Wednesday, April 30, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, April 30, 2014

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Jeffery Lee 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.
Birthdays on April 30…
Ellen Bacon
Sarah Close
George W.P. Custis
Lois P. Dunlap Kruse
Florence Godlove
Alma Machacek Balderston
Margaret McKinnon Mills
Mary C. Taylor
April 30, 313: Licinius defeated Maximinus at the Battle of Tzirallum, thus making him the Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire. The Emperor of the Western Roman Empire was his brother-in-law, Constantine. The two in laws would clash repeatedly until Constantine defeated Licinius and eventually killed him despite the pleas of his sister to spare her husband’s life. We know that Constantine made Christianity the state religion of the Roman Empire with all that that would mean for the Jews of Europe. Would it have been any different if Licinius had triumphed? Who knows? Lucinius did subscribe to the policy of tolerance towards Christians but those who were writing history in the fourth and fifth century tended to create an idyll-ic vision of Constantine which meant painting a less than flattering portrait of Licinius. Gibbon follows the same path in his history of the Roman Empire.
AD 314 – 335 Sylvester I is pope - promotes (Sunday) first day observance

"Pope Sylvester instructed the clergy to keep the feriae. And, indeed, from an old custom he called the first day [of the week] the "Lord's [day]," on which the light was made in the beginning and also the resurrection of Christ is celebrated."[380]

But he [Sylvester] ordered [them] to call the Sabbath by the ancient term of the law, [to call] the first feria the "Lord's day," because on it the Lord rose [from the dead], Moreover, the same decreed that the rest of the Sabbath should be transferred rather to the Lord's day [Sunday], on order that on that day we should rest from worldly works for the praise of God.[15]
April 30, 711: Moorish troops led by Tariq ibn-Ziyad land at Gibraltar to begin their invasion of the Iberian Peninsula (Al-Andalus). For the Jews living under the Visigoth rulers of Spain, this is good news. The victory of the Moors will mark the start of what is called the Golden Age. Ironically, the Golden Age will begin to tarnish not because of Christians, but because of an invasion by another, more religiously conservative group of Moslems.
April 30, 1527: – Wolsey signs an alliance between England and France, the Treaty of Westminster.
April 30, 1536: – Mark Smeaton is arrested for committing adultery with Anne Boleyn.

April 30, 1555: – False reports of Mary giving birth to a son.

April 30, 1556: A community of Marranos at Ancona (Italy) was devastated when Pope Paul IV retracted letters of protection issued by previous Popes' for protection of the Jews, and ordered immediate proceedings to be taken by the Holy Office. The result of the findings came in the spring and early summer, when 24 men and 1 woman were burned alive in successive proceedings. Their deaths are memorialized in that city every Tisha B'av.

April 30, 1562: Port Royal, off the coast of South Carolina, becomes the first French colony in America.
April 30, 1563 The Jews were expelled from France by order of Charles VI.
On April 30, 1571, the controller of Edinburgh Castle, Kirkcaldy, ordered all enemies of the Queen to leave the city. But for Knox, his former friend and fellow galley-slave, he made an exception. If Knox did not leave, he could stay in Edinburgh, but only if he remained captive in the castle. Knox chose to leave.
April 30th, 1598 - 1st theater performance in America (Spanish comedy-Rio Grande)
April 30, 1662: Only two daughters survived: Mary (born April 30, 1662) and Anne (born February 6, 1665).[24] Samuel Pepys wrote that James II was fond of his children and his role as a father, writing that he played with them "like an ordinary private father of a child", a contrast to the distant parenting common to royals at the time.[25] James's wife was devoted to him and influenced many of his decisions.[26] Even so, he kept a variety of mistresses, including Arabella Churchill and Catherine Sedley, and was reputed to be "the most unguarded ogler of his time."[27] With Catherine Sedley, James II had a daughter, Catherine Darnley (so named because James II was a descendant of Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley). Anne Hyde died in 1671.
April 30, 1765: Says a letter from Winchester, Va., dated April 30, 1765 — "The frontier inhabitants of this colony and Maryland are removing fast over the Allegheny Mountains in order to settle and live there."

April 30, 1774: Immediately after the occurrence of the events narrated as above by Clarke came the killing of the Indians at Captina Creek and the murder of the relatives of the Mingo chief Logan at Baker's Bottom, on the Ohio, the date of the last-named event being April 30th. The so-called speech of Logan fastened the odium of killing his people in cold blood on Capt. Michael Cresap, of Red­stone Old Fort. That the charge was false and wholly unjust is now known by all people well informed on the subject. Cresap did, however, engage in the killing of other Indians, being no doubt incited thereto by the deceitful tenor of Dr. Connolly's letters, which were evidently written for the express purpose of inflaming the minds of the frontiersmen by false information, and so bring about a general Indian war.
The chief Logan, with a hunting party of his Indians, and having with them their women and children, had pitched his hunting-camp at the mouth of Yellow Creek, about thirty miles above Wheeling, on the west side of the Ohio, and opposite Baker's Bottom on the Virginia side, where lived Joshua Baker, whose chief occupation was selling liquor to the Indians. From the time when Logan had first pitched his camp at Yellow Creek it had been the determination of some of the whites to attack it and kill the Indian party, but in their first attempt to do this they had been over­ruled in their purpose, chiefly by the influence of Capt. Cresap, as is shown in Clarke's account before quoted. But after Cresap and Clark had departed with their men for Redstone, and while they were making their way from Catfish Camp to the Monongahela, on the day succeeding the night which they spent at William Huston's cabin, the plan to kill the Indians of Logan's party was put in execution (during the absence of the chief) by enticing a part of them across the river to Baker's cabin, where a party of white men lay concealed. There liquor was given them, and then when they or some of them were in a state of partial intoxication the bloody work was done, all the Indians at the house being killed except an infant child. The party who did the perfidious and cold-blooded deed were under the leadership of Daniel Greathouse, a settler on King's Creek near its mouth. Several accounts of the affair have been given, generally agreeing as to the main facts, but disagreeing to some extent as to the minor details. One account has it that in the evening preceding the tragedy a friendly squaw came across the river from Logan's camp and told Baker's wife with many tears that the lives of herself (Mrs. Baker) and her family were in danger, as the Indians were planning to come across and murder them. She wished well to Mrs. Baker, and thus risked her own life to serve her by bringing the information so as to allow the family time to escape. Upon receipt of this warning Greathouse's party was collected in haste at the cabin. No Indians appeared during the night, and on the following morning Greathouse and two or three others crossed to Logan's camp, and in an apparently friendly manner invited the Indians to come across to Baker's and get some rum. A party of them accepted the invitation and came. Most of Greathouse's men lay concealed in the back part of the cabin. Baker was to deal out rum freely to the Indians, and did so. When they became intoxicated the concealed men rushed out and killed them. In Mayer's "Logan and Cresap" the following account is given of the massacre:
"Early in the morning a party of eight Indians, composed of three squaws, a child, and four unarmed men, one of whom was Logan's brother, crossed the river to Baker's cabin, where all but Logan's brother obtained liquor and became excessively drunk. No whites except Baker and two of his companions appeared in the cabin. After some time Logan's relative took down a coat and hat belonging to Baker's brother-in-law, and putting them on, set his arms akimbo, strutted about the apartment, and at length coming up to one of the men addressed him with the most offensive epithets and attempted to strike him. The white man, Sappington, who was thus assailed by lan­guage and gesture for some time kept out of his way, but becoming irritated, seized his gun and shot the Indian as he was rushing to the door, still clad in the coat and hat. The men, who during the whole of this scene had remained hidden, now poured forth, and without parley slaughtered the whole Indian party except the child. Before this tragic event occurred two canoes, one with two and the other with five Indians, all naked, painted, and completely armed for war, were descried stealing from the opposite shore, where Logan's camp was situated. This was considered as confirmation of what the squaw had said the night before, and was afterwards alleged in justification of the murder of the unarmed party which had first arrived.
"No sooner were the unresisting drunkards dead than the infuriated whites rushed to the river-bank, and ranging themselves along the concealing fringe of underwood prepared to receive the canoes. The first that arrived was the one containing two warriors, who were fired upon and killed The other canoe immediately turned and fled; but after this two others containing eighteen warriors, painted and prepared for conflict as the first had been, started to assail the Americans. Advancing more cautiously than the former party, they endeavored to land below Baker's cabin, but being met by the rapid movements of the rangers before they could effect their purpose they were put to flight, with the loss of one man, although they returned the fire of the pioneers.:
Another account of the Baker's Bottom massacre was given more than half a century afterwards by Judge Jolley, who for many years was a resident of Washington County, Ohio, and who at the time of the occurrence was a youth living on the frontier. His account, as given below, was published in the year 1836 in "Silliman's Journal," viz.:
"I was about sixteen years of age, but I very well recollect what I then saw, and the information that I have since obtained was derived from (I believe) good authority. In the spring of the year 1774 a party of Indians encamped on the northwest of the Ohio, near the mouth of the Yellow Creek. A party of whites, called 'Greathouse's party, lay on the opposite side of the river. The Indians came over to the white party, consisting, I think, of five men and one woman with an infant. The whites gave them rum, which three of them drank, and in a short time became very drunk. The other two men and the woman refused to drink. The sober Indians were challenged to shoot at a mark, to which they agreed; and as soon as they emptied their guns the whites shot them down. The woman attempted to escape by flight, but was also shot down; she lived long enough, however, to beg mercy for her babe, telling them that it was akin to themselves. The whites had a man in the cabin prepared with a tomahawk for the purpose of killing the three drunken Indians, which was immediately done. The party of men then moved off for the interior settlements, and came to Catfish Camp (Washington) on the evening of the next day, where they tarried until the day following. I very well remember my mother feeding and dressing the babe, chirruping to the little innocent, and its smiling. However, they took it away, and talked of sending it to its supposed father, Col. John Gibson, of Carlisle, Pa. who had been for some years a trader among the Indians.
"The remainder of the (Indian) party at the mouth of Yellow Creek, finding that their friends on the opposite side of the river were massacred, attempted to escape by descending the Ohio, and in order to prevent being discovered by the whites passed on the west side of Wheeling Island, and landed at Pipe Creek, a small stream that empties into the Ohio a few miles below Grave Creek, where they were overtaken by Cresap with a party of men from Wheeling. They took one Indian scalp, and had one white man (Big Tarrener) badly wounded. They, I believe, carried him in a litter from Wheeling to Redstone. I saw the party on their return from their victorious campaign. It was well known that Michael Cresap had no hand in the massacre at Yellow Creek."
The concluding sentence in Judge Jolley's statement was written in refutation of the calumny which was circulated and for many years believed by the majority of the people of the country, that the murder of Logan's men and relatives was done by Capt. Michael Cresap or by his orders. Such an inference might be drawn from the first part of the statement of William, already given, viz., where he says, "I had previously heard the report of Mr. Cresap having killed some Indians, said to be the relations of Logan, an Indian chief." But his memory was evidently at fault. He could not have previously hears of the killing at Yellow Creek, as it did not occur until after the time to which he refers in the certificate. And in the latter part of the same document he disproves his previous statement by saying, "I further certify that some of the party who afterwards killed some women and other Indians at Baker's Bottom also lay at my cabin on their march to the interior." Another statement that seems to be conclusive proof of Capt. Cresap's innocence of any participation in the atrocity at Baker's Bottom is found in an affidavit of the man who shot Logan's brother on that occasion, viz.: "I, John Sappington, declare myself to be intimately acquainted with all the circumstances respecting the destruction of Logan's family, and do give the following narrative, a true statement of that affair: Logan's family (if it was his family) was not killed by Cresap, nor with his knowledge, nor by his consent, but by the Greathouses and their associates. They were killed thirty miles above Wheeling, near the mouth of Yellow Creek. Logan's camp was on one side of the river Ohio, and the house where the murder was committed was opposite to it on the other side. They had encamped there only four or five days, and during that time had lived peaceably with the whites on the opposite side until the very day the affair happened."
The killing of the Indians at Baker's was on the 30th of April, as before mentioned. Several accounts of the affair, however, have mentioned different dates. Sappington stated many years afterwards that, according to his memory, it happened on the 24th of May; Benjamin Tomlinson placed it on the 3d or 4th of May; but Col. Ebenezer Zane gave the date as the late day of April, which is undoubtedly correct. It seems to be verified by a letter addressed to Col. George Washington by his agent, Valentine Crawford, who then lived on Jacob's Creek, near the Youghiogheny River, in Westmoreland County. In that letter (dated Jacob's Creek, May 6, 1774) he says, _
"I am sorry to inform you the Indians have stopped all the gentlemen from going down the river. In the first place they killed one Murphy, a trader, and wounded another, then robbed their canoes. This alarmed the gentlemen very much, and Maj. Cresap took a party of men and waylaid some Indians in their canoes that were going down the river and shot two of them and scalped them. He also raised a party, took canoes and followed some Indians from Wheeling down to the Little Kanawha, when, coming up with them, he killed three and wounded several. The Indians wounded three of his men, only one of whom is dead; he was shot through, while the other two were but slightly wounded. On Saturday last, about twelve o'clock, one Greathouse and about twenty men fell on a party of Indians at the mouth of Yellow Creek and killed ten of them. They brought away one child a prisoner, which is now at my brother, William Crawford's"
The exact date of this exploit of Greathouse and party, usually known as the “Yellow creek massacre,” so long a matter of uncertainty, is fixed by the above, beyond a peradventure—saturday April 30, 1774. The Mingo, Logan’s brother, known as John Petty, his mother and sister—the latter the mother of the child, then only two months old—were all slain. The child-prisoner being Logan’s niece, it follows that his relatives were not all killed.
History, always written by the victors, is not unbiased. While many accounts of the Lord Dunmore's War downplay it, there were plenty of hostilities of the Whites against the Indians. What undisputedly led to the War was the "Yellow Creek Massacre" on April 30, 1774. A group of Virginia frontiersmen murdered a dozen Mingoes, many relatives of the previously-friendly John James Logan (~1725-1780) (Iroquois/Mingo), including women and children. Some accounts claim there were nearby Indian warriors painted for battle; some don't. Although influential tribal chiefs in the region, such as Cornstalk (Shawnee), White Eyes (Lenape), and Guyasuta (Seneca/Mingo), attempted to negotiate a peaceful resolution lest the incident develop into a larger war, several parties of mixed Mingo and Shawnee warriors soon struck the frontier, killing and taking captives. By most accounts Logan personally "took the scalps of more than 30 colonists."
About 1772, he removed to the Ohio, and it was at his town on Yellow Creek that the affray occurred on April 30, 1774, that has been cited as the occasion for Dunmore’s War. Having glutted his vengeance by four prolonged raids, during the summer after the negotiations with Lord Dunmore for peace had begun. The date of his arrival, as here given by Christian, is proof that he was not in the battle at Point Pleasant. Noticing his absence, Lord Dunmore sent his interpreter, John Gibson, to bring him to the conference. Logan refused to go, and upon that occasion delivered the now famous speech, so generally quoted as an example of Indian eloquence, to which Jefferson paid high tribute in his “Notes on Virginia”. There grew up an animated controversy concerning the genuineness of this speech, and its attribution of the murder to Cresap. It is now admitted that the substance of the speech, as it has come down to us, was actually delivered by Logan, but that he was mistaken in attributing the murder of his family to Cresap. See Jacob, Life of Cresap; Mayer, Logan and Cresap (especially documents in appendix to edition of 1867); Roosevelt, Winning of the West, I, pp. 236-239, 347-352. The rest of Logan’s life is sunk in obscurity. He removed to Pluggy’s Town, on the Scioto, then to the watersof Mad River, in Logan County, and later to the neighborhood of Detroit. He saved Kenton from the stake in 1778, and the next year was recognized in a savage raiding party in southwest Virginia. See Draper MSS., 5QQ11. He was killed by one of his own relatives on his way home from Detroit in 1780. His epitaph may be given in his own statement, that “he knew he had two souls, the one good and the other bad; when the good soul had the ascendant, he was kind and humane, and when the bad soul ruled, he was perfectly savage, and delighted in nothing but blood and carnage.” See Amer. Pioneer, I, p. 350. Dunmore’s War, Thwaites and Kellogg pp. 305-306

