Tuesday, April 1, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, April 1, 2014

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Jeff Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com

Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove

The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), Jefferson, LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, and including ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, Teddy Roosevelt, U.S. Grant, Benjamin Harrison “The Signer”, Benjamin Harrison, Jimmy Carter, Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, William Taft, John Tyler (10th President), James Polk (11th President)Zachary Taylor, and Abraham Lincoln.

The Goodlove Family History Website:

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html

The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://wwwfamilytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx

• • Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.

• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.

Sarah A. Bishop (grandniece of the 3rd great granduncle)

John Bowes-Lyon (9th cousin 2x removed)

Marcus L. Brittain (3rd cousin 6x removed)

Joel Chesire

Enel Godlove

Mary Munn Freman (1st cousin 7x removed)

Eleanor M. Orr Ennis (7th cousin 2x removed)

James A. Stephenson (half 4th cousin 4x removed)

Solomon Vance (2nd cousin 6x removed)

April 1, 1550: Conclusion of the peace of Boulogne between England and France : Scotland is included therein. [1]

April 1, 1582: Our Current calendar was slightly modified by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582.[2] 10 days from October 1582 were completely erased from the calendar to allow the time to catch up. He also decreed that the new year would begin January 1, not in late March as it did before. The Protestant American colonies were slow to adopt the Popes new Calendar and did not change it for two hundred years. They continued to celebrate the new year at the end of March. The Americans were considered fools, which is a likely reason why April 1 is April fools day.[3]

April 1, 1586: James VI (6th cousin 12x removed) signs the treaty of alliance which he had arranged between England and Scotland; and Randolph^[4] then ambassador from Elizabeth to James, immediately despatches this treaty to London by Thomas Milles. [5]



April 1, 1708: Elizabeth Smith (2nd cousin 9x removed) , b. May 25, 1690; m. April 1, 1708 to Henry Harrison [i][xi].



.April 1, 1751: Anne Smith (wife of the 1st cousin 9x removed) wife of Thomas Smith acknowledged her dower, etc. Indenture dated December 24, 1750, recorded April 1, 1751 in DB C Pages 110-112, Fairfax Co., VA., conveys 598 acres from Thomas Smith and Anne Fowke Smith, his wife, of Truro Parish in Fairfax County, to daughters, Susannah Smith and Mary Smith, for natural love and affection, the parcel where Thomas and Anne then lived, in Fairfax Co., formerly Stafford County, to be divided equally between them. It also mentions in the property description "... William Darrell and his wife Ann, the daughter of Col George Mason." The land originated in a land grant to Thomas Standiford in 1703/4, referred to in "Beginning at a White Oak: Patents & Northern Neck Grants," (1977), by Beth Mitchell. [6]

April 1, 1756: Frederick the Great had abandoned his French ally during the War of Austrian Succession by signing a separate peace treaty with Austria in December 1745. At the same time, French officials realized that the Habsburg empire of Maria Theresa of Austria (3rd cousin 2x removed of the wife of the 21st grandfather) was no longer the danger it had been in the heyday of the Habsburgs, back in the 16th and 17th centuries, when they controlled Spain and much of the rest of Europe and presented a formidable challenge to France. The new dangerous power looming on the horizon was Prussia. In a "diplomatic revolution", the king overruled his ministers and signed the Treaty of Versailles with Austria on April 1, 1756, and put an end to more than 200 years of conflict with the Habsburgs. The new Franco-Austrian Alliance would last intermittently for the next thirty-five years.

Louis apparently expected that his alliance with Austria would prevent another war on the continent by confronting Prussia with two continental powers arrayed against him instead of just one, as had been the way during the War of the Austrian Succession. He was mistaken. Austria was determined to retrieve Silesia from Prussian control. [7]

April 1st, 1768: George Washington (grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) Journal:. At home with Mr. Crawford.(6th great grandfather)[8]



April 1, 1775: Explorer Daniel Boone establishes the settlement of Boonesborough on the Kentucky River.[9]

April 1, 1778: President John Adams, Jr.’s (1735 - 1825)(8th cousin 4x removed of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) first stay in Europe, between April 1, 1778, and June 17, 1779, was largely unproductive, and he returned to his home in Braintree in early August 1779. [10]

April 1, 1778

Winch, Joseph.(half 6th great granduncle) Private, Capt. John Homes's co., Col. Jonathan Reed's (1st) regt. of guards same co. and regt.; entered service April 1, 1778; service to July 3, 1778, 3 mos. 3 days, at Cambridge.[11]



April 1, 1783: Since Uriah Springer (husband of the 5th great grandmother)was the Power of Attorney for Moses Crawford, Sr. (Son of Lt. John Crawford and grandson of Col. William Crawford), this may have been the stretch of land Moses was entitled to. Probably was sold by Uriah Springer and the amount turned over to Moses Crawford, Sr., as part of his share. (See letter of Richard Crawford, written to his Uncle David Bradford).

