did not venture to accept it, and only sent an officer to demand that the bridge should be opened, threatening to blow it up in case of refusal. The bridge was opened in the night, without the formal consent of the Elector, and the boats went on their way. From this point, the voyage down the Rhine was unhindered, and the troops were mustered into the English service in Holland. Each regiment received a present of 100 ducats from the Margrave, and extra rations during the journey.[17]
[Gen. Edward Hand to Col. David Shepherd. 3NN100—
Transcript.]
FORT Pitt, March 7th, 1778.
Dr SIR—I am just returned from a short excursion into the Indian Country, in which I was prevented of completing my views by the badness of the weather & height of the waters. Except a few gentlemen from about Stewart’s Crossings,[18] & Some who accidentally happened here from the different parts of the Virginia frontiers, the party Consisted of volunteers from Westmoreland County. Many of the Virginia gentlemen seem to desire an opportunity of distinguishing themselves on a Similar occasion, which would in my opinion, render much service to the Country & should meet my hearty concurrence. I therefore request that you may request that you may endeavor to promote so laudable an Enterprise. I think that 200 men, each provided with a good horse & two bushels of grain, might in 8 or 10 days from this place make a considerable blow. If the scheme be carried into execution, the men should be punctual in rendezvousing here on the 1st of Next month. I think so short a trip would not interfere with my intention of drawing what assistance I can from the frontier counties & penetrating the enemies country in May with a design of taking a larger circuit; & beg to know your sentiments on the subject, & what men I may expect from your county on either occasion. Any grain furnished will be paid for, & also, the horses by appraisement if lost.
EDWd HAND
To Col. David Shepherd..[19]
March 7, 1825: The second treaty was signed at the Indian Springs Hotel on February 12, 1825 and ratified March 7, 1825. It was negotiated by McIntosh and his first cousin, Georgia Governor George Troup. Under this treaty the Lower Creek surrendered all of their lands east of the Chattahoochee, including the sacred Ocmulgee Old Fields, and accepted relocation west of the Mississippi River to an equivalent parcel of land along the Arkansas River. In compensation for the move to unimproved land, and to aid in obtaining supplies, the Creek nation would receive $200,000 paid in decreasing installments over a period of years. A controversial article provided additional payments to McIntosh for the lands granted to him in 1821.[1]
The treaty was popular with Georgians, who re-elected Troupe in the state's first popular election in 1825. It was signed by only six chiefs, and the Creek National Council denounced it, ordering the execution of McIntosh and the other Muscogee signatories, as it was a capital crime to alienate tribal land. [20][21]
Mon. March 7[22], 1864
Very hot for March. Didn’t do any duty
Billa dn Dave Winans[23] caught a large garfish
4 feet long –four divisions[24] of 13 corp left for (I) or (A) berie
William Harrison Goodlove (2nd great grandfather) Civil War Diary, 24th Iowa Infantry
William McKinnon Goodlove, (1st cousin 3x removed) on March 7, 1864 enlisted in the Union Army, K Co. 57th Inf Reg. in Ohio at the age of 18.
March 7th, 1865: At … Marks Station,on the Wilmington[25], Charlotte, and Rutherfordton Railroad, troops from the Twentieth Corps under Gen. J. W. Geary “destroyed three-quarters of a mile of track, and a quantity of new iron rails which were piled up for shipment to other points.” In addition, Geary reported that his men had destroyed “several large resin factories.”[26]
March 7, 1881: Kirkwood, Samuel Jordan : Governor of Iowa 1876-1877, when he resigned to become United States Senator, serving as a Republican from March 4, 1877, to March 7, 1881, when he resigned to accept a Cabinet portfolio; Secretary of the Interior in the Cabinet of President James Garfield 1881-1882, when, upon the death of President Garfield, he resigned; unsuccessful candidate for election in 1886 to the Fiftieth Congress; resumed the practice of law; president of the Iowa City National Bank;[27]
March 7, 1901: David GODLOVE
Birth: January 27, 1828
Death: March 7, 1901
Spouse: Mary Matilda ORNDORFF (1839-1902)
Marriage: September 17, 1857 [28]
March 7, 1914: Cammie Mae Nix (b. March 7, 1914).[29]
March 7, 1936: Hitler violated Treaty of Versailles.[30] German forces enter the Rhineland.[31] Nazi leader Adolf Hitler violates the Treaty of Versailles and the Locarno Pact by sending German military forces into the Rhineland, a demilitarized zone along the Rhine River in western Germany.