April 30, 1789: Brother Washington became Worshipful Master on December 20, 1788, and was inaugurated President of the United States on April 30, 1789, thus becoming the first, and so far the only, Brother to be simultaneously President and Master of his Lodge.
April 30, 1802
Thomas Meason becomes county commissioner for Fayette County, Pennsylvania
April 30, 1802: Congress passes the Enabling Act, authorizing territories organized under the Northwest Ordinance to prepare for statehood.
Gabriel Smith10 [John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1764 / d. 1841) married Sarah Ann Downs (b. 1767 / d. 1833).

More about Gabriel Smith
* Gabriel is buried in the Old Poplar Springs Cemetery (Now Horsley), Haralson Co. GA.
* It is believed that Gabriel was also a part of the Militia in 1780 during the Revolutionary War.
* A photo copy, Georgia Dept of Archives and History, August 6, 1968 from the old family history. "Copy Photo" by Savory Albritton . Taken from a copy by Girlilee Thomason for heirs of Gabriel Smith, Sr. from Mrs. Lizzie Walker and Rev. War date from Montgomery Co., NC. Gabriel Sr. (1764-1842) enlisted in North Carolina Militia in 1780 from Montgomery Co., NC--Moved to Wilkes Co., Ga 1785 census page 44----Moved to Franklin County, Ga. 1802 (in the 1820 census of Habersham County, Ga.)--Moved to Carroll County, Ga in 1835. Carroll County Will Book B- page 39, will Apr 9, 1846-48 James C. Smith and Sarah Bunt

* !Bible record printed in Carroll Co. (GA) Genealogical Quarterly vol. II Fall & Winter 1981 No. 3 By Carroll Co. Genealogical Society pg 93 & 94. Births taken from this bible record where possible. "Gone To Georgia" Copyright 1965 by National Genealogical Society, special publication No. 30. pg 79 In Franklin Co., #2 Gabriel Smith enlisted in Montgomery Co., NC 1780; moved to Wilkes Co., Ga 1784 where he was taxed 1785 and then to Franklin Co., Ga 1802. !REV: "Roster of Rev. Soldiers in Ga." by McCall (Gen. R973.34) pg 274. Gabriel Smith applied for Pension in Franklin Co., Ga. CENSUS 1830 Franklin Co., Ga vol II Roll 209 dwelling 251/household 20 - 1male 60-70, 1 female 50-60. Census 1840 Carroll Co., GA 754th Div. pg 056. Census 1850 Carroll Co., GA 11th Div. pg 052. Census 1860 Carroll Co., GA Kansas Dist., P.O. Carrollton.
A. Children of Gabriel Smith and Sarah Downs:
. i. Ezekiel Smith (b. July 18, 1786 in Wilkes Co. GA)
+ . ii. Gideon Smith (b. October 8, 1787 in Wilkes Co. GA)
. iii. William Smith (b. February 15, 1789 in Wilkes Co. GA)
+ . iv. Richard Smith (b. June 13, 1790 in Elbert Co. GA)
+ . v. Mary Smith (b. October 1793 in Anson Co. NC / d. abt. 1833 in GA)
+ . vi. Morning Smith (b. October 1793)
+ . vii. Grace Louisa Francis Smith (b. January 1795 in Elbert Co. GA)
. viii. James Claiborne Smith (b. May 14, 1796 in Elbert Co. GA)
+ . ix. Gabriel D. Smith (b. June 18, 1798 in Elbert Co. GA / d. October 3, 1880 in GA)
. x. Mark Smith (b. April 6, 1800)
+ . xi. Sarah Smith (b. September 2, 1802)
. xii. Hugh Smith (b. January 5, 1805 in Franklin Co. GA)

April 30, 1803: The United States of America purchases from Napoleon I of France the Louisiana Territory for the ultimate amount of $23,213,568. Thomas Jefferson's administration concludes the Louisiana Purchase; Jefferson believed that he had secured the United States space for the relocation of Indian tribes. The United States acquires from France 828,000 square miles of land between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains, in the Louisiana Purchase.
1803 - Summer - Litigation at New Madrid: Negro men, Tom and Joe, property of Benjamin Harrison, Sr., were taken in execution under a mortgage from Harrison to Richard Jones Waters.
1804 - April 30 - Litigation at New Madrid: Richard Jones Waters vs. William Hinkson and Benjamin Harrison, Jr. Petition to take negro slave Joe, formerly property of Benjamin Harrison, Sr., into protective custody. Judgment rendered in favor of Waters, May 2, 1804.
* * *
Ste. Genevieve District, Territory of Louisiana
Gen. Harrison moved from New Madrid District to Ste. Genevieve District and had a grant on which is now located the town of Altenberg in southeast Perry County.
April 30, 1831: SAMUEL SALTER, brother of James, also served in the American Revolution. He enlisted in May 1776 with the 12th Virginia Regiment and served until May 1, 1777. He was honorably discharged in Winchester,Va. Samuel applied for a pension, October 29, 1822 in Fayette Co., Pa., when he was 69 and his wife Bridget was 64. He received $8.00 a month, to begin March 1, 1823. - Bridget died April 30, 1831. On January 19, 1833, he asked that his pension be sent to Ohio where he moved to be with his son, William. Samuel received $96 per year; the total received was $1,057.03. In his pension file, he says he served for a year in the 12th Virginia Line, as a private in the company commanded by Capt. Ebenezer Zane, in the regiment commanded by Col. Joseph Wood. - Samuel was born in Baltimore, Md. and lived in Fayette Co., Pa. for most of his life. His grandson, Eli W. Salter lived and died in Marshall County, W.Va.
April 30, 1852: John Wesley Allen b: April 30, 1842.

April 30, 1863: In late April Robert E. Lee moved toward Cancellorsville, just west of Fredericksburg; between April 30th and May 6th Lee stopped Joe Hooker in the series of conflicts known collectively as the Battle of Chancellorsville.

April 30, 1863: During the Civil War, President Lincoln issued a proclamation proclaiming Thursday, April 30, 1863 as a National Day of Fasting.

April 30, 1864: Assigned to duty as brigadier general, April 8, 1864, by General E. Kirby Smith. Mortally wounded at the Battle of Jenkins' Ferry, April 30, 1864; died, May 2, 1864. Not duly appointed by Confederate President Jefferson Davis or confirmed by the Confederate States Senate.



Sat. April 30 , 1864
In camp hot day went over town saw
Troops daming red river killed a beef
In cane field all quiet on red river

April 30, 1864: Battle of Jenkins Ferry, AR.




________________________________________
April 30, 1866: Carter Harrison III collection…
23 1208 Ogden, William B. (A.L.S.), April 30, 1866

April 30, 1881
Maurice Goodlove


Birth: unknown
Death: April 30, 1881

Aged 30 years

Burial:
San Joaquin Cemetery
Sacramento
Sacramento County
California, USA

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May 14, 1858: April 30, 1887:
Marguerite Stearns Harrison
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Birth: May 14, 1858
Death: Apr. 30, 1887


Family links:
Spouse:
Carter Henry Harrison (1860 - 1953)


Burial:
Graceland Cemetery
Chicago
Cook County
Illinois, USA

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April 30, 1903
(Pleasant Valley) Mrs. Myrtle Goodlove is on the sick list again.

April 30, 1903
(Jordan’s Grove) Ruth Gray, of Anamosa is visitying with her grand parents Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Goodlove.

April 30, 1903
(Pleasant Valley) Willis Goodlove ran a rusty nail in his foot and is laid up as a result. Willis says troubles never come singly.

April 30, 1914
(South Side News) Mr. and Mrs. Goodlove of Central City were visiting their daughter Mrs. Jessie Bowdish, Monday.

April 30-May 1, 1920: The first institute was to be held in the Buck Creek Church on April 30-May 1. The success of the Buck Creek institute was to be measured by more than just the number of people attending. It was also hoped that the petitions then being reaedied calling for the establishment of the Consolidated Independent District of Buck Creek would be signed in large numbers by those attending the special services on
Sunday, thereby obviating any necessity for doodr to doore canvassing at a time when farmers were beginning their spring field work. Therefore, it was a serious setback when the institute had to be canceled at the last minute because inclement weather rendered local roads impassable. This opportunity by bring in the experst to help generate enthusiasm had been lost. It was unlikely that a new one could or should be scheduled until later in the spring when crops were in the ground. Furthermore, the poor road conditions that had forced the cancellation of the institute also made it difficult to implement a door to door campaign. When the roads finally did improve, farmers would need to be completing their spring plowing. The campaign to form a consolidated school district had to be delayed again.


April 30, 1921: Objectors filed their appeal on April 30, well within the ten day period specified by the law. Ottilie set May 10 as the date for the county board to meet.. Howver, in apparent ignorance of the law, he failed to notify each of the objectors of the time and place for the hearing of the appeal by registered letter.

April 30, 1940: The Lodz ghetto is sealed.


April 30, 1942
USS Enterprise sailed toward Coral Sea, but would arrive too late to participate in the upcoming battle.

April 30, 1942: The Jews of Pinsk are ordered to establish a ghetto within one day. About 20,000 Jews move into it.

April 30, 1942: Twelve hundred Jews are killed in Diatlovo during and Aktion. The Jews offer armed resitance but to no avail.




• April 30, 1945: “…Above all, I call upon the leaders of the nation and all followers to implacably oppose the universal poisoner of all races, the Jews.”

Adolf Hitler, hours before he committed suicide.

April 30, 1945
As the Soviet Army advances through the streets of Berlin, Hitler marries his long time mistress, Eva Braun. He waits until the Soviets are only blocks away from his bunker and then shoots himself in the head.


April 30, 1961 Lee Harvey Oswald marries nineteen year old Marina Prusakova.
Also sometime during the last part of April, Dr. Alexis H. Davidson begins a tour of
duty as the U.S. Embassy physician in Moscow. In connection with this assignment, as Davidson
later testifies, he receives some “superficial intelligence training.” This training, he says, mainly
involves lectures on Soviet life and instructions on remembering and reporting Soviet names and
military activities. In fact, for at least a year during his Moscow tour of duty, Davidson will serve
as part of the signal system for a CIA agent who is a highly placed GRU officer, Colonel Oleg
Penkovsky. When the Soviets finally break the Penkovsky case in 1963, Davidson will be
publicly declared persona non grata. The name of Dr. Davidson's mother and her Atlanta address
will appear in Oswald’s address book. (When LHO and Marina eventually do return to the USA,
their plane will make a stop in Atlanta .)

April 30, 1963 James R. Hoffa donates $336,000 today to the Boy Scouts of America for
construction of a new Scout center in D.C. Hoffa is certainly aware of J. Edgar Hoover’s keen
interest in the Boy Scouts of America.

April 30, 1987: Ethel Estelle WINCH was born on July 26, 1903 in Buck Creek, Jones County, Iowa, USA. She died on April 30, 1987 at the age of 83 in Monticello, Jones County, Iowa, USA. She was buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Monticello, Jones County, Iowa, USA. Ethel had Social Security Number 484-24-9168 (Iowa, bef. 1951). Last residence: Monticello, Jones County, Iowa.

April 30, 1993: More about Gladys Parker
Gladys married Ardis Ulan Mashburn, Sr. (b. October 4, 1919 / d. April 30, 1993 in GA).

A report in Nature April 30, 1998, traced mammals back to around 100 million years using a "molecular clock."

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, April 29, 2014

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Jeffery Lee 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.