Uriah Springer, (who was Power of Attorney to Moses Crawford’s share of Lt. John Crawford’s estate), had a son , Uriah Springer. The records of Brown County, Ohio, indicate that young Uriah Springer was collecting bounty lands belonging to his own father, (who was the second husband of Sarah, daughter of Col William Crawford). Uriah

Springer, Sr. ranked as a Captain. Here a transaction, involving Robert and Joseph Wardlow, concerning a United States patent. Pages 332, 333 and 334. Young Uriah Springer was a Justice of the Peace and he and his wife Nancy, lived at Williamsburg (which is in present Clermont County, Ohio). On East Fork of the Little Miami River, and where many of the early transactions were recorded. Note: the relationship between young Uriah springer and Moses Crawford, Sr., would be first cousins, since Moses’ father, John, was brother to young Uriah’s mother, Sarah.

At Circleville, Ohio, in Pickaway County (formed in 1810), Warrant no. 223, Uriah Springer, 700 acres. Surveyed about 1901 on no. 914 which no. belongs to Uriah Springer, St.

For his services in the American Revolutionary War, Uriah Springer, Sr., was entitled to about 4,000 acres of bounty lands. His warrants as follows and not to be confused with Crawford’s.

Warrant No. 222, Uriah Springer , 2,999 acres, Captain on the Va. Con’t Line, 3 years. Surveyed & dated April 1, 1783.

Warrant No. 223, Uriah Springer, 2,000 acres, Va. Con’t Line, 3 years. Surveyed April 1, 1783.

These surveys, like others are located in various places and in different sized plats.[12]

April 1, 1794: At the next session of the court held April, 1, 1794, called the Court of Quarter Sessions, the tavern rates were fixed as follows; Whisky, half a pint, 6d; breakfast, 1s, dinner, 1s 3d; supper, 1s; bed, 6d; corn and oats, 2d per quart; stable and hay for one horse, twenty-four hours, 1s. The seat of justice was at this court fixed at Cynthiana, on ground laid off for that purpose. The court agreed with Robert A Harrison (1st cousin 7x removed) to build a stray pen “ten panels square, none rail high, staked and ridered,” and for which he was afterward allowed ₤7 10s. [13]

April 1, 1804: As indicated by a detachment order, the captains had determined the constitution of the two parties, so far as the enlisted soldiers were concerned, and for the most part they adhered to that plan. Certain changes became necessary because of subsequent events, a possibility they had no doubt anticipated from the start. For instance, the two enlisted French boatmen, FranC with cedilla lowercase symbolois Labiche and Pierre Cruzatte, joined the ranks of the permanent party. Moses B. Reed and John Newman were expelled from the permanent party, the first for desertion, the other for insubordination. Sergeant Charles Floyd died, and Patrick Gass, another member of the permanent party, assumed his rank. To make up the losses in the permanent party, the captains transferred Robert Frazer from the original return party and enlisted Jean Baptiste Lepage, a French trapper encountered at the Mandan villages.[14] No mention of T. Moore (Thomas L. Moore, husband of the 5th great grandaunt) yet, a pilot on the first leg of the journey.



April 1, 1827

On April 1, 1827, Thomas Harrison Moore (1st cousin 6x removed) married in Harrison County, Kentucky, Martha Ann (Webb). It is said that his wife and children were on the journey to join their husband and father when word of her husband’s death was received while they were staying in the house of Thomas H. Moore’s uncle. Colonel Benjamin Harrison, in New Madrid, Missouri, the family returned to Many, La. [15]

April 1, 1837

The State of Ohio, Adams County.