The Treaty of Versailles, signed in July 1919--eight months after the guns fell silent in World War I--called for stiff war reparation payments and other punishing peace terms for defeated Germany. Having been forced to sign the treaty, the German delegation to the peace conference indicated its attitude by breaking the ceremonial pen. As dictated by the Treaty of Versailles, Germany's military forces were reduced to insignificance and the Rhineland was to be demilitarized.
In 1925, at the conclusion of a European peace conference held in Switzerland, the Locarno Pact was signed, reaffirming the national boundaries decided by the Treaty of Versailles and approving the German entry into the League of Nations. The so-called "spirit of Locarno" symbolized hopes for an era of European peace and goodwill, and by 1930 German Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann had negotiated the removal of the last Allied troops in the demilitarized Rhineland.
However, just four years later, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party seized full power in Germany, promising vengeance against the Allied nations that had forced the Treaty of Versailles on the German people. In 1935, Hitler unilaterally canceled the military clauses of the treaty and in March 1936 denounced the Locarno Pact and began remilitarizing of the Rhineland. Two years later, Nazi Germany burst out of its territories, absorbing Austria and portions of Czechoslovakia. In 1939, Hitler invaded Poland, leading to the outbreak of World War II in Europe.[32]
March 7, 1940: As Jews continued to protest against the newly enacted British laws limiting purchase of land in Palestine by Jews, the Chief Rabbis and leaders of the Vaad Leumi led a protest demonstration through the streets of Jerusalem while other Jews took part in a work stoppage in Haifa. In reaction to the protest in Jerusalem, the British imposed an over-night curfew on the Jewish quarter of the City of David.[33]
March 7, 1942: The British evacuate Rangoon.[34]
March 7, 1944: At Birkenau, 3,860 Jews who had been living in "family quarters", were sent to the gas chambers. Five days earlier, in their special "family quarters", they were shown off to Red Cross representatives (who were not allowed to see the rest of the camp.) The Jews were told to write postcards to their Czech relatives, but post date them March 25, 26, and 27. The Jews would never live to see those days. Of this group, only 37 were spared, including eleven sets of twins. They would be sent to Dr. Mengele for medical experiments.[35]
March 7, 1944 : “We plan to staff the whole underground facility with prisoners from concentration camps. We have been promised 3,500 of them for construction and factory work. I would like more people from the camps to expand the site and I will get them from the head of the SS.”
-Ferdinand Porsche on building the factory to make the V1 rockets with Hungarian Jews who had just arrived at Auschwitz. [36]
Almost all the 800 workers chosen from Auschwitz to work in the V1 rocket plant survived the war. Those not chosen were murdered in the gas chambers.[37]
March 7, 1945: The United States First Army crosses the Remagen Bridge over the Rhine River.[38]
March 12, 2012: Abner Vance, Spy/Scout (c.1760 - 1819)
View Abner Vance, Spy/Scout's complete profile:
Birthdate:
circa 1760
Birthplace:
North Carolina, United States
Death:
Died July 16, 1819 in Arlington, Virginia, United States
Occupation:
"Spy/Scout of the Revolution" Patriotic Service per DAR
Managed by:
Nicole Rockwell
Last Updated:
March 7, 2012[39]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[2] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[3] http://listverse.com/2009/01/18/top-10-worst-plagues-in-history/
[4] www.wikipedia.org
[5] The Ten Lost Tribes, A World History, Zvi Ben-Dor Benite, page 81.