Patricia A. Benson Sherman (wife of the 2nd cousin 1x removed)

Celia D. Brittain (3rd cousin 6x removed)

Lucretia Davies Douglas (2nd cousin 5x removed)

Patricia LeClere Haynes (2nd cousin 2x removed)

Louisa A. Mckinnon Franks (1st cousin 4x removed)

Katherine A. Wilkinson Mundy (1st cousin 4x removed)

April 29, 1128: Henry I (26th great grandfather) made his court, including Stephen of Blois, (husband of the 26th great grandaunt) swear an oath of allegiance to Matilda.[21] John of Worcester described a second oath, taken one year after the first, at Henry's Easter court on April 29, 1128.[22]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Geoffrey_of_Anjou_Monument.jpg/170px-Geoffrey_of_Anjou_Monument.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf7/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Geoffrey of Anjou, (25th great grandfather) Matilda's second husband

The question of marriage was entirely down to Matilda's father. King Louis VI of France (father in law of the 24th great grandmother) was discontented about Normandy and England united and as such, promoted the claim of William Clito in order to attempt to cause a rift in the court.[23] Furthermore, Fulk, Count of Anjou, was likely to support Clito's claim due to the longstanding hostility between Normandy and Anjou.[23] The animosity between Normandy and Anjou had temporarily been repaired with the marriage of William Adelin to Fulk's daughter Matilda.[23] However, William's death meant the match was brief. Fulk then married his younger daughter Sibylla to William Clito, though Henry managed to sever the union by having Pope Calixtus II annul the marriage on the grounds of consanguinity.[21][23] However, Louis VI then offered his wife's half-sister Joan to Clito for marriage. Her dowry was the Vexin, an area of land bordering Normandy.[23] Furthermore, the murder of Charles I, Count of Flanders, in 1127 gave Louis the opportunity to install William as the new Count of Flanders, thus setting him up to be a strong rival of Matilda.[24]

Henry was faced with a predicament of Clito's rising power and he recognised that his daughter must marry in a union of diplomacy to counter this. He arranged for her to marry Geoffrey of Anjou, Fulk's son. Matilda was outraged, and viewed Geoffrey as entirely beneath her, though she could not do anything to prevent the marriage. Matilda was sent to Normandy early in 1127, under the care of Robert of Gloucester, her half-brother.[25] The wedding could not take place straight away, as Geoffrey was considered too young, having not yet turned 14. Nonetheless, he was considered handsome and intelligent, though neither of these traits served to console Matilda.[1]

April 29, 1483: Edward IV's will, (5th cousin 17x removed) which has not survived, nominated his trusted brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester,(5th cousin 17x removed) as Protector during the minority of his son. Both the new king and his party from the west, and Richard from the north, set out for London, converging in Stony Stratford, Buckinghamshire.[3] On the night of April 29, Richard met and dined with Earl Rivers and Edward's half-brother, Richard Grey, (half uncle of the 3rd cousin 15x removed) the but the following morning Rivers and Grey, along with the king's chamberlain, Thomas Vaughan, were arrested and sent north.[4] They were all subsequently executed. Mancini reports that Edward protested, but the remainder of his entourage was dismissed and Richard escorted him to London, where the new king took up residence in the Tower of London.[2]

April 29, 1572: Walsingham and Thomas Smith, ambassadors from Elizabeth, sign at Blois the treaty of alliance between France and England. [3]



April 29, 1586: Cherelles leaves London for France.*



From the moment that Morgan and Charles Paget, permitting themselves to be deceived by Giiford, had accorded him a blind confidence, their correspondence with Mary was carried on with great activity .f[4] It was to them that the agents maintained by the queen, not only in France, but in Holland and other countries, addressed nearly all their despatches, and they undertook either to convey them to her, or apprise her of their contents.



At this time, the Queen of Scots had accredited Lord Claude Hamilton and Courcelles, in Scotland ; Liggons, in Flanders ; Lord Paget and Sir Francis Englefield, in Spain ; and Dr. Lewis, secretary of the congregation, at Rome. All that they wrote, and all the replies which they received, passing through the hands of Giiford, were immediately communicated to Walsingham. [5]



April 29, 1599: Records survive of Cromwell's baptism on April 29, 1599 at St John's Church,[13] and his attendance at Huntingdon Grammar School. He went on to study at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, which was then a recently founded college with a strong Puritan ethos.[6]

April 29, 1684: Mary Smith , b. April 29, 1684[i][ix]; d. June 18, 1684[ii][x][7]

April 29, 1718:Will (Andrew Harrison 8th great grandfather) April 29, 1718, St.Mary's Parish, Essex Co. VA.

My beloved wife Eleanor my executrix.

My son Andrew and my son in law Gabriel Long as trustees. Children; William, Andrew and Elizabeth already settled on lands on which they now live;

My dau Margaret Long and three youngest sons viz. Richard and Gabril and William.

Wit: Jno. Ellitts, Wiliam Davison, Mary Davison, November 18, 1718.

April 29, 1776: On this day in 1776, shortly after the American victory at Boston, Massachusetts, General George Washington (grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) orders Brigadier General Nathanael Greene to take command of Long Island and set up defensive positions against a possible British attack on New York City.

Greene's troops were arranged to defend themselves against a frontal attack in Brooklyn Heights across from Manhattan. On August 26, 1776, the British took the vast majority of Long Island with ease, as the island's population was heavily Loyalist. On August 27, the troops at Brooklyn Heights disintegrated under an unexpected attack from their left flank. In a British effort to earn goodwill for a negotiated peace, they allowed American survivors to flee to Manhattan. Otherwise, the War for Independence might easily have been quashed less than three months after it began.

Born in Rhode Island in August 1742, Greene was elected to the Rhode Island legislature at the age of 28 in 1770. Overcoming his Quaker scruples against violence and warfare, Greene joined a local militia at the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1774 and was promoted to the rank of brigadier general of the Continental Army by Congress in 1775.

At the siege of Boston in March 1776, Greene was assigned to General Washington's brigade and a lifelong friendship between the two men began. Shortly after several American losses in and around New York in the summer and fall of 1776, Greene was promoted to major general of the Continental Army under Washington.

After leading troops into several successful battles, including the Battle of Trenton in December 1776 and the Battle of Germantown in October 1777, Greene succeeded Thomas Mifflin as quartermaster general in March 1778. Greene was named commander in chief of the Southern Army in October 1778; he commanded troops on the battlefield throughout the rest of the revolution. After twice turning down offers to become secretary of war, Greene retired from the military in 1785. Less than one year later, in June 1786, Greene died at his Georgia home.[8]

April 29, 1778; A pair of stocks, whipping post, pillory in the court house yard and a compleat bar inside the court house ordered to be built.

s. Wm. Goe[9]

April 29, 1778: Court met according to adjournment April 29th, 1778.

Present William Goe, Isaac Cox, Andrew Swearengen &
Joshua Wright Gentlemen Present.

George McCarmick 2 is appointed Sheriff Protempore to serve
one month he complying with the Law. Whereupon the said
George with Samuel Beeler and Dorsey Pentecost his Securities
come into Court entered into Bond and oath accordingly.

Ordered that Benjaman Collins have Leave to keep a publick
Ordinary at his Dwiling House he complying with the Law.

1 Paging of original followed, though erroneous.

2 This name erased in the original. [10]




Whereupon the said Benjaman came into Court entered in Bond
accordingly.

Appraisement of the Estate of Job. Robins returned by the
Appraisers and ordered to be recorded.

Benjamin Custard and John Wall Enter Special Bail for
Michael Humble and John Johnston at the suit of Mary Burriss.

Upon the motion of John Wall ordered that his Mark a Crop
in the right Ear and a hole in the Left be recorded.

Upon the motion of George McCarmick his mark a Crop in
the right Ear and half Crop in the Left ordered to be recorded.

Upon the Motion of Benjaman Custard his mark a Cropt and
slit in the right Ear and a Slit in the Left Ordered to be re-
corded.

The Ear mark of Thomas Cherry a crop in the right Ear
ordered to be recorded.
(9) Samuel Newell, Gentleman Present.

Samuel Beeler being bound in recognizance and charged
with Hogstealing which being called personally appeared and
pleads not guilty. Ordered to be continued at Defendant's
Request.

Benjaman Jones vs. Patrick McDonald. Plu. Cap.

Paulser Shilling vs. Spencer Collins. Tresp. Plu. Cap.

Ordered that a Dedimus Issue to Take the Examination Anne
Taylor and Margaret Conner, a witness In behalf of Joseph
Cox against John Williams, Theodoras Davis, and Mary Hazle.

Dorsey Pentecost vs Christopher McDonald In. Cas. Contd.

Zachariah Connell (brother in law of the half 5th grandaunt) vs Abraham Vaughan In Debt. Plu. Cap.

David Wilson vs Henry Bowling In Debt. Plu. Cap.

John Livy vs Samuel Beeler I. Tresp. P. Cap.

John Gallehar vs Christian Summet In Slan. P. Cap.

Hugh Sterling came into Court and Took the Oath of a
Deputy Sheriff.

Joseph Lindsey against George Long In Debt Plu Cap.

Richard Swissichs agt. Jacob Jones In Case. Plu. Cap.

Paul Froman against Robert McCrowry In Debt Plu Cap.

Francis Morrison agt. Daniel Swigert In Debt Plu. Cap.

George Schley against John Rammage In Case Plu. Cap.

Susannah Schley against Robert McKendley In Case Plu.
Cap. [11]




Thomas Freeman agt. John Jones and Samuel Lyneet In
Case Plu Cap.

Jacob Bouseman agt. James Bradley In Case Plu. Cap.

Mary Burriss agt Michael Humble & John Johnston In Case
Sp. B.

Jacob Johnston against Godfrey Waggonier In Case Plu. Cap.

Jacob Shillings against Henry Newkirk In Case Plu. Cap.

The Same against the same In Debt. Plu Cap.

William Dunnanghgain against James Gray In Debt Sp. Bail.

Paul Froman against John Dean In Case Plu. Cap.

Thomas Cook against Richard Dickerson In Case. Plu Cap.

John Pearce Sen. against Aron Carter In Case Al. Cap.

Thomas Wells against Paulcer Shillings In Case A Cap.
(10) James Murphy

against In Case

Jacob Jones Then came the parties and then also came

a Jury To wit. James Wright, John Wall, Benjaman Custard,
Benjaman Collings, Robert Craighead, David McKee, Enoch
Springer, Michael Humble, Matthew Rogers, Joseph Cox,
Patrick Jourden & John Johnston, who find for the plaintiff L
16. 15 6. & Costs.

David McClure

against In Debt.

Patrick McElroy, Assine. Upon the motion of the Plain-
tiff Judgmt was Confesed by the Difind in a letter to the clerk.
It is Considered by the Court That the plantiff recover against
the Defendant upon Bond Eighty pounds with Interest from
the Sixth day of April 1777, untill paid and his Costs.

John Brown against John Crow. In Asst. Dismd. at Plan-
tiffs Request.

John Pearce Senr. against John Reredon. Slep. Bail.

Joseph Pearce against Arnold Evins Al Cap.

Andrew Swearingen

against In Case

Robert Hamelton Ordered to be Dismissed at Plantiff 's
request, Defendant paying Costs.

Andrew Steel against Joeseph Ralston. In Case Al Cap.

William Braden against James Vannatree In Case Al Cap. [12]





Obidiah Stout against Thomas Thompson and wife In Slan.
Al Cap.

Richard McMahan against James Bruce In Case Agreed.

William Thompson against John Fife Sen. In Asst. Plu Cap.

Cloe Riggs against Ebenezer Corn In Case Al Cap.

Moses Thompson agt William Carpenter In Debt. Al Cap.

Dorsey Pentecost against Jacob Long In Debt Al Cap.

William Brashers against Robert Hamelton In Case Al Cap.
(n) John Nelson against Jacob Shilling In Case C. O.

John White against Ezekil Johnston In Case Al Cap.

William Bruce against Archibald Frome In Case. C. O.

John Springer against Henry Kearsey In Asst. Al Cap.

Nicholas Dawson against Francis Kirkpatrick In SI. Al Cap.

William Thompson agt. John Fife Sen. In Tresp. Al Cap.

John Campbell agt William Patterson. In Trespass C. O.

Jacob Shillings vs John Wilson In Trespass C. O.

William How vs. William Genoway, Ebenezer Corn &
George Corn Jun. In Trespass Al Cap.

Paul Froman vs James Boyers In Tresp. Al. Cap.

Michael Myors vs Philip Hooper In Trespass. Al Cap.

John Mitchel vs. Philip Hooper. In Case. Al Cap.

Mordeca Richards vs Joseph Ross In Slan. Al Cap.

John Springer vs. James Dunnaughan In Trespass. Al Cap.

John Crow vs John Brown In Sir. agreed.

Joseph Baker vs John Springer In Debt Al Cap.

Daniel Byers vs James Patterson In Case C. O.

Benjaman Fullum vs William Johnston, John McCornish.
In Asst. Al Cap.

Benjaman Fullum vs William Johnston & John McCornish.
In Case. Al Cap.

David Andrew vs W™ Johnston In Tresp. Al Cap.

James Johnston agt. Godfrey Waggoner In Case Al Cap.

Jacob Shilling vs Samuel Fortner In Tresp. Al Cap.

Mary Burriss vs David Williams In Case. Al Cap.

Upon the Motion of Andrew Sweargen ordered that his Ear
Mar a Crop in the Left Ear and a hole in the Right be recorded.

Upon the Motion of Thomas Hamelton ordered that his Ear
mark a Crop slit and a bit in the right Ear be recorded. [13]



.

Upon the motion of Joshua Wright ordered that his Mark a
Swolefork in the Left Ear be Recorded.
{12) Ordered that Isaac Cox Gentleman contract with some
Proper Person or Persons to build a pair of Stocks, whiping
Post and pillory, in the Court house yard, and also a compleat
Bar, and other work in the Inside of the Court House as he
may thing proper for the conveniency of the Court and Bar,
the whole to be compleat by next Court.

George McCarmick Gentleman high Sheriff Protest against
the Strength & sufficiency of the Goal.

Ordered that the Sheriff summon a Grand Jury to attend the
next Court.

Ordered that William Price, Thomas Rogers, and Isaac
Wells be appointed Constables to serve the ensuing year, and
that they be Summoned to attend the next Court to Qualify
into said Office.

Isaac Cox having obtained an Atteachment against the Estate
of Samuel McCored Thomas Apple garnishee being sworn sayeth
that he hath about five acres of winter grain and no more of
the Estate of the sd. Samuel in his hands, and the said Samuel
being called and failing to appear and replevy the said atteached
effects though Solemnly called, the Plantiff produced his acct.
of five pounds, Ten Shillings and four pence & swore to the
Justness thereof. Judgment for the afores d . sum of five pounds
Ten shillings, and four pence, with Costs Ordered that the
Sheriff make Sale of the Atteached Effects.

Ordered that Court be adjourned to Court in Course.

William Goe.

(13) At a Court continued and held for Yohogania County May
the 25th. 1778.

Present George Vallandingham, John McDonald, Samuel
Newell, Benjamin Kirkendall, Gentlemen Justices.

Upon the Motion of William Brur Ordered that his Ear
mark a Crop in the near Ear, and under bit in the off Ear be
recorded.

Bargain and Sale Ezekil Johnston to Joseph Beeler Jun. was
proved by the oath of Joseph Beckett one of the subscribing
witnesses, and ordered to be recorded as Dorsey Pentecos [14]




and Joseph Beeler Sen., at a former Court was Sworn to the
Execution of said Bargain and Sale and Subscribing Witnesses
Thereto.

Administration of the Estate of Conrad Swessicks deceased
is granted to Margaret Swessicks She having Complied with
the Law.