I Joseph Darlington Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of the County aforesaid do hereby certify that the above named Asa Williamson & Charles Stephenson Esqrs who have signed two of the foregoing certificates of acknowledgments were at the time of signing the said certificates Justices of the Peace in & for the County aforesaid, duly commissioned and qualified & that full faith and credit are due to their said certificates & all other offical acts by them done as well in Courts of Justice as there — out——— And I further certify that the Hon: David C. Vance (2nd cousin 7x removed) who has signed the above certificate of acknowledgments was at the time of signing the same &- still is an Associate Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of the County aforesaid duly Commissioned & qualified & that full faith & credit are due to his said Cer­tificate as well in Courts of Justice as thereout.



In Testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and S.S. affixed the seal of the said Court at West Union this

1st day of April in the year of our Lord 1837 and in the

35th year of this State.

Joseph Darlington Clk. A. C.[16]



April 1, 1841: Secretary of State Daniel Webster sent word to John Tyler (11th cousin 1x removed of the wife of the nephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) of William Henry Harrison's (6th cousin 7x removed) illness on April 1; two days later, Richmond attorney James Lyons wrote with the news that the President had taken a turn for the worse, remarking that "I shall not be surprised to hear by tomorrow's mail that Gen'l Harrison is no more."[41] Tyler determined not to travel to Washington, not wanting to appear unseemly in anticipating the President's death.

April 1, 1853: (Conrad Goodlove) (3rd great grandfather) 1500 Acres According to 1850 Census which also indicates he was born in PA.



In the 1850 Census the land owned by Conrad was valued at $1500. Conrad reported he was 57 and was born in Pennsylvania. (Ref#13)

This would have been the parcel of ground which Conrad and Cordelia would have sold on April 1, 1853, to Eli Arbogast. [17]

His March 26, 1855, letter (Ref#20) on the second page he testified “that he has heretofore made application for Bounty Land under the Act of September 28, 1850, and received a land warrant for forty acres of land which he entered upon land at Defiance Land Office, Ohio, and received a patent therefore and has since disposed of said land and has therefore legally disposed of said land warrant and land and cannot now return the same.”

I believe the explanation for the second application for Bounty Land had to do with the information on the mustering out rate and the documents on file with the government office (Ref #9.1 & 9.2) showed he terminated on the 18th of September (September 18) whereas he has claimed he served as a “volunteer” until November 25th. It appears he did obtain an additional warrant for 120 acres. Whether he used this to purchase the Iowa property as well as the sale of land near the Defiance, Ohio, land office, I have not been able to determine to date. Another possible theory regarding the 40 acres “entered on” at Defiance, Ohio, is that after receiving warrant #24784 for 40 acres dated December 4, 1850, he sold the property in Clark County to Eli Arbogast April 1, 1853 (see Deed in Ref #14) and also sold the 40 acres “entered on” at the Defiance Land Office before departing to Iowa.

Mary and I visited the Ohio State Library and the Ohio State Historical Society in February, 2002, after attending the booth of our Agri-Safety, Inc. (wholesale agricultural safety supplies) at the National Farm Machinery Show. In search of records of Bounty Land Warrants we located an old handwritten log pertaining to warrant number 15231 which appears in Ref. #24: It was issued to Conrad

Goodlove. (Ref #___)[18]



April 1-2. 1862: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Battle of Shiloh Tenn. [19]

April 1, 1863: A thorough organization of the troops at Helena was effected
about the first of April. The 24th was transferred to the second brigade of the 12th division, 13th Army Corps, under command of General J. A. McClernand. The 12th division was placed under command of Brigadier General A. P. Hovey, while Colonel J. R. Slack, of the 47th Indiana, commanded the second brigade, composed of the 47th Indiana, the 56th Ohio, and the 28th and 24th Iowa regiments. All hailed the hour of our approaching departure with joy. Vicksburg was known to be the point of attack, but how or where no one was able to discover. The sufferings which all had experienced from the unhealthiness of the climate at Helena invested the final day of departure with a deep and solemn interest. There were none who had not a brother or favorite comrade sleeping the sleep that knows no waking on the bluffs above us or in the vale by the river bank below. During the three months of January, February and March alone, fifty of our comrades were interred at Helena, besides a great number that were sent to the hospitals at Cario, Memphis and St. Louis. [20]

April 1863: In the spring of 1863, General Grant was making his approaches upon Vicksburg. At that time Young's Point,across the river, was the limit of uninterrupted navigation, and there much sickness existed caused by the high water covering the low lands. bout April 1, Mrs Harvey began her work at this point, but after a few weeks she was overcome by the miasma, and was obliged to return to the North, where after a few months of rest in New York and Wisconsin, she recovered her health. It was on her return trip from the North that she visited Washington and obtained from President Abraham Lincoln (9th cousin 1x removed of the wife of the nephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) permission to establish a hospital in Wisconsin for convalescent soldiers.