[6] http://www.jewishhistory.org.il/history.php?startyear=170&endyear=179
[7] http://www.jewishhistory.org.il/history.php?startyear=170&endyear=179
[8] Mary HARRISON
[3934]
____ - ____
Father: Benjamin HARRISON
Mother: Mary NEWALL
Family 1 : Charles SWAN
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
_Andrew HARRISON ____+
| (1687 - 1753)
_Lawrence HARRISON _______|
| (1720 - 1769) m 1748 |
| |_Elizabeth BATTAILE _+
| (1695 - 1710)
_Benjamin HARRISON __|
| (1750 - 1808) m 1769|
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_Catherine MARMADUKE_(?) _|
| (1730 - 1836) m 1748 |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Mary HARRISON
|
| _____________________
| |
| __________________________|
| | |
| | |_____________________
| |
|_Mary NEWALL ________|
(.... - 1812) m 1769|
| _____________________
| |
|__________________________|
|
|_____________________
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDEX
[3934] ! Gen. of Va. Families, Vol. III Gen. Publ. Co., Inc., 1981, p. 956
! "A House of Harrison" compiled the years 1966-67 by Catherine Murphy
-- corrected the year 1979 -- State Historical Society of Mo., 929.2
H245 c.2
http://jonathanpaul.org/silvey/graham/d0001/g0000115.html
[9] Sent by John Moreland email May 12, 2010.
[10] NOTES ON THE MOORE—HARRISON FAMILY OF HARRISON COUNTY. KENTUCKY, Contributed by the Reverend Emmett Moore Waits St. Barnabas’ Rectory 1200’North Elm Street Denton, Texas 76201, see egles notes and queries vol. 7 pp 123,127,131) 1974 VlO—2 73
[11] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/e/r/Irene-Deroche/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0585.html
[12] [Note 1: 1 Born in Country Donegal, Ireland, December 25, 1729; died at his home, Smithfields, in Montgomery Country, Va., July 28, 1783. Colonel Preston, himself a man of no little prominence, was the father of Governor James Patton Preston and General Francis Preston, and the grandfather of General John Smith Preston, Major Thomas Lewis Preston, Senator William Campbell Preston, William Ballard Preston, Secretary of the Navy during the latter part of Zachary Taylor’s administration, and William Preston, U. S. Minister to Spain under Buchanan. In 1761, Colonel Preston married Susanna Smith, of Hanover County.]
[13] [Note 2: 2 In 1773, William Preston was appointed county surveyor of what was then Fincastle County. This county, formed from Botetourt in 1772, was in 1776 divided into Kentucky, Montgomery, and Washington counties. It embraced all southwest Virginia and Kentucky.]
[14] The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799
Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers. Published by the Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Edited by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton.--vol. 04
[15] The Horn Papers, Early Westward Movement on the Monongahela and Upper Ohio 1765-1795 by W.F. Horn Published for a Committee of the Greene County Historical Society, Waynesburg, Pennsylvania by the Hagstrom Company, New York, N.Y. 1945
Ref. 33.1 Conrad and Caty, by Gary Goodlove 2003
[16] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/the-siege-of-boston
[17] http://www.americanrevolution.org/hessians/hess5.html
[18] 89 Stewart’s Crossings is one of the historic spots of Fayette County, Pa. In 1753 William Stewart located there, about the same time that Christopher Gist built his cabin at Mount Braddock. Stewart chose a ford on the Yiogheny where the old Catawba Indian trail from the Iroquois country crossed that river. Erecting his cabin on the southwest bank of the stream, he lived on the site of the present village of New Haven. That autumn Maj. George Washington crossed at this place, bearing the famous message from Governor Dinwiddie of Virginia to the French officers on the upper Allegheny. The next year Washington, with his Virginia soldiers, did not advance as far as Stewart’s Crossings; but his French opponent Sieur de Jumonville, must have crossed at this spot when endeavoring to gain information of the English situation. After the surrender of Fort Necessity (July 4, 1754), Coulon de Villiers, the victor, retired to Gist’s place and ordered all the cabins of English settlers to be burned. William Stewart’s home shared the common fate, and he retreated to the Eastern settlements, leaving his name attached to the crossing of the Youghiogheny. Braddock’s Road led over this crossing; but that general himself forded the stream (1755) a mile or two below. In 1765 Col. William Crawford took possession of the place. Thither, the next year, he brought his family and established his permanent home. It is to his services that Hand here refers. On his death his son John fell heir to the Stewart Crossings estate, which in 1786 he sold to Edward Cook. The latter sold to Col. Isaac Meason, whose son built a store and in 1796 laid out the town of New Haven. The site of Stewart’s Crossings is now a busy one, leading to the populous city of Connellsville on the northeast bank of the stream. William Stewart was living in 1786, and testified to his early occupation of this site.—ED
[19] Draper Series, Volume III Frontier Defense on the Upper Ohio, 1777-1778, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison pgs. 221-222
1. [20] ^ "Treaty of Indian Springs, 1825", New Georgia Encyclopedia Online
[21] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Indian_Springs
[22] William McKinnon Goodlove, on March 7, 1864 enlisted in the Union Army, K Co. 57th Inf Reg. in Ohio at the age of 18.