Andrew Pearce and Sarah Pearce took the oath of Executrix
& Ex" of the Estate of James Pearce Deceased, and complied
with the Law.

Ordered that Zadock Wright, W" Brice, Gabriel Cox and
William Frye or any three of them they being first Sworn do
appraise the goods chatties and credits and Slaves if any of the
Estate of Conrad Swessicks deceased and make return to next
Court.

Administration of the Estate of Benjaman Bruer deceased is
granted to Mary Bruer she having complied with the Law.
(14) Ordered that Joseph Beeler Sen, Christopher Hays John
Mellender & John Morecroft or any three of them they being
first sworn do appraise the goods chatties Credits and slaves if
any of the Estate of Benjaman Brewer deceased and make re-
turn to next Court.

Benjamin Frye Gentleman Present.

Administration of the Estate of Jonathan Higgs deceased is
granted to Catharine Higgs she having complied with the Law.
Ordered that Joseph Beeler Sen. Christopher Hays John Mil-
linger and John Morecroft or any three of them they being
first Sworn, do appraise the Estate of Jonathan Higgs deceased
and make return to next Court.

Mesheck Carter enters Special Bail for Daniel Williams at
the suit of Isaac Vance.

Bargain and Sale James Patterson to John Strauthers for
Six Hundred acres of Land acknowledged by the said Patter-
son and Ordered to be recorded.

Hugh Brawday enters Special Bail for Jas. Boyer at the
Suit of Paul Froman.

Elijah Hart Took the oath of Lieutenant of the Militia for
this County in open Coart.

Elijah Hart and Walter Sparks came into Court and took the
oath of Allegience and Fidelity. [15]




Administration of the Estate of Archibald McNeal deceased
is granted to William Filds, he having complied with the Law.
Ordered that Thos. Applegate William Crow, Andrew Pearce
and Walter Wall or any three of them they being first Sworn
do appraise the Estate of Archibald McNeal deceased and
make return to next Court.

(15) Benjamin Jones v Patrick McDonald. Plu Cap.
Zacheriah Connell v Samuel Wells. Contd.

v Providence Maunce. Contd
John Worshington v Michael Morton. Eject, Contd.
Edward Ward v Richard Dunn. Contd.

v Joseph Wells Contd
Walter Briscoe v Edward Todd Contd.
Zachariah Connell v John Lindsey Contd.
Peter Reasoner v Davis Ruth Contd.

John Springer Plantiff

v Upon motion of the parties

Henry Kearsey Defendt. ordered to be refered to John
Hull, Henry Taylor & George Vallandingham.

Valentine Shuster enters Special Bail for John Eliott at the
suit of Philip Hooper.

William Collings enters Special Bail for Michael Myers at
the suit of Philip Hooper.

William Collings enters Special Bail for George Myers at
the suit of Philip Hooppr.

William Collings enters Special Bail for Michael Thomas
and Zebuland Collings at the suit of Philip Hooper.

View of a Road from the House of Edward Cook Crossing
the Monaungohela River at the House of John Ratton's, Thence
to or Near the plantation of John Hop deceased, Thence to
Luther Colvin's on Pigeon Creek, Thence the nearest and best
way to the Road Leading from Parkersons to Zebuland Col-
lings. Ordered to be Confirmed, and that the Tithables within
three miles on each side work on and keep said Road in Repair.

John Decker, John Hull, Samuel Johnston, Jacob Johnston,
Samuel Frye and Henry Newkirk came into Court and Took
the oth of Feledity.

(16) Peter Reasoner is appointed Surveyor of the Road from
Edward Cook's to John Rattons ferry. [16]




Nicholas Christ is appointed Surveyor of the Road from
John Rattons ferry to Pigeon Creek, near the House of Luther
Colvins.

John Decker is appointed Surveyor of the road from Pigeon
Creek near the House of Luther Colvins to the road Leading to
Parkersons to Zebulon Collinings.

Then came a Grand Jury or Inquest of the Body of this
County, vizt. John Decker, John White, Gabriel Cox, Jacob
Bouseman, Henry Newkirk, Jacob Johnston, John Springer,
Nicholas Christ, James Wright, Samuel Johnston, John Hull,
Samuel Frye, David Andrew, Joseph Brown & James Patter-
son, who being Sworn received their Charge and Retired to
their chamber.

Bargain and Sale Jasper Cawther and Catherine his wife to
(17) David Andrew for a Tract of Land on the waters of Millers
Run proved by the oath of Samuel McBride and James Scott
the two Subscribing witnesses & Ordered to be Certified.

Edward Kemp enters Special Bail for Spencer Collings at
the suit of Paulcer Shilling.

Joseph Beeler Jun. came into Court and Took the oath of
Deputy Sheriff of this County.

Bargain and Sale William Wilson to Jeremiah Ellis for One
Hundred and five Acres of Land. Acknowledged by said
Willson and Ordered to be record.

John Riggs enters Special Bail for Nathan Ellis at the suit of
Tacitus Gillord.

Henry Kearsey and James Munn enters Special Bail for
William Johnston at the suits of Benjaman Fullum and David
Andrews.

Henry Kearsey and James Munn enters Special Bail for
Robert Johnston at the suit of Benjaman Fullum.

John Gutteridge produced a Commission from his Excellency
the Governor appointing him Lieutenant of the Militia, which
was read, and Sworn to accordingly.

License is granted to Joseph Nicholas to keep an Ordinary
at his Dweling House in the Town of Pittsburgh the Ensuing
year he having Complied with the Law.

William Christie enters Special Bail for Robert McKindley
at the suit of Susannah Schley. [17]




(17) Upon the motion of Tobias Decker Ordered that his mark a

Crop in the Left ear, and Swolofork in the right be recorded.

License is granted Richard McMahan to keep an Ordinary
at his Dweling House in this County he having Complied with
the Law.

George Christ produced a Commission from his Excellency
the Governor appointing him Ensign of the Militia which was
read as usual, & Sworn to, in Open Court.

Inventory of the Estate of Francis Brown deceased returned
by the appraisers and ordered to be recorded.

Benjamin Vannatree enters Special Bail for James Vannatree
at the Suit of William Braden.

Ordered that Isaac Cox and Benjamin Kirkendall, Gentle-
men Bind Andrew Brooks an Orphan to Friend Cox, accord-
ing to law.

Ordered that the Clerk draw on the Treasury of this Com-
mon Welth for the sum of Sixteen pounds for the support of
Anne Jones the wife of Richd. Jones a poor Soldier in the
Continental Service.

Ordered that Court be adjourned Untill Tomorrow Morning
7 OClock. William Goe.



April 29, 1787: Philip Smythe (b. May 14, 1715 / d. April 29, 1787).[18] Philip Smythe9 [Endymion Smythe8, Phillip Smythe7, Thomas Smythe6, John Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. May 14, 1715 / d. April 29, 1787) married Mary Jephson.

More about Philip Smythe
Philip is the 4th Viscount Strangford

A. Children of Philip Smythe and Mary Jephson:
+ . i. Lionel Smythe (b. 1753 / d. 1801)
. ii. Infant Son
. iii. Mary Smythe
. iv. Ann Smythe[19]

· April 27, 1818: George IV, GCMG: Knight Grand Cross of St Michael and St George, as Regent, assumed informally April 27, 1818 – January 29, 1820.[20]

·


1819

April 27, 1819

Age 29

Birth of John Tyler


April 27, 1821: When the Greek Patriarch Gregory, head of the Greek Orthodox Church had been publicly executed, the Turkish Grand Vizier Benderli Ali Pasha was reportedly to have said to the Jews present, "Here hangs your enemy and ours."[21]

April 27, 1822: Birthdate of U.S. Grant, “savior of the Union” and President of the United States.[22]

April 29, 1861: The Maryland Legislature votes to remain in the Union.[23]



April 29-May 30, 1862:. Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry,Advance on and siege of Corinth, Miss.[24]



April 29-May 2, 1863: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry,Demonstration on Haines and Drumgould’s Bluffs [25]



April 29, 1863: Grand Gulf, Mississippi, April 29, 1863: The attack by the seven ironclads began at 8:00 am and continued until about 1:30 pm. During the fight, the iron clads moved within 100 yards of the Rebel guns and silenced the lower batteries of Fort Wade; the Confederate upper batteries at Fort Cobun remained out of reach and continued to fire. The Union ironclads (one of which,the Tuscumbia, had been put out of action) and the transports drew off. After dark, however, the iron clads engaged the rebel guns again while the steamboats and barges ran the gauntlet. [26]

April 29, 1863: The return of daylight revealed the entire fleet anchored near the
encampment. The divisions of Carr and Osterhaus and Hovey embarked on board the transports and gunboats, landing at Bruinsburg, about 12 miles below, about noon. Here three days' rations of hard bread, sugar, coffee and salt, were issued as quickly as they could be landed from the vessels, and at 4 o'clock P. M. the column was en route for the rear of Grand Gulf. About 9 o'clock the column, having reached the highlands of Mississippi, were halted for supper. An hour later, it was again in motion. The divisions of Carr and Osterhaus were in advance, followed closely by that of Hovey. Not knowing at what point to expect the enemy, the advance moved forward cautiously and slowly. Every soldier has cause to remember that this feeling for the enemy in the dark is by far the most laborious and fatiguing duty that can be imposed on an army. It is a movement that requires constant readiness and cautious dealing, while the drowsy powers are busy in their efforts to weigh down the eyelids during the intervals of its many halts. Occasional shots far in advance will create murmurs among the massed hosts in the rear
like that of a dreamer disturbed by familiar sounds in his slumbers. By daylight the skirmishing in front had become quite brisk, announcing the presence of the enemy in force. Halting at the foot of Thompson's Hill, the troops were rapidly preparing their breakfast. The General, riding along the line, put a sudden stop to these operations by orders to fall in immediately. Cannon were booming on the hill, the divisions of Osterhaus and Carr being already partially engaged. The column moved rapidly up the hill, and were immediately formed in two lines of battle on the right of Magnolia Church, the first brigade, under command of Gen. McGinnis, in advance. Although within rifle range of the enemy's position; the thick foliage and dense undergrowth completely hid his lines. The country was exceedingly broken, there being a continuous succession of knobs and precipitate hillsides, while almost impenetrable canebrakes choked up the deep, narrow ravine. An effort to turn the enemy's right resting on Bayou Pierre had failed,
and by means of posting small bodies of men on the knobs he was enabled to develop a long line to the left. From these knobs then he must be driven. Small parties of skirmishers were now sent out to discover his position and practicable routes leading to it on our right, while our left held the enemy in check, preventing any effort that might be made to assail and turn it. By this means the several knobs were successfully charged, and the enemy's left made to retire. The enemy stubbornly resisted every advance, and would abandon his position only when forced to. To the regiment or brigade nearest the most practicable route would be assigned the duty of charging the enemy from his position. During the day there was considerable strife among field and staff officers as to which regiments or brigades should have the honor of assailing the enemy's positions when more than were required were at hand. An amusing incident of this nature occurred about 8 o'clock A. M. The line in struggling forward through a canebrake had become much confused and broken up, the men of the 28th and 24th Iowa regiments becoming mingled. Lieut. Col. Wilds, presuming Col. Byam to be at the center of the regiment and regulating the line there, mistook the colors of the 28th Iowa for our own and followed them with the four right companies. But it was afterwards ascertained that Col. Byam had left the field, having become sick and faint, and much to his own injury had failed to have the fact reported to Col. Wild, upon whom the command now devolved. Major Wright on the left, with the colors and the six remaining companies, bore to the left in order to pass around the canebrake, thus dividing the regiment. A similar accident happened to the 34th Indiana, of the first brigade. The six companies under Major Wright and five companies of the 34th Indiana arrived first in an open space beyond the canebrakes.
Here General Hovey ordered Col. Cameron of the 34th Indiana to charge a battery which the enemy had planted on the crest of the hill. Col. Cameron remarked that there were but five companies present, but that he would charge it if the General so ordered.
Col. Slack, commanding our brigade, proposed uniting the two parts of regiments. To this the General objected, desiring that our regiment should do it. Col. Slack then eagerly responded: "Then let the 24th Iowa go in. Six companies can do it. The Hawkeyes will do it." But the General refused, and the remaining five companies of the 34th arriving soon after, the regiment was ordered to advance to the charge. About this same time two regiments of Carr's division, the 8th and 18th Indiana, charged the same point from another direction, the three regiments carrying the point, and each claiming the honor of the victory. The battle continued in this way until nearly nightfall, no regiment on either side being exposed to fire at any one time very long, owing to the broken nature of the ground. At intervals a deep, sudden roll of musketry and artillery, followed soon after by a shout of triumph, announced the capture of some advanced position by our forces. Then a lull, during which the enemy took a new position, while our artillery and infantry were advanced. One point after another was gained in this way on the right, until the enemy began to entertain fears of being cut off from the Port Gibson road. The entire right of this line had been forced back until it was nearly at right angles with the line on the left.
The retreat soon after began in good earnest. The victory was won. Several hundred prisoners, part of his train and much of his artillery fell into our hands. The primary object of the battle was accomplished. Grand Gulf was evacuated. The whole loss in the 24th Iowa was but one killed and seven wounded. It was a hard battle, but bloody only at intervals. The difficulties of approaching the enemy's several positions were almost insurmountable. The field upon which the battle was fought is exceedingly picturesque and beautiful. The many knobs are crowned with the most beautiful of all trees, the magnolia. Their rich, polished green leaves glisten brightly in the sunshine, as if always bathed in dew, while their large, fine white flowers load the air with sweet fragrance.
This battle is memorable as the first in that brilliant series of conflicts resulting in the capture of Vicksburg. As it was the first battle in which most of the troops enlisted in '62 had participated, the Generals, whose reputation rested upon their success, preferred that the veteran troops of '61 should lead the charges, supported by the less experienced in battle; a distinction, however, that was never repeated. The courage displayed by them on this day, whenever opportunity offered, convinced them that this distinction would hereafter be wholly unnecessary. It is not necessary to criticize the conduct of Col. Byam in this engagement. It is, perhaps, fair to presume that what he said of himself was true. He was sick and faint, or, as the boys ould have it, sun-struck at 8 o'clock in the morning, reporting at the hospital, two miles away, for medical assistance. As for the rest, both officers and men conducted themselves with the customary valor of Iowa's sons, receiving their just meed of praise in their brigade commander's report of the engagement. Wearied almost to exhaustion by the day's labors, and suffering for
want of sleep, the men lay down on their arms, in support of a battery planted on a hill above us. It not being certain that the enemy had gone, and fearing, too, lest he might be re-enforced during the night, everything was in momentary readiness for an attack. All around was silent until midnight, when the pickets in front were falsely alarmed by some means, and discharged their pieces. A moment later and the line was in complete readiness to repel the advance of the enemy, should he come. But the alarm proving to be a false one, we lay down again, and rested without any further disturbance until daybreak. Learning soon afterwards that the enemy had evacuated Grand Gulf, and were flying towards Vicksburg, we took up our line of march for Port Gibson, about four miles distant, where we arrived about noon, and encamped in the streets. The town is situated on Bayou Pierre. It is tastefully and regularly laid out, containing originally perhaps four thousand inhabitants. It had no defenses, and our visit was evidently a very unexpected, as well as unwelcome event. It had never been occupied by any troops of either army before, and had a neat, cleanly appearance. [27]

April 29-30, 1863: Crossing? of Rappahanock, VA.[28]

Fri. April 29, 1864

All quiet first day for 8 wk without canonadeing made a by breastworks[29]

And dug a well. Got 2 papers from home

Hot day

William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary, 24th Iowa Infantry[30]

100_1719

“The U.S. Civil War Out West” The History Channel



April 29, 30, 1865: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry,March to Washington D.C., via Richmond, Va., April 29, May 30. [31]



On April 29, 1865 Company B was detailed as an honor guard to escort General Sherman’s train on a flying trip to Wilmington. The regiment had not been paid for eight months, and Captain Rigby did not even have enough money to purchase a paper collar for his dress uniform. Borrowing the only one in the command from Sergeant Lyons and carefully splitting it in two, the Captain was able to make his toilet both going and coming. On the return trip the honor guard unceremoniously beat up a Confederate captain who insulted them.[32]



April 29, 1905: Dora Gottlieb, nee Seinfeld, Born April 29,1905 in Perehinsko. Resided Nordausen. Deportation: October 28, 1938, nach Bentchen. Abgeschoben. Todesdaten: Unknown[33]



Erich Gottlieb born April 29, 1911. Transport AAm- Olomouc Terezin July 4, 1942. Dz- May 15, 1944 Osvetim.[34]

April 29, 1923: Albert's freedom in choosing Elizabeth, not a member of a royal family, though the daughter of a peer, was considered a gesture in favour of political modernisation; previously, princes were expected to marry princesses from other royal families.[25] They married on April 29, 1923, at Westminster Abbey. Unexpectedly,[26] Elizabeth laid her bouquet at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior on her way into the Abbey,[27] in memory of her brother Fergus.[28] Ever since, the bouquets of subsequent royal brides have traditionally been laid at the tomb, though after the wedding ceremony rather than before. Elizabeth became styled Her Royal Highness The Duchess of York.[29] Following a wedding breakfast at Buckingham Palace prepared by chef Gabriel Tschumi, the new duchess and her husband honeymooned at Polesden Lacey, a manor house in Surrey, and then went to Scotland, where she caught "unromantic" whooping cough.[30][35]

April 29, 1926: Mary Ann Goodlove, born January 7, 1829, in Moorefield Twp. Clark County, Ohio.She died April 29, 1926 in Columbus Ohio. She was the daughter of Conrad Goodlove and Catherine “Katie” McKinnon. She married Peter T. Davis October 7, 1852. She is the sister of William Harrison Goodlove. (Conrad Goodlove Family Bible)

April 29, 1939: A group, organized by Esau, met with Rudolf Mentzel at the REM to discuss the potential of a sustained nuclear chain reaction. The group included the physicists Walther Bothe, Robert Döpel, Hans Geiger, Wolfgang Gentner (probably sent by Walther Bothe), Wilhelm Hanle, Gerhard Hoffmann, and Georg Joos; Peter Debye was invited, but he did not attend. After this, informal work began at the Georg-August University of Göttingen by Joos, Hanle, and their colleague Reinhold Mannkopff; the group of physicists was known informally as the first Uranverein (Uranium Club) and formally as Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Kernphysik. The group’s work was discontinued in August 1939, when the three were called to military training.[7][8][9][10][36]

April 29, 1942: The Jews of the Netherlands are ordered to wear the yellow badge.[37]



April 29, 1944: Kistarcsa, Hungary, was the site of the first deportation of Jews from Hungary to Birkenau Concentration Camp.[38]

April 29-30, 1944: .After a week's rest and replenishment at Majuro, Enterprise sailed on April 14, to support landings in the Hollandia (currently known as Jayapura) area of New Guinea, and then hit Truk again from April 29-30.[39]

On April 29, 1945: Hitler married Eva in their bunker hideaway. Eva Braun met Hitler while working as an assistant to Hitler's official photographer. Braun spent her time with Hitler out of public view, entertaining herself by skiing and swimming. She had no discernible influence on Hitler's political career but provided a certain domesticity to the life of the dictator. Loyal to the end, she refused to leave the bunker even as the Russians closed in.

Only hours after they were united in marriage, both Hitler and Eva committed suicide. Warned by officers that the Russians were only about a day from overtaking the chancellery and urged to escape to Berchtesgarden, a small town in the Bavarian Alps where Hitler owned a home, the dictator instead chose to take his life. Both he and his wife swallowed cyanide capsules (which had been tested for their efficacy on his "beloved" dog and her pups). For good measure, he shot himself with his pistol.[40]

April 29, 1945: The German concentration camp at Dachau is liberated by United States troops.[41]



100_1210[42]



April 29, 1961 A National Security Council meeting of this day deals with Viet Nam.

Prior to this session there is a “brainstorming” meeting which includes: McNamara, Rusk, RFK,

Bowles, U. Alexis Johnson, and other State Dept. officials. There are repeated references to the

use of nuclear weapons. The use of nuclear weapons is discussed without reservations.

McNamara points out that if their decision is to intervene it has to be done right away. The

situation is deteriorating so rapidly that each passing day means a higher price in American lives.

Rusk also argues for a quick decision. [43]



April 29, 1963 The Cuban Revolutionary Council (CRC), represented by Jose Miro

Cardona and Tony Varona, breaks with the Kennedy administration. They accuse the President

of treason, because he intends to limit subversive activities against Cuba, which are rapidly

escalating. * (This fact merited a remark in the conclusion of the investigation of the Congress Committee in

1978, where it was stated that Cubans in exile felt betrayed in April 1963 because the U.S. government announced that

new plans for the invasion of Cuba would not be approved.)

LHO contests, today in writing, the rejection of his Texas unemployment claim. It has

been suggested that his only income could be a small monthly stipend from the FBI.

A CIA memo dated this date orders an “expedite check” of George de Mohrenschildt.

De Mohrenschildt has been doing business in Washington with a man named Clemard Charles,

a Haitian banker, a working relationship that seems to have been of some interest to the Agency.

On this date, JFK writes Defense Secretary Robert McNamara asking, “Are we keeping our

Cuban contingency invasion plans up to date?” McNamara assures the President that all plans are

current. [August 3, 1964 is being referred to as “D Day,” when all-out air strikes against Cuba

(OPLAN 316) will commence. [44]





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


[1] wikipedia


[2] Wikipedia


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


[4] f Very many of their letters are in the State Paper Office of

London, and in the collection of the Marquis of Salisbury. Some

of the latter have been published by Murdin.


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


[6] wikipedia


[7] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[8] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/nathanael-greene-takes-command-of-long-island


[9] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, page 133.

[10] Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 217



[11] 218 Annals of the Carnegie Museum.




[12] Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 219


[13] 220 Annals of the Carnegie Museum

[14] Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 221



[15] 222 Annals of the Carnegie Museum.



[16] Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 223



[17] 224 Annals of the Carnegie Museum.




[18] Proposed Descendants of William smythe.


[19] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[20] Wikipedia


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


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


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


[24] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[25] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[26] http:Americancivilwar.com/statepic/ms/ms004.html




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


[28] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012


[29] Barricades.

(Glossary of Slang)

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~keller/ovi80/work/letter.html


[30] annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[31] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[32] Rigby, April 24, 1865; Longley, Annals of Iowa (April, 1895, p. 50. History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 201-202.)


[33] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.


[34] Terezinska Pametni Kniha, Zidovske Ob


[35] wikipedia


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


[37] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1771.


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


[39] wikipedia


[40] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/prohibition-takes-effect


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


[42] Hitler and the Occult, HISTI


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


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



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Monday, April 28, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, April 28, 2014

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Jeffery Lee 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.

Birthdays on April 28 .…

Rosemary Adams Lewis

Edward IV

Joseph Godlove

Abner A. Hannah

John Hitchell

James Monroe

Neeltje van Antwerp van Antwerp

Louisa N. Williams Hope



April 28, 66 A.D.: In 66 A.D. a Roman Governor planted his pagan sandals on God’s domain, effectively desecrating it. That was not enough, for he grabbed 17 talents, about $1.5 million dollars.[1] After stealing money from the Temple Treasury, the Roman Procurator Gessius Florus allowed his troops to “loot the Upper Market” of Jerusalem. He also unleashed his Cohorts on the crowds of Jews who gathered to protest the theft. This would prove to be the precipitating event that would start the Great Revolt which would end in disaster for the Jewish people.[2] The Jews had had enough. Enough of the crucifixions, enough of the beheadings, enough of the stealing of the money, enough of the taxation, enough of the oppression, and they said “it is revolution time.” [3]

Not an ordinary revolution, this required a messiah to lead them. According to Jewish faith, a messiah was a political figure, sent by God, to lead the faithful to freedom. [4]

The sicari were front row and waiting. The sicari developed a relegion that said you cannot be subservient to Rome. The sicari were daggermen. They are terrorist of sort. They have Gallilean roots. When the Gallilean’s show up they encounter local groups that are also against the Romans. Jesus was from Galilee and so were most of his followers. The sicari were considered zealots or political opponents. The sicari believed they were living the end of days, messianic times. [5]

66 CE: In 66 the Sicari break into Masada, break into the armory, take arms, come to Jerusalem, try to take over the mini rebellion that had already begun in Jerusalem, were unsuccessful and are pushed out, they go back to Masada and they bide their time their from 67 to 73.[6]

In 66 CE, in rebellion against another round of Roman taxes and attacks on the Temple, Jewish priests in Jerusalem stopped offering daily sacrifices on behalf of the emperor. The protest ballooned into a guerrilla revolt and then a full fledged war. Messianic zealots, bandits, and freedom fighters banded together to fight a battle known in Roman history as the Jewish War and remembered by Jews as the Great Revolt.[7]

Ananias, whose conduct in 62-64 had suggested secret sympathy for the extremists, is named among the advocates of peace in the summer of 66. But it was his son Eleazar, captain of the Temple, who brought about the cessation of sacrifices on behalf of the Emperor, the action which Josephus regards as marking the outbreak of the rebellion. The protests and warnings of the High Priests were ignored by the revolutionaries, who grew rapidly in numbers and got possession of much of Jerusalem. Ananias and others of the peace party, together with some of the Roman garrison, were forced to take refuge in Herod’s palace (the procurators’ residence), which was then besieged by the insurgents, and he and his brother were treacherously killed aftger an agreement had been made for the Jews to evacuate the palace under truce.[8]

Summer 66 CE: Ananias, whose conduct in 62-64 had suggested secret sympathy for the extremists, is named among the advocates of peace in the summer of 66. But it was his son Eleazar, captain of the Temple, who brought about the cessation of sacrifices on behalf of the Emperor, the action which Josephus regards as marking the outbreak of the rebellion. The protests and warnings of the High Priests were ignored by the revolutionaries, who grew rapidly in numbers and got possession of much of Jerusalem. Ananias and others of the peace party, together with some of the Roman garrison, were forced to take refuge in Herod’s palace (the procurators’ residence), which was then besieged by the insurgents, and he and his brother were treacherously killed aftger an agreement had been made for the Jews to evacuate the palace under truce.[9]

66 A.D.:A full scale Jewish Revolt had broken out in Palestine in 66 A.D. under the rule of the Roman governor Gessius Florus. Jerusalem fell into the control of several rebel factions. Nero had appointed a Spanish general Vespasian, to crush the revolt and several legions poured into the country. [10]

66 A.D.:Eusebius and Epiphanius preserved a tradition that the Jerusalem followers of Jesus, now led by Simon son of Clophas, fled the city of Jerusalem just before siege in response to an “oracle given by revelation before the war”. They reported that the followers settled in the area of the Decapolis city of Pella, on the other side of the Jordan in the mountains of Gilead. Although some scholars have questioned the historical reliability of this tradition there is strong evidence in its favor. As we have seen, the book of Revelation, dating to the time of Nero and the Jewish Revolt, portrays the church as a “woman” who flees into the wilderness “to her place” where she is nourished for three and a half years (Revelation 12:14). In the book of Revelation Nero is the “Best” with the mysterious number 666 and it was indeed Nero who both persecuted the Christians after the fire in Rome and sent Vespasian to wquell the Jewish Revolt in 66 A.D..[11]

Pella, the region to which they are saed to have fled, is just a few milesw north of the biblical “Wadi Cherith,” the traditional place where Elijah hid from danger and very likely the area where Jesus had spent the last winter of his life hiding from Herod Antipas, the “Jesus hideout” in Jordan. If Simon, leader of the group at this time, was in fact the brother of Jesus as James Tabor has argued, the flight in 66 A.D. would be a return visit for him after forty years.[12]

Judas the Galilean last surviving son, Menahem, captured from the Romans the stronghgold of Masada and attempted in 66 A.D., at the beginning of the first Jewish War, to assert his supreme authority among the rebels by entering the Temple in royal apparel. However, he and most of his followerxsx died in the feud which raged at that time between the various revolutionary factions in Jerusalem. One of those who escapted the massacre was another descendant

66 CE: After a pagan provocation, an all out battle ensued in Caesarea. In one hour the cities gentiles aided by the Roman garrison, slew 20,000 Jews.

April 28, 70 A.D.: Following an early repulse of his forces, the Roman Legions commanded by Titus retake and destroy Jerusalem’s middle wall. The Romans followed this victory by quickly building a wall that will surround the city, cutting off all shipments of food and causing increased starvation among the Jewish defenders.[13]

April 28, 1192: Conrad I, newly crowned King of Jerusalem was assassinated in Tyre only days after ascending the throne. According to one source, the assassins were Moslems who may have been in the pay of Conrad’s Christian enemies. The whole affair of Conrad’s selection during the time of the Third Crusade points to the fact that these were not noble religious adventures at all. This makes the treatment of the Jews during this period all the more despicable.[14]

Conrad of Montferrat (or Conrad I of Jerusalem) (Italian: Corrado di Monferrato; Piedmontese: Conrà ëd Monfrà) (mid-1140s – April 28, 1192) was a northern Italian nobleman, one of the major participants in the Third Crusade. He was the de facto King of Jerusalem, by marriage, from November 24, 1190, but officially elected only in 1192, days before his death. He was also marquis of Montferrat from 1191.[15]

When Queen Sibylla and their daughters died of disease later that year, Guy, who had only held the crown matrimonial, no longer had a legal claim to the throne — but refused to step aside. The heiress of Jerusalem was Isabella of Jerusalem, Queen Sibylla's half-sister, who was married to Humphrey IV of Toron, of whom she was fond. However, Conrad had the support of her mother Maria Comnena and stepfather Balian of Ibelin, as well as Reginald of Sidon and other major nobles of Outremer. They obtained an annulment on the grounds that Isabella had been under-age at the time of the marriage and had not been able to give consent. Conrad then married Isabella himself, despite rumours of bigamy because of his marriage to Theodora, who was still alive. (However, Choniates, who usually expresses strong disapproval of marital/sexual irregularities, makes no mention of this. This may imply that a divorce had been effected from the Byzantine side before 1190, by which time it was obvious that Conrad would not be returning.) There were also objections on grounds of canonical 'incest', since Conrad's brother had previously been married to Isabella's half-sister, and Church law regarded this kind of "affinity" as equal to a blood-relationship. However, the Papal Legate, Ubaldo Lanfranchi, Archbishop of Pisa, gave his approval. (Opponents claimed he had been bribed[16][17][18]

April 28, 1396: In 1392, Robert III strengthened the position of his son David, now earl of Carrick, when he endowed him with a large annuity that allowed the young prince to build up his household and affinity and then in 1393 regained his right to direct rule when the general council decided that Fife's lieutenancy should end and that Carrick now of age should assist his father.[26] This independence of action was demonstrated in 1395–6 when he responded to Carrick's unauthorised marriage to Elizabeth Dunbar, daughter of George, Earl of March by ensuring its annulment.[8] The king appears to have also taken over the conduct of foreign affairs, preserving the peace with Richard II and managing to increase the power of the Red Douglas Earl of Angus in the southeast of the country as a counterbalance to Fife's Black Douglas ally. He further showed his authority when in an attempt to reduce inter-clan feuding and lawlessness, he arranged and oversaw a gladiatorial limited combat between the clans of Kay and Quhele (Clan Chattan) in Perth on April 28, 1396.[27] David of Carrick progressively acted independently of his father taking control of the Stewart lands in the south-west while maintaining his links with the Drummonds of his mother and all at a time when Fife's influence in central Scotland remained strong.[28]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ac/Falkland_Palace.jpg/200px-Falkland_Palace.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.23wmf17/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png


Falkland Palace built close to the site of Falkland Castle

The king was increasingly blamed for the failure to pacify the Gaelic areas in west and north.[19]

April 28, 1442: Edward IV of England (April 28, 1442 – April 9, 1483). The future King, Edward IV was born in Rouen on April 28, 1442 and immediately baptised privately in a small side chapel. He would later be accused of illegitimacy directly by his cousin, Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, and by his own brother, George, Duke of Clarence; this was a common method of discrediting political enemies, and George and Warwick were in dispute with Edward at the time and seeking to overthrow him. The claims would later be dismissed. Nonetheless, some modern historians give serious consideration to the question, and use Edward's date of birth as supporting evidence: assuming Edward was not premature (there being no evidence either way), Richard of York would been several days march from Cecily at the time of conception and the baby's baptism was a simple and private affair (unlike that of his younger brother, Edmund, which was public and lavish). This is countered by other historians, however, who point out that Cecily's husband could easily, by the military conventions of the time, have returned briefly to Rouen, where Cecily was living at the time, whilst baptism conventions of the time meant that a low-key baptism would be more likely due to Richard of York's political standing at the time vis-a-vis his later position, and fears for the baby's survival; if the difference in baptisms was to be taken as a disavowal of an otherwise acknowledged and cherished heir, it would not only be a humiliation of a wife Richard otherwise valued before and after Edward's birth, but also a personal and political humiliation. In any case, Richard acknowledged the baby as his own, which established legal paternity.

Around 1454, when Richard began to resent the influence of Edmund Beaufort, 1st Duke of Somerset, Cecily spoke with Queen consort Margaret of Anjou on his behalf. When Henry VI suffered a nervous breakdown later in the year, Richard of York established himself as a Protector.

After the outbreak of the Wars of the Roses, Cecily remained at their home, Ludlow Castle, even when Richard fled to Ireland and Continental Europe. At the same time she surreptitiously worked for the cause of the House of York.[20]



April 28th, 1521 - Treaty of Worms: Emperor Charles names his brother Ferdinand Arch duke of Neth-Austria[21]



April 28, 1603: Elizabeth's coffin was carried downriver at night to Whitehall, on a barge lit with torches. At her funeral on April 28, the coffin was taken to Westminster Abbey on a hearse drawn by four horses hung with black velvet. In the words of the chronicler John Stow:

Westminster was surcharged with multitudes of all sorts of people in their streets, houses, windows, leads and gutters, that came out to see the obsequy, and when they beheld her statue lying upon the coffin, there was such a general sighing, groaning and weeping as the like hath not been seen or known in the memory of man.[177]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8f/Funeral_Elisabeth.jpg/300px-Funeral_Elisabeth.jpg

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Elizabeth's funeral cortège, 1603, with banners of her royal ancestors

Elizabeth was interred in Westminster Abbey in a tomb she shares with her half-sister, Mary. The Latin inscription on their tomb, "Regno consortes & urna, hic obdormimus Elizabetha et Maria sorores, in spe resurrectionis", translates to "Consorts in realm and tomb, here we sleep, Elizabeth and Mary, sisters, in hope of resurrection".[178]

Legacy and memory

Elizabeth was lamented by many of her subjects, but others were relieved at her death.[179] Expectations of King James started high but then declined, so by the 1620s there was a nostalgic revival of the cult of Elizabeth.[180] Elizabeth was praised as a heroine of the Protestant cause and the ruler of a golden age. James was depicted as a Catholic sympathiser, presiding over a corrupt court.[181] The triumphalist image that Elizabeth had cultivated towards the end of her reign, against a background of factionalism and military and economic difficulties,[182] was taken at face value and her reputation inflated. Godfrey Goodman, Bishop of Gloucester, recalled: "When we had experience of a Scottish government, the Queen did seem to revive. Then was her memory much magnified."[183] Elizabeth's reign became idealised as a time when crown, church and parliament had worked in constitutional balance.[184]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Elizabeth-I-Allegorical-Po.jpg/220px-Elizabeth-I-Allegorical-Po.jpg

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Elizabeth I, painted after 1620, during the first revival of interest in her reign. Time sleeps on her right and Death looks over her left shoulder; two putti hold the crown above her head.[185]

The picture of Elizabeth painted by her Protestant admirers of the early 17th century has proved lasting and influential.[186] Her memory was also revived during the Napoleonic Wars, when the nation again found itself on the brink of invasion.[187] In the Victorian era, the Elizabethan legend was adapted to the imperial ideology of the day,[179][188] and in the mid-20th century, Elizabeth was a romantic symbol of the national resistance to foreign threat.[189][190] Historians of that period, such as J. E. Neale (1934) and A. L. Rowse (1950), interpreted Elizabeth's reign as a golden age of progress.[191] Neale and Rowse also idealised the Queen personally: she always did everything right; her more unpleasant traits were ignored or explained as signs of stress.[192]

Recent historians, however, have taken a more complicated view of Elizabeth.[193] Her reign is famous for the defeat of the Armada, and for successful raids against the Spanish, such as those on Cádiz in 1587 and 1596, but some historians point to military failures on land and at sea.[123] In Ireland, Elizabeth's forces ultimately prevailed, but their tactics stain her record.[194] Rather than as a brave defender of the Protestant nations against Spain and the Habsburgs, she is more often regarded as cautious in her foreign policies. She offered very limited aid to foreign Protestants and failed to provide her commanders with the funds to make a difference abroad.[195]

Elizabeth established an English church that helped shape a national identity and remains in place today.[196][197][198] Those who praised her later as a Protestant heroine overlooked her refusal to drop all practices of Catholic origin from the Church of England.[199] Historians note that in her day, strict Protestants regarded the Acts of Settlement and Uniformity of 1559 as a compromise.[200][201] In fact, Elizabeth believed that faith was personal and did not wish, as Francis Bacon put it, to "make windows into men's hearts and secret thoughts".[202][203]

Though Elizabeth followed a largely defensive foreign policy, her reign raised England's status abroad. "She is only a woman, only mistress of half an island," marvelled Pope Sixtus V, "and yet she makes herself feared by Spain, by France, by the Empire, by all".[204] Under Elizabeth, the nation gained a new self-confidence and sense of sovereignty, as Christendom fragmented.[180][205][206] Elizabeth was the first Tudor to recognise that a monarch ruled by popular consent.[207] She therefore always worked with parliament and advisers she could trust to tell her the truth—a style of government that her Stuart successors failed to follow. Some historians have called her lucky;[204] she believed that God was protecting her.[208] Priding herself on being "mere English",[209] Elizabeth trusted in God, honest advice, and the love of her subjects for the success of her rule.[210] In a prayer, she offered thanks to God that:

[At a time] when wars and seditions with grievous persecutions have vexed almost all kings and countries round about me, my reign hath been peacable, and my realm a receptacle to thy afflicted Church. The love of my people hath appeared firm, and the devices of my enemies frustrate.[204][22]

April 28, 1396: The king appears to have also taken over the conduct of foreign affairs, preserving the peace with Richard II and managing to increase the power of the Red Douglas Earl of Angus in the southeast of the country as a counterbalance to Fife's Black Douglas ally. He further showed his authority when in an attempt to reduce inter-clan feuding and lawlessness, he arranged and oversaw a gladiatorial limited combat between the clans of Kay and Quhele (Clan Chattan) in Perth on April 28, 1396.[27] David of Carrick progressively acted independently of his father taking control of the Stewart lands in the south-west while maintaining his links with the Drummonds of his mother and all at a time when Fife's influence in central Scotland remained strong.[28]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ac/Falkland_Palace.jpg/200px-Falkland_Palace.jpg

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Falkland Palace built close to the site of Falkland Castle[23]



April 28, 1619: In London, on April 28, little more than a week after Yeardley had reached Virginia "at a Quarter Court for Virginia at Sir Thomas Smiths Howse in Philpott Lane" Sir Thomas Smythe, *Treasurer since the for-

mation of the Company, resigned on the plea of his complete occupation

by new official duties but in greater likelihood though the pressure of two

parties in the Company combining to displace him. Over two other

contestants Sir Edwin Sandys was elected by a large majority to succeed

Smythe as Treasurer. Under the new control pronounced changes were

made in the previous system; a colonist was now assigned a divident of

land and conceded a share in the government. [24][25]



April 28, 1635: John West acted as deputy governor from April 28, 1635

until January 19, 1637, when Harvey was restored by act of the King, who

proceeded to take action against the Governor's deposers on the ground

that they had proceeded as if by "an act of regal authority."



Harvey, on his return to Jamestown, improved his capital by the

addition of about twelve new houses and planned towards erecting a

church and a statehouse of brick, but his administration was not of suffi-

cient duration to carry all his plans into effect. In consequence of his

persistent mischief-making and tyranny Harvey was removed by royal

decree, and in August 1639, Sir Francis Wyatt again became governor and

continued in the office until the coming of Berkeley in 1642. [26]

April 28, 1718: Will of Andrew Harrison of St. Mary's Parish in the County of Essex, being grown very aged and at this time very sick and weak in body, dated April 28, 1718.

My beloved wife Eleanor my executriz.

My son Andrew and my son in law Gabriel Long as Trustees and overseers to assist her in the performing of this my last will.

I have already setled three of my children, viz. William, Andrew and Elizabeth on lands on which they now live, viz. to my son William 270 acres and to my son Andrew 200 acres and to my daughteer Elizabeth 200 acres, all which my lands they are now possessed with and which I now give to them.

I have put into the hands of Wm. Stannard bills and exchange for L 65.12.6 sterling for him to buy me two Negroes; my loveing wife have the use of these negroes or that money during her natural life or widowhood and after her decease to my daughter Margarett Long's three youngest sons viz. Richd. and Gabril and William, to be equally divided as soon as they shall all come to the age of twenty years if my wife dye before. If my wife should dye before either of them comes to that age, my son in law Gabriel Long have the use of them till they come to that age, to give them schooling, that is to learn them to read and write and cost account.

To my daughter Margaret Long after the decease of my loveing wife one feather bed and bolster and pillows and rugg and blankets.

Unto my son William after the decease of my loveing wife one feather bed and bedstead and all the furniture belonging to it.

Unto my son William a chest and all my wearing cloaths and the cloth which I have to make me cloaths on and my riding sadle after my decease.

Unto my son William after the decease of my loveing wife one ovell table.

Unto my son William after the decease of my loveing wife one large iron pott.

Unto my son Andrew after the decease of my loveing wife one feather bed and bolster and pillows and all manner of furniture belonging to itt, and one large iron pott.

The rest of my personall and moveable estate after the death of my loveing wife to be equally divided among my four children viz. William and Andrew and Elizabeth and Margarett.

Andrew (A H) Harrison

Wit: Jno Ellitts, William (X) Davison, Mary (X) Harrison



In April 28, 1752 instructions (quoted above), the Ohio Company directed Christopher

Gist to employ Indians who were already acquainted with the ―ways‖ to cut the

contemplated Ohio Company road.

· As related above, Jacobs—a man who was in a position to know—clearly states that the

Ohio Company road followed a route that was in some fashion identified by the Indian

Nemacolin.[27]



April 28, 1752: The Ohio Company‘s April 28, 1752 new instructions to

Gist, quoted on page 236 of Darlington‘s book, states: If Col Cresap has not agreed with any person to clear a Road for the Company, you are with the advice and assistance of Col. Cresap to agree with the proper Indians, who are best acquainted with the ways, immediately to cut a road from Wills Creek to the Fork of Mohongaly at the cheapest Rate you can for Goods, and this you may mention publicly to the Indians at the Loggs Town or not as you see occasion.

This appears to be a plan that is based on Gist‘s new input.

The above quote indicates that on April 28, 1752, the Ohio Company knew that the road to the

―Fork of Monongahela‖ had not yet been cut, and did not even know if any arrangements had

been made to cut it. The passage also reveals that the Ohio Company envisioned employing

Indians to cut their road. If interpreted correctly, the above quote indicates that the Ohio Company road was intended to go to the present-day location of Pittsburgh, which was then known as the ―Fork of Monongahela‖.[28]



In 1752, the Ohio Company got the land grant terms altered. The company committed to settling 300 families and building two forts, in exchange for removal of any deadline and granting the entire 500,000 acres. Location of the land grant was specified in 1752 as:5

"on the south side of the river Alleghany between the Kiskiminites Creek and Buffalo Creek, and between Yellow Creek and Cross Creek on the north side" (for the first 200,000 acreas) and between "the Great Conhaway [Kanawha River] on the southwest, and to the west side of the Alleghany Mountains on the east" (for the remaining 300,000 acres) [29]



1752

George Washington’s elder brother had just died and he was twenty years old attempting to make his way into this world, it was then he joined the Freemason’s. It’s something that you see again and again in early Freemasonry. It’s a place for young men to establish themselves in the community.[30]



Masonic President




GEORGE WASHINGTON (1732-1799)
First President (1789-1797)






Brother George Washington

MASONIC RECORD

Initiated as an Entered Apprentice[31]: November 4, 1752, Fredericksburgh (Fredericksburg) Lodge No. 4, Fredericksburg, Virginia.

Brother Washington became Worshipful Master on December 20, 1788, and was inaugurated President of the United States on April 30, 1789, thus becoming the first, and so far the only, Brother to be simultaneously President and Master of his Lodge.[32]





Court met on Monday April 28,1777, according to

adjournment to Court in Course.



Present : Edward Ward, John Cannon, John McDowell,

Richard Yeates, Benjamin Kirkindall, Joshua Wright, Oliver

Miller and Andrew Swearingen, Gentlemen Justices.



On the Court's meeting and the Sheriff's Commission not

coming to Mr. Joshua Wright, agreable to recommendation of

the Court and notwithstanding Colonel Penticost's letter to

Colonel Cannon, Insuring him he had a Sheriffs Commission

for Mr. Wright, he refused to act Protempory. Therefore the

Court was reduced to the necessity of appointing another, as

there was an Election to be held for a Senitor and Delegates,

and a Criminal to be tried and other Breeches of the Peice.



The question being first put to Mr. Joshua Wright, to be ap-

pointed Protempory, and he refused, notwithstanding his hear-

ing of the Commission as aforesaid ; but said if his commission

had came to this Court he would have sworn into said Office. —

The Question then being put to the rest of the Court, who

would serve as Sheriff, and all refused to, Except Mr. William

Harrison, who agreed to be appointed, and the Court unani-

mously agreed that the said Mr. Harrison be recommended as

a proper Person for Sheriff and Mr. Joshua W right concurd

with the Court.



The Court is of the opinion that William Harrison, Samuel

Newell and Thomas Freeman are proper persons to be recom-

mended for Sheriffs the Insuing year.



William Harrison came into Court and took the oath as

Sheriff.

(6) Court adjourned Tuesday 7 O'Clock. 9



Court met according to adjournment.



Present : Edward Ward, John Cannon, John McDowell,

Richard Yeates, Benjaman Kirkindall, Joshua Wright, Oliver

Miller, Andrew Swearingen, Gentleman Justices.



Zacheriah Connell came into Court and took the oath of

Justice of the Piece.



The Court Still Labouring under great difficulty for the want

of a Clerk, as Colonel Dorsey Penticost our former Clerk lying



8 7 o'clock !







Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 83



in Baltimore in the Small Pox. The Court then applied to

Mr. James Innis, who the said Colonel Penticost had appointed

to serve as Clerk in his absence, and when application was made

to said Mr. Innis, he refused to attend the Court ; his answer

was that he only agread to 'attend the March Court — upon

which the Court Choose Mr. Isaac Cox for their Clerk who

Came into Court and swore into said Office.



Zachariah Connell, William Lee and Andrew Heth came

into Court and took the Oath of Captains of the Militia.



John Cannon Came into Court and took the Oath as Colonel

of the Melitia.



Henry Taylor came into Court and took the oath of Major of

the Melitia.



Joshua Wright was applied to by the Court to Swear into his

Captain's commission, but he refused as he was a Leiutenant of

a former Nominal Company.



John Meligan being charged with Felloniously Murdering

William Guttery and being Convicted for the same, was

brought into Court, and he acknowledged he was guilty of the

Crime he stod charged with, and the Court is of Opinion that

the said Crimminal for said fellony ought to be sent to the

general Court for farther Trial.



John Melony and Samson Beavers, Securities for Joseph

Ross, for his appearance at the Court, as by his recognizance

appears, came into the Court and delivered said Ross to the

Court, and after the Court had heared the Complaint, was fined

twenty five Shellings for swearing four Blasfemous Oaths before

John Cannon, one before John Johnston — and ordered that

( 7 ) the said Ross give Security for his better Behavior For one

year and one day.



John Melony came into Court and agreed to be security for

Joseph Ross's keeping the Piece and better Behavior to the

Subjects of the Common Wealth, and esspecially to Colonel

John Cannon, whome he had threatened to abuse the first opper-

tunity. The said security bound in the sum of one Hundred

pounds.



Upon the Petition of Benjaman Jones ordered that John

Bennitt be summoned to Bring a Boy Claimed by the said

Jones to the Next Court.



Samson Beavers come into Court and entered Security for

the payment of twenty five Shellings at the laying of the Next

Parrish Levey, it being Joseph Ross's fine for swearing.



Court is adjourned untill Wednesday 8 Oclock.



Court met according to adjournment.



Present : Edward Ward, John Cannon, Oliver Miller and

Zacheriah Connell, Gentlemen Justices.



The Sheriff came into Court and gave Bond and Security

for the true performance of the said office.



John Crow being charged with Breach of the piece, ordered

that the said Crow give Security for his Better behavior towards

all the Subjects of the Common Wealth, and Especially to Joseph

Ross for a year and one day. Henry Taylor and James

Austurges enter Security for the same, bound in the sum of one

Hundred pounds.



Ordered that the Clerk furnish the Sheriff with all papers

necessary for the Tryal of John Milligan at the General Court.



Ordered that the Clerk send down the recommendation for

William Harrison to be Sheriff.



Ordered that the Clerk send down by Mr. William Harrison

all proceedings of the Court relative to the appointment of the

Sheriff and Clerk.



Patrick McGey, Thomas Smyth and James Furgurson being

Convicted for Breaches of the piece — Ordered that the said

Patrick McGey, Thomas Smyth and James Furgurson give

Security to each other, for their better Behaviour for the Space

of one year and one day, and also to all the Subjects of the

Common Wealth.



Henry Taylor and John McGey enter Security for Patrick

McGey and Thomas Smyth.



John Crow and David Williams enter Security for James

Furgurson.

(8) Ordered that Patrick McGey and Thomas Smyth be fined



the Sum of two pounds each, and that the Sheriff secure the

same and pay it to James Furgurson.



Charles Harrison and William McKee is appointed Constables

for the Ensuing year, and that they be Summoned before

Zacheriah Connel Gentleman to swear into said office.



The Court adjourned to Court in Course. [33][34]



April 28, 1778

April 28, 1778; Justices John Stephenson and Col. William Crawford absent, but Isaac Cox, John Cannon, Wm. Goe, Andrew Swearingen, John McDowell, George McCormick were present.[35]

“Thomas Gist[36] came into Court and being sworn on the Holy evangelist of Almighty God, sayeth that in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and seventy-two, in the month of April to the best of his recollection, in the presence of Joseph Beelor, John Stephenson and Edward Rice, he solemnized the wrights of matromony between Isaac Meason and Catharine Harrison, according to the rights and ceremonies of the Church of England, he the said deponent then being a Majistrate in the State of Pennsylvania, and that he was under an oath not to devulge said marriage except legally called for that purpose.”

Two of the witnesses, John Stephenson and Joseph Beelor, came likewise into court and made a similar affidavit, and Joseph Beelor added “that there was a preengagement between the said Isaac and Catharine that upon the devulging of the said marriage contrary to the will of the said Isaac then that said parties should be absolved from any obligation to each other as man and wife.”[37]

W Harrison took the oath of Major of the Militia in open Coart.

Ordered that George McCarnieck John Cannon & John Stephenson Gent, be recommended to his Excellency the Governor as proper persons to serve as Sheriff for this County, the Ensuing year.

Ordered that Court be adjourned Until Tomorrow Morning

8 oCbock. JOHN CANON.[38]



April 28, 1778 Pg. 156 Summary: The court ordered that Edmond Lindsey, Ralph Cherry, Edward Cherry, and Doyale Meason appraise the goods, chattles, credits, and Slaves , if any, of James Louden. Yohogania,
VA.[39]

April 28, 1778 Pg. 152 Zacheriah Connell v John Lindsey, Contd, Yohogania, VA.[40]


April 28, 1778:

April 28th Court met according to adjournment.

Present, Isaac Cox, John Cannon, William Goe, Andrew
Swearengen, John McDowell, and George McCarmick, Gentle-
men Justices, Present.

Andrew Swearengen and David Andrew produced Commis-
sions from his Excellency the Governor appointing Them
Captains of the Militia, which being read, the said David and
Andrew came into Coart and Swore into said Commissions.

Nathaniel Blackmore came into Court produced a Commis-
sion appointing him a Lieutenant of the Militia, which was
read and Sworn to accordingly.

[Bill of sale from John Stueart to Jacob Bouseman for Three
Hundred Acres.] 1

Power of Attorney John Stueart to Jacob Bouseman be as
proved by the Oath of John McCollister, one of the Subscrib-
ing Witnesses.

Mortgage John Stueart to Jacob Bouseman for Three Hun-
dred Acres of Land on Yohogania River was proved by the
Oath of Jacob Leoport, one of the Subscribing Witnesses.
(3) Upon the motion of Jacob Bouseman ordered that his Mark
Two Crops and Two Slits be recorded.

Thomas Gist came into Court and being Sworn on the Holy
evangelist of Almighty God, Sayeth that in the year of our
Lord one Thousand Seven Hundred and Seventy two, in the
month of April to the best of his recollection, in the presence
of Joseph Beeler, John Stephenson and Edward Rice, he
Solemnized the wrights of Matromony between Isaac Meason
and Catherine Harrison, according to the rights and cere-
monies of the Church of England, he the s 1 ! Seponent then
being a Majistrate in the State of Pennsylvania, and that he
was under an Oath not to Devulge said marriage Except
Legally called for that purpose.

John Stephenson and Joseph Beeler came into Court and
being Sworn on the Holy Evangelist of Almighty God,
Sayeth that they ware present at the Marriage of Isaac Meason
with Catherine Harrison in the year one Thousand Seven
Hundred and Seventy two in the Month of April to the best
of their recollection, and was under a promise not to devulge
the said Marriage Unless Legally called, or Death of either of
the parties, and the said Joseph farther Sayeth that there was a
preengagement between the said Isaac and Catherine that upon
the devulging the said Marriage contrary to the will of the sd
Isaac then that said parties should be absolved from any obli-
gation to each other as man and wife.

Indenture from Martha Daviss to Isaac Cox acknowledged
by said Martha and ordered to be Recorded.

1 The part in brackets erased in the original.



214 Annals of the Carnegie Museum.

Bargain and Sale Thomas Bay to James Marshall for four
Hundred Acres of Land acknowledged by said Bay and
Ordered to be Recorded.

Bargain and Sale Thomas Bay to George Marken [or
Marten, Editor] for Two Hundred Acres of Land acknowl-
edged by said Bay and Ordered to be recorded.
(4) Bargain and Sale Ezekiel Johnston to Joseph Beeler JunT

proved by the oath of Dorsey Pentecost and Joseph Beeler
Sen r two of the Subscribing Witnesses.

Joseph Beeler produced to this Court a Commission from his
Excellency the Governour appointing him Colonel of the
Militia was red & Sworn to in open Coart.

Nathan Ellis produced to this Coart a Commission from his
Excellency the Governour appointing him Captain of the
Militia which was red & Sworn to in open Coart.

W™ Harrison took the oath of Major of the Militia in open
Coart.

Richard Crooks took the oath of Lieutenant of the Militia
in open Coart.

Michael Tigert took the oath of Ensign of the Militia in open
Coart.

Ordered that Sarah Shirly be admitted to administer on the
estate of James Shirly Deceased, she Complying with the Law,
Whereupon the sd. Sarah came into Coart with her Securities &
entered into Bond accordingly.

Ordered that Ignatius Lebat Sam'l Sample Sam'l Evalt &
David Dunkin or any three of them Being first sworn do appraise
the s'* Estate & make Report to next Coart.

James Gray Enters himself special Bail in a suit wherein Jno.
Pearce is plaintiff & Jno. Raredon Defendant.

Jno. Raredon Enters himself special Bail in Case wherein
W™ Danningin is plaintiff & and James Gray Defendant.

Ordered that Mary Lindsey the wife of William Lindsey a
poor Soldier in the Continental service be allowed Six pounds
per month for the support of herself and Six children to com-
mence the first day of January Last.

Ordered that Eloner Lindsey the wife of Ezekial Lindsey be
allowed the sum of five pounds pr. month for the support of
herself and five children.



Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 215

(5) Ordered that Jane Dunn the wife of Thomas Dunn a poor
Soldier in the Continental Service be allowed the sum of
four pounds pr month for the support of herself and four
children.

Ordered that two children of Peter McCorkeys a soldier in
the Continental Service be allowed the sum of two pounds pr
month for their Subsistence.

Ordered that Elizabeth Depugh the wife of John Depugh be
allowed the sum of three pounds pr Month for the support of
herself and Three Children.

Ordered that the wife of Jeremiah McCarty be allowed the
sum of three pounds pr Month for the support of herself and
three children.

Ordered that the wife of William Nau a poor Soldier who
died in the Continental Service be allowed the sum of six
pounds pr month for herself and Six children to commence the
first day of January until his Death.

Ordered that the wife of James Behan be allowed the sum
of three pounds pr month for the support of herself and three
children.

Ordered that the sum of two pounds pr month be allowed
the wife of Richard Wade for the support of herself and two
children to Commence the first day of this month.

Ordered that the wife of David Smith be allowed the Sum
of three pounds for the support of herself and three children.

Ordered that Susannah Decompt and Christopher Hayes be
appointed Administrator and Administratrix of the Estate of
John Decomp Deceased they complying with the Law. Where-
upon the said Susannah and Christopher came into Court and
Entered into Bond oath accordingly.

Ordered that Joseph Beeler, James Blackstone, Edward
Cook, and Benjamin Davis or any three of them they being
first sworn do appraise the Estate of John Decomp Deceased
and make return to next Court.

(6) Daniel Brooks is appointed Administrator of the Estate of
Nathan Hammond Deceased he complying with the Law,
Whereupon the said Daniel came into court entered into Bond
and oath accordingly. Ordered that Joseph Parkerson, Thomas
Parkerson, James Innis & David Richie any three of them [41]


they being first sworn do appraise the Estate of Nathan Ham-
mon Deceased and make return to next Court.

Ordered that Isaac Cox be appointed Administrator of the
Estate of Samuel Richardson deceased he complying with the
Law, whereupon the said Isaac came into Court and intered
into Bond and oath- accordingly. Ordered that Abraham Van-
natree, Edmund Pollack, Richard Elson and Edward Wiggins
or any three of them they being first sworn do appraise the
Estate of Samuel Richardson, Deceased and make return to-
next Court.

Bargain and Sale John Pearce to James Patterson for three
Hundred and Eighteen Acres of Land Acknowledged by the
said Pearce and Ordered to be Recorded.

Ordered that George McCarmeck John Cannon & John.
Stephenson Gent, be recommended to his Excellency the Gov-
ernor as proper persons to serve as Sheriff for this County, the
Ensuing year.

Ordered that an Attachment Issue against Philip Whitsel and
the papers and records belonging to the District of West
Augusta, which by Act of Assembly are to be Inyrold amongst
the Records of this County, and the said records so attached
have before this Court for farther Proceedings.

Bargain and Sale Matthew Rogers to John White for an Im-
provement of Land on Churteers Creek Acknowledged by said.
Rogers and Ordered to be Recorded.
(8) 1 Ordered that Court be adjourned Until Tomorrow Morning

8 oClock. John Canon. [42][43]


April 28, 1778: Joseph Beeler came into Court and proved his service as a Captain in the Virginy

Service in Col. Brocodes (Bouquet's) Campaign; he Likewise proved his

being a Waggon master in General Forbes Campaign." On April 28, 1778,

"Joseph Beeler produced ... a Commission ...appointing him Colonel of
Militiawas red & Sworn to in open Court." Ibid., II, 214[44]



April 28, 1789: Grant Book 19, p.397 Granted to William A. [Augustine] Smith on April 28, 1789, in Monongalia Co, Sandy Crk waters of Tyger Valley R adj lands of Maj. John Harden and Thomas Powell.[45]

April 28, 1810: Ratified on April 28, 1810 in which the Osage Nation ceded all the land east of the fort in Missouri and Arkansas north of the Arkansas River to the United States. The Fort Clark treaty and the Treaty of St. Louis in which the Sac (tribe) and Fox (tribe) ceded northeastern Missouri along with northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin were the first two major treaties in the newly acquired Louisiana Purchase. The affected tribes, upset with the terms, were to side with the British in the War of 1812. Following the settlement of that war, John C. Sullivan for the United States was to survey the ceded land in 1816 (adjusting it 23 miles westward to the mouth of the Kansas River to create the Indian Boundary Line west of which and south of which virtually all tribes were to be removed in the Indian Removal Act in 1830.[46]

April 28, 1834: Joseph Godlove, born April 28, 1834. [47]

Joseph (Hooker) GODLOVE
Birth: April 28, 1834
Spouse: Eveline ORNDORFF (1840- )
Marriage: September 16, 1858 [48]

April 28, 1863: We reached a point within four miles of the batteries at Grand Gulf on the morning of the 28th. The gun boats were to engage and silence the batteries on shore, and we were then to land under cover of their fire, and carry the place by assault. It was a clear, bright day, and the enemy's works were clearly visible from where we lay. The gunboats formed in line of battle, and dropped down slowly and cautiously upon the enemy's works. The enemy was the first to open the ball. One, two, three, four wreaths of smoke, and as many bright jets of water sprang into the air. Still the sullen turtles deigned no reply, as the enemy's missiles failed to reach their advance. Another roll of thunder, more bright jets of water start up. This time discloses the approaching foe, yet still they were silent. But now the leading vessel began to leave the west bank of the river, bearing
off to the left of their works, followed by the others. Having formed a line immediately in front and to the right and left of their works, they squared across the mighty current, and then came the loud response to the enemy's taunts. The compliments of the Admiral and his men having thus been presented to the enemy, the vessels separated and each began the battle on its own account. Some running directly under the guns of the fort and delivering their heavy broadsides at pistol range, others with guns of heavy calibre anchored out in the river, as if for target practice, settled themselves quietly to the work.
The air seemed alive with a thousand devils, screeching, howling and hissing, while the roar of discharging cannon and bursting shells was loud and incessant. Through the black clouds of smoke lifting from the scene of the battle could be seen the meteoric pathway of fuse shells, which either bounded harmlessly from the iron mail of the turtles or went skipping over the smooth waters miles away from their intended object. An occasional discharge of grape shot would make the water boil around the approaching vessels.
Meanwhile parties were detailed on board our vessels and sent to the holds with tow and cotton, and carpenter's tools were in readiness to stop any unlucky perforation of the enemy's balls in that region when it should come our turn to meet their fire. Guns were all loaded and officers and men at their posts, in momentary readiness for an order to advance. The steamers stood out in the middle of the river, slowly paddling the water to prevent their floating too near the scene of action for safety before the gunboats had accomplished their mission. We could see there was great danger to be encountered in getting there, but knowing something of the indomitable will and perseverance of our leader, we did not doubt for a moment but that it would be done. It were needless then to be fearful of consequences, and each braced himself with a determination, to do his best, for in speedy victory alone there appeared safety. For four hours the battle had raged and the enemy's position had been raked from every quarter. Still the saucy guns from the fort belched forth their fire and smoke and storms of missiles. They could not be silenced. The brave tars had done all in their power to accomplish the purpose. Meanwhile our interest had become so great as to forget all else around us. The steamers drew up to the landing at Hard Times, which had the appearance of having maintained a very poor family in a very poor way, and much to our surprise we were ordered to disembark. After marching down the levee about three miles we encamped for the night on the river. We were now very unexpectedly several miles below Grand Gulf. So sharp was the bend of the river to the right of Grand Gulf that we could not perceive its direction during the day. We then for the first time comprehended the full strength of the position chosen by the enemy. Soon after darkness set in, the gunboats again opened vigorously upon the enemy. The enemy replied slowly but determinedly. The transports, which had already run the blockade at Vicksburg without serious injury, now under cover of their fire sped rapidly by the rebel fort, followed by the fleet of ironclads. The bold adventure was as speedily and successfully accomplished as it had been planned, without further injury than the killing of a few battery horses on board the transports and cutting the hog chain of one of the rams. [49]

Thurs. April 28, 1864

In camp skirmishing in rear at noon ordered

Out in line of battle then fell back near town

Throwed up breast work at night laid in cane field without blankets

William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary, 24th Iowa Infantry[50]



April 28, 1865: Over 50,000 people view Abraham Lincoln’s coffin in Cleveland, Ohio..[51]

April 28, 1879: Inauguration: Carter Henry Harrison, Sr., 24th Mayor of Chicago, Party: Democrat: 1st term: April 28, 1879.[52]

April 28, 1895: L. Frank Baum published "They Played a New Hamlet" (April 28, 1895).

April 28, 1897: The Choctaw and Chickasaw Indian Nations agree to give their lands to the Federal Government and dissolve their tribal governments.[53]



April 28, 1917: Brother, Michael, was reported missing in action on April 28, 1917.[16] Three weeks later, the family discovered he had been captured after being wounded. He remained in a prisoner of war camp for the rest of the war. Glamis was turned into a convalescent home for wounded soldiers, which Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon helped to run.[54]

April 28, 1942, the "Big E" sortied toward the South Pacific to reinforce U.S. carriers operating in the Coral Sea. However, the Battle of the Coral Sea was over before Enterprise arrived. After executing, with Hornet, a feint towards Nauru and Banaba (Ocean) islands which caused the Japanese to cancel their operation to seize the two islands.[55]

April 28, 1946: James Ransom Barrow (b. November 15, 1860 in GA / d. April 28, 1946 in GA).[56]

April 28, 1988: USS Scamp (SSN-588) James Kirby, Sonar




USS Scamp (SSN-288)


Career

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/a/a4/Flag_of_the_United_States.svg/67px-Flag_of_the_United_States.svg.png


Name:

USS Scamp


Ordered:

July 23, 1957


Builder:

Mare Island Naval Shipyard


Laid down:

January 23, 1959


Launched:

October 8, 1960


Commissioned:

June 5, 1961


Decommissioned:

April 28, 1988


Struck:

April 28, 1988


Honors and
awards:

Three campaign stars for Vietnam War service


Fate:

Entered the Submarine Recycling Program in 1990


General characteristics


Class and type:

Skipjack-class submarine


Displacement:

2,830 long tons (2,880 t) surfaced
3,500 long tons (3,600 t) submerged


Length:

232 ft (71 m)


Beam:

32 ft (9.8 m)


Draft:

30 ft 5 in (9.27 m)


Propulsion:

1 × S5W reactor
2 × Westinghouse steam turbines, 15,000 shp (11 MW)
1 shaft


Speed:

More than 20 knots (23 mph; 37 km/h)


Complement:

83 officers & men


Armament:

6 × 21 in (530 mm) torpedo tubes



Service record


Part of:

US Seventh Fleet


Operations:

Vietnam War


Awards:

3 Battle stars


For other ships of the same name, see USS Scamp.[57]



Scamp was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on April 28, 1988. ex-Scamp entered the Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program in Bremerton, Washington[58]

USS SCAMP was the second SKIPJACK - class nuclear-powered attack submarine and the second ship in the Navy to be named after the fish. Both decommissioned and stricken from the Navy list on April 28, 1988, the SCAMP later entered the Navy’s Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Wash.,

Decommissioned: April 28, 1988

Builder: Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, Calif.

Propulsion system: one S5W nuclear reactor

Propellers: one

Length: 251.64 feet (76.7 meters)

Beam: 31.5 feet (9.6 meters)

Draft: 27.9 feet (8.5 meters)

Displacement: Surfaced: approx. 2,880 tons Submerged: approx. 3,500 tons

Speed: Surfaced: approx. 15 knots Submerged: approx. 30 knots

Armament: six 533 mm torpedo tubes

Crew: 8 Officers, 85 Enlisted [59]







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


[1] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


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


[3] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[4] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[5] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[6] Masada, The Naked Archaeologist, 1/09/2006


[7] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine. Page 118.


[8] Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 29.


[9] Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 29.


[10] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor. Page 294.


[11] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor, page 299.


[12] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor, page 300.


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


[14]


[15] Wikipedia


[16] Wikipedia


[17] wikipedia


[18] Wikipedia


[19] Wikipedi


[20] Wikipedia


[21] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1521


[22] wikipedia


[23] wikipedia


[24] v ^ .° r - T he L answer of the General Assembly in Virginia to a Declaration of the state of the Lolome in the 12 years of Sr Thomas Smiths Government, exhibited by Alderman Johnson and others see NeilPs "History of the Virginia Company of London," pp. 407-411.




[25] Cavaliers and Pioneers Abslracls of Virginia Land Patents and Grants 1623 -1800

NELL MARION NUGENT




[26] Cavaliers and Pioneers Abslracls of Virginia Land Patents and Grants 1623 -1800

NELL MARION NUGENT




[27] April 28, 1752 instructions (quoted above), the Ohio Company directed Christopher

Gist to employ Indians who were already acquainted with the ―ways‖ to cut the

contemplated Ohio Company road.

· As related above, Jacobs—a man who was in a position to know—clearly states that the

Ohio Company road followed a route that was in some fashion identified by the Indian

Nemacolin.


[28] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 65., 66.


[29] http://www.virginiaplaces.org/boundaries/paboundary.html


[30] Secret Brotherhood of Freemasons, HISTI, 2/14/2001


[31] http://www.gwmemorial.org/washington.php


[32] http://www.pagrandlodge.org/mlam/presidents/washington.html


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


[34]

84 Annals of the Carnegie Museum.




[35] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, page 133.


[36] Much after the manner of young people today, marriages were at times kept secret in that day, too. Justice Thomas Gist and the famed iron master, Isaac Meason, must have had a difference, which prompted the revelation of the marriage of the former, as shown by the minutes of April 28, 1778


[37] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania, by Lewis Sclark Walkinshaw, A. M. Vol. II pg. 78.


[38] MINUTE BOOK OF VIRGINIA COURT HELD FOR YOHOGANIA COUNTY, FIRST AT AUGUSTA TOWN NOW WASHINGTON, PA.), AND AFTER­ WARDS ON THE ANDREW HEATH FARM NEAR WEST ELIZABETH; 1776-1780.’ EDITED BY BOYD CRUMRINE, OF WASHINGTON, PA. pg. 214-216.


[39] http://doclindsay.com/spread_sheets/2_davids_spreadsheet.html


[40] http://doclindsay.com/spread_sheets/2_davids_spreadsheet.html


[41] 216 Annals of the Carnegie Museum.


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


[43] Minutes of Court of Yohogania County. 213


[44] See James Veech, Monongahela of Old, 131, 137; Ellis, History of Fayette County, 363.




[45] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~katy/hardin/b939.html


[46] Wikipedia


[47]http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/i/d/Jan-C-Didawick-Berkeley-Springs/GENE2-0004.html


[48] SOURCES
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1880 United States
Census
REPO: @R01@ (Copyright (c) 2000, 2002 FamilySearch (TM) Internet Genealogy
Service, January 3, 2003).


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


[50] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[51] On This Day in
America


[52] Source:
The Stormy Years (autobiography of Carter Harrison Jr.), and the Biography of Carter Harrison I, and assorted notes of Edna B Owsley (his granddaughter).

Submitted by Milancie Adams. Visit her website Keeping the Chain Unbroken: Owsley and Hill Family History Website for additional info on this family. Note - be sure to go to her home page and follow some of the other Harrison links in her family as well.

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


[53] On This Day in America,


[54] wikipedia


[55] wikipedia


[56] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[57] wikipedia


[58] Wikipedia


[59] http://navysite.de/ssn/ssn588.htm