Returning to the South Mrs. Harvey again visited all of the hospitals on the river, down as far as New Orleans, making Vicksburg the centre of her field of labor. Here her presence was in itself a power for good, so great was the reputation she had won in the army. Hospital officers and attendants were especially affected by her return; they knew how quickly she would find out and condemn any delinquency on their part, and they acted accordingly.[21]



Fri. April 1[22][23], 1864

Started on a forced march[24] to reinforce

Gen. Lees cavalry[25] at natchittoches[26]

Marched 22 miles in 6 ½ hours[27]

Rebs left captured part of them

4 captains

Camped close to town on camp gard at night

William Harrison Goodlove (2nd great grandfather) Civil War Diary, 24th Iowa Infantry[28]



April 1, 1865



On the 1st of April, Schofield’s force, composed of the Tenth Corps, under Terry, and the Twenty-third Corps, under Cox, was reconstructed by Sherman as the centre of his armies, and designated as the Army of the Ohio. The next day the troops of Grover’s division, then in North Carolina, were attached to the’ Tenth Corps, reorganized into three brigades, and designated as the First division; the command being given to Birge, and the brigades being commanded by the three senior colonels, Washburn, Graham, and Day. Some time before this, Shunk’s 4th brigade of Grover’s division had been broken up and its regiments distributed; the 8th and 18th Indiana to Washburn, the 28th Iowa to Graham, and the 24th Iowa to Day. The 22d Indiana battery formed the artillery of the division. [29]



April 1, 1865: Battle of Five Forks, VA.[30]



April 1, 1879: Carter Harrison III (8th cousin 5x removed) first became mayor of Chicago April 1, 1879 when he defeated Abner M. Wright (Republican) & Ernst Schmidt (Socialist Labor).[31]

April 1, 1884:James Augustus Stephenson, (half 4th cousin 4x removed) Born on April 1, 1884 in Triplett, Chariton County, Missouri. James Augustus died in Marecline, Linn County, Missouri on February 15, 1959; he was 74. [32]



April 1, 1886:


Lieutenant The Hon. John Bowes-Lyon

April 1, 1886

February 7, 1930

43 years

Known as Jock,[13] he married The Hon. Fenella Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis (daughter of Charles Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis, 21st Baron Clinton) in 1914, and had issue.


[33] (9th cousin 2x removed)

April 1, 1915

Harold Goodlove (1st cousin 2x removed) was in Central City, Tuesday.[34]



April to September 1915: Just a year or so before the organization of the Modern Klan an event took place of the very first importance in its influence upon the Northern sentiment toward the Klan, namesly, the production of David W. Griffith’s great moving picture, “The Birth of a Nation.” It is simply impossible to estimate the educative effect of this film masterpiece upon public sentiment. It is probable that the great majority of adult Americans have at one time or another seen this film. In the Boston theaters, where it was admitted only after a bitter fight that served merely to advertise it, the picture was shown twice daily from April to September 1915, to a total of almost four hundred thousand spectators. It broke the records in Boston and New York and in other large cities. That the modern Klan recognized the advertising value of “The Birth of a Nation” seems to be indicated in the proposal to make use of a moving picture as part of the Klan propaganda which “shows the hooded figures of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan riding to the rescue, and prortrays the final triumph of decent and orderly governemtn by real Americans over the alien influences now at work in our midst.” [35]

April 1: 1920: The emergence of the Nazi Party. (This happened on the anniversary of the day that Haman published his decree of extermination of the Jews.)[36]

April 1, 1924: Adolf Hitler is sentenced for his role in the Beer Hall Putsch of November 8, 1923. The attempted coup in Munich by right-wing members of the army and the Nazi Party was foiled by the government, and Hitler was charged with high treason. Despite his conviction, Hitler was out of jail before the end of the year, with his political position stronger than ever.

Germany was in the midst of a national crisis in the early 1920s. After World War I, its economy was in shambles, and hyperinflation caused widespread discontent. Hitler and the Nazis stepped into this breach with often-racist demagoguery that attracted a significant following throughout the nation.

The failed coup turned out to be quite a boon for Adolf Hitler. His trial brought him more attention and publicity than ever before. With a crowd of thousands-including press from around the world-watching the proceedings, Hitler made the most of this opportunity by going on the offensive.

Taking every chance to turn the subject away from the putsch itself, Hitler frequently made speeches about Germany's postwar plight. He blamed the Jews, Marxism, and France for all of the country's problems, repeatedly returning to his theme of hypernationalism. The conservative-leaning judges did nothing to stop Hitler or keep the focus on the attempted coup. The prosecutors, who had been threatened by Hitler's student followers, shrank from challenging the defendant.

It soon became evident that Hitler was winning the public relations battle by using the 25-day trial as a showcase for his extreme right-wing views, even if he was technically losing the case. In his closing argument, Hitler declared that he would ignore the court's verdict because the "Eternal Court of History" would acquit him.

After his conviction, Hitler spent the remainder of the year in prison writing the first volume of Mein Kampf. By the time he was released, he had become more popular than ever, and within eight years he had taken over Germany.[37]

• April 1, 1933: On the eve of World War II Hanover had one of the 10 largest Jewish communities in Germany, with over 20 cultural and welfare institutions. The anti-Jewish boycott started even before the nationwide boycott of April 1, 1933, when the Karstadt Department store fired all its Jewish employees.[38]



• April 1, 1933 : A one day nationwide boycott of Jewish businesses is carried out in Germany.[39]



April 1, 1933: According to a report by Morton Rotehnberg, President of the Zionist Organization of America, 11,000 German Jewish refugees had entered Palestine from April 1, 1933 through January 1, 1934. As co-chair of the United Jewish Appeal, Rothenberg is contributions totaling three million dollars to aid the refugees from Germany.” At the same time, Dr. Arthur Hantke, director of the Palestine Foundation Fund reported that “there is no unemployment.” There is an “insistent demand for workers” throughout the country meaning that the influx of immigrants will be a net economic gain.[40]





April 1, 1934: Hitler agreed to a nationwide boycott of Jewish businessmen and professionals to be known as “Boycott Day” which would take place on April 1. The boycott is designed to last indefinitely or until the Jews have been completely eliminated from the German economy.[41]



April 1, 1936: French conservatives condemned French Socialist leader Léon Blum because of his Jewish ancestry and his strongly anti-Nazi orientation. A popular slogan at the time condemned the future French premier: "Better Hitler than Blum."[42]



April 1, 1940: Shanghai, China, accepted thousands of Jewish refugees.[43]



April 1, 1941: A ghetto was established at Kielce, Poland. German overseers of the ghetto renamed some of the streets. New names were Zion Street, Palestine Street, Jerusalem Street, Moses Street, Non-Kosher Street, and Grynszpan Street.[44]



April 1, 1941: A men's annex was established at the Ravensbrück concentration camp located in Germany,[45]



April 1, 1941: Agitation by exiled Palestinian Mufti Hajj Amin El Husseini in Iraq leads to coup. Pro-Axis Government under Rashid Ali.[46] A pro-Axis officer clique headed by Rashid Ali al-Gaylani seized power in Iraq, and prepared airfields for German use.[47]



April 1, 1941: 1941: The first Croatian concentration camp began operation, at Danica. Four more Croat camps were opened, at Loborgrad, Jadovno, Gradiska, and Djakovo.[48]



April 1, 1941: A pro-Allied coup is carried out in Yugoslavia.[49]



April 1, 1942: Sobibór death camp was nearly operational; gassings would begin in May.[50]



April 1, 1942: The Nazis deported 965 Slovakian Jews to Auschwitz.[51]

April 1, 1943: 1943: Pope Pius XII complained that Jews are demanding and ungrateful.[52]

April 1, 1945

Another major American assault began, this time on the island of Okinawa. It was to be the dress rehearsal for mainland Japan.[53]



April 1, 1946: Covert Lee Goodlove (grandfather) Initiated March 11, 1946 Passed April 1 1946, Raised April 22, 1946, all at Vienna Lodge No 142. Suspended November 13, 1972, Reinstated January 10, 1973. Demitted May 10, 1988 when they closed. Birthdate November 12, 1911, Died August 30, 1997. May 10, 1988 joined Benton City LodgeNo. 81, Shellsburg, IA. Became a 50 Year Mason, June 19, 1996. Karen L. Davies Administrative Assistant, Grand Lodge of Iowa A.F. & A.M.PO Box 279, Cedar Rapids, IA 52406-0279. 319-365-1438.



1946: A year after the end of hostilities a Nazi underground movement remained active in Bavaria.[54]



1946: Jerusalem population during Late British Mandate (Christian rule), 165,000.[55]



1946: Bikini string is invented.[56]



April 1, 1956: The Diary of Anne Frank wins the Tony7 Award for Best Play of 1955.[57]



April 1, 1961

Oswald’s Diary: Apr: 1st-30 We are going steady and I decide I must have her, she

puts me off so on April 15 I propose, she accepts. [58]



April 1, 1963 Oswald loses his job with Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall (a photography firm) for

poor job performance. He is given until April 6th to leave.

During this month, JFK tells Averell Harriman that the US must “seize upon any favorable

moment to reduce our involvement (in Vietnam)” -- although that moment “might yet be some time

away.”

The New York Times reports: “Seventeen heavily armed Cuban exiles planning to attack a

Soviet tanker off Cuba were seized yesterday by a British force on a solitary islet in the Bahamas chain . . . .

The capture was apparently the first result of an agreement worked out late last week by Washington and

London to cooperate in preventing raids by opponents of Premier Fidel Castro . . . [In Miami], Cuban

exiles reacted with a mixture of anger, defiance and gloom . . .” The anti-Castro raiding party is led by

Jerry Buchanan, a member of Frank Sturgis’s International Anti-Communist Brigade.

Shortly before this date, a New Orleans immigration inspector will later testify that he is

absolutely certain he interviews Lee Harvey Oswald in a New Orleans jail cell. The inspector

will later not remember whether LHO was using that particular name, but is certain that Oswald

was claiming to be a Cuban alien. The inspector quickly ascertains that LHO is not a Cuban alien

and subsequently leaves LHO alone. This period of time - sometime before April 1 -- predates

the real Oswald’s descent on New Orleans. [59]



April 1, 1970: President Nixon signs a bill banning cigarette advertising on television.[60]



April 1, 2012


[61]
[62]


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[73]

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


[2] Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 2010 Vol 36 NO 5 Page 16.


[3] Secret Access: The Vatican, 12/22/2010


[4] * From this period there is scarcely any mention of Cherelles in

the correspondence of the time. Only it is certain that he did not

receive the just punishment due to his crimes; for in a life of Mary

published at Paris in 1793 by Girouard, there is, at page 74, a

note in which Cherelles is mentioned with much respect ; it is also

added that he died at Paris, aged upwards of eighty years.


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


[6] Beginning at a White Oak: Patents & Northern Neck Grants," (1977), by Beth Mitchell.




[7] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XV_of_France


[8] William Crawford’s visit was not purely social. By the fall of 1767 GW had concluded that because the survey of the Pennsylvania-Maryland boundary line (Mason and Dixon’s Line) would soon be completed, and because west­ern expansion (temporarily barred by the Royal Proclamation of Oct. 1763) would soon be at least partially opened up by a treaty with the Indians, the time was ripe for acquiring tracts of choice land in western Pennsylvania and the Ohio Valley. GW made a major effort between 1769 and 1773 to acquire for himself and other Virginians land promised to those who had fought in the French and Indian War. At the outbreak of that war, Robert Dinwiddie, lieutenant governor of Virginia, signed a proclamation dated ii Feb. 1754 setting aside 200,000 acres on the Ohio River for the officers and men who voluntarily served in the upcoming campaign against the French. Nine years later, in 1763, a royal proclamation rewarded the officers and men who had served in America during the French and Indian War with tracts of western land, ranging from 50 acres for privates to 5,000 acres for field officers. Because the Proclamation of 1763 had closed the transmontane west to settlement, the Virginia veterans were not able to acquire their bounty lands under either proclamation for nearly a decade after the war. On December 15, 1769, however, GW petitioned the Virginia governor and council on behalf of the officers and men of the Virginia Regiment of for the 200,000 acres of land promised them by Dinwiddie. The council agreed that 200,000 acres would be surveyed along the Great Kanawha and Ohio rivers for the benefit of the 1754 veterans (Va. Exec.Jls., 6:337—38). William Crawford, who often served as GW’s agent in the west, made the first survey in 1771. GW received four tracts of land surveyed by Crawford, three on the Ohio River between the Little Kanawha and Great Kanawha rivers totaling 9,157 acres and one tract of io, 990 acres along the Great Kanawha. In the second bounty allotment under the Proclamation of (?) made in November i~ he secured a tract of 7,276 acres on the Great Kanawha, 3,953 acres in his own right and the rest by a trade with George Muse (ibid., 513—14, 548—49).

On November 6, 1773, after gaining the Virginia council’s approval for the second allotment of land under the Proclamation of GW persuaded the governor and council to authorize warrants of survey on the “western waters” for those entitled to land under the Royal Proclamation of 1763 (Hening, 7:663—69). Under the second proclamation GW was entitled to 5,000 acres for his own service as colonel of the Virginia Regiment. In addition, he already had purchased shares entitling him to an additional 5,000 acres from other officers, and in 1774 he obtained the right to purchase 3,000 more acres through his purchase of a warrant of survey from a former captain in the 2d Virginia Regiment.

Crawford’s appearance today at Mount Vernon, allowing land discussions that were spread over a six-day period, was GW’s first opportunity to confer personally with his man in the field.


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


[10] http://www.geni.com/people/John-Adams-2nd-President-of-the-USA-Signer-of-the-Declaration-of-Independence/6000000012593135757


[11] Ancestry.com. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols. [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1998. Original data: Secretary of the Commonwealth. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution. Vol. I-XVII. Boston, MA, USA: Wright and Potter Printing Co., 1896.


[12] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, pp. 187-189.


[13] History of Harrison County, Ref 42.2 Conrad and Caty, by Gary Goodlove, 2003 Author Unknown


[14] The Lewis and Clark Expedition


[15] John F. Woolsey. Jr #5000 Chapter 35. The Sons of the Republic of Texas sent by John Moreland.


[16] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U.; Emahiser, 1969, p 244-245.


[17] (Ref#14) Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003




[18] (Ref#14) Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003


[19] The Civil War explodes in the west as the armies of Union General Ulysses S. Grant and Confederate General Albert Sidney Johnston collide at Shiloh, near Pittsburgh Landing in Tennessee. The Battle of Shiloh became one of the bloodiest engagements of the war, and the level of violence shocked North and South alike.

For six months, Yankee troops had been working their way up the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers. Kentucky was firmly in Union hands, and now the Federals controlled much of Tennessee, including the capital at Nashville. Grant scored major victories at Forts Henry and Donelson in February, forcing Johnston to gather the scattered Rebel forces at Corinth in northern Mississippi. Grant brought his army, 42,000 strong, to rendezvous with General Don Carlos Buell and his 20,000 troops. Grant's objective was Corinth, a vital rail center that if captured would give the Union total control of the region. Twenty miles away, Johnston lurked at Corinth with 45,000 soldiers.

Johnston did not wait for Grant and Buell to combine their forces. He advanced on April 3, delayed by rains and muddy roads that also slowed Buell. In the early dawn of April 6, a Yankee patrol found the Confederates poised for battle just a mile from the main Union army. Johnston attacked, driving the surprised bluecoats back near a small church called Shiloh, meaning "place of peace." Throughout the day, the Confederates battered the Union army, driving it back towards Pittsburgh Landing and threatening to trap it against the Tennessee River. Many troops on both sides had no experience in battle. The chances for a complete Confederate victory diminished as troops from Buell's army began arriving, and Grant's command on the battlefield shored up the sagging Union line. In the middle of the afternoon, Johnston rode forward to direct the Confederate attack and was struck in the leg by a bullet. The ball severed an artery, and Johnston quickly bled to death. He became the highest ranking general on either side killed during the war. General Pierre G. T. Beauregard assumed control, and he halted the advance at nightfall. The Union army was driven back two miles, but it did not break.

The arrival of additional troops from Buell's army provided Grant with reinforcements, while the Confederates were worn out from their march. The next day, Grant pushed the Confederates back to Corinth for a major Union victory.

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/battle-of-shiloh-begins




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


[21] http://secondwi.com/wisconsinpeople/mrs_louis_harvey.htm


[22] The 1st of April, the command reached Natchitoches, after a march of nearly three hundred miles from Berwick