Battle at Resaca, Georgia on May 13, 1864
Battle at Resaca, Georgia on May 14, 1864
Battle at Kenesaw Mountain, Georgia on June 27, 1864
Battle at Atlanta, Georgia on July 22, 1864
Battle at Atlanta, Georgia on July 23, 1864
Battle at Atlanta, Georgia on July 28, 1864
Battle at Atlanta, Georgia on August 5, 1864
Battle at Atlanta, Georgia on August 16, 1864
Battle at Atlanta, Georgia on August 22, 1864
Battle at Jonesboro, Georgia on August 31, 1864
Battle on October 11, 1864
Battle at Statesboro, Georgia on November 2, 1864
Battle at Statesboro, Georgia on December 3, 1864
Battle at Statesboro, Georgia on February 12, 1865
Battle at Fayetteville, North Carolina on March 11, 1865
Battle at Fayetteville, North Carolina on March 12, 1865
Battle at Fayetteville, North Carolina on March 13, 1865
Battle at Waynesboro, North Carolina on March 16, 1865
He Mustered out at Little Rock Arkansas, August 14, 1865. (Historical Data Systems, comp,. American Civil War Soldiers [database on-line], Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1999.)
[23] Winans, David C. Age 19. Residence Springville, nativity Ohio. Enlisted August 7, 1862. Mustered September 3, 1862. Promoted Sixth Corporal June 20, 1864. Mustered out July 17, 1865, Savannah, Ga.
http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logn/mil508.htm
[24] One division = 4000, therefore 12,000 men of the 13th corp left for Iberia. Http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ia/county/linn/civil war/24th/24 history p2.htm
[25] Meanwhile, as Sherman’s forces moved toward Fayetteville, major troop movements were also occurring to the north and east. Gen. Jacob D. Cox had established an important base of supplies at New Bern, and his troops had made considerable progress in repairing the severed railroad connection between that port and Goldsboro. Related repair efforts also were under way from Goldsboro southward to Wilmington.
[26] Joseph Mullen Jr. Diary, Eleanor S. Brockenbrough Library, Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia[copy courtesy Mark Bradley, Raleigh]
Sherman’s March through North Carolina, by Angley, Cross, and Hill, page 12.
[27] http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=
[28] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/i/d/Jan-C-Didawick-Berkeley-Springs/PDFGENE3.pdf
[29] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe
[30] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[31] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1760.
[32] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/hitler-reoccupies-the-rhineland
[33] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[34] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1770.
[35] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[36] Hitler’s Managers, Ferdinand Porsche, The Engineer. 10/15/2005
[37] Hitler’s Managers, Ferdinand Porsche, The Engineer. 10/15/2005
[38] On This Day in America by John Wagman.++++++
[39] http://www.geni.com/people/Abner-Vance/4994209725870054396
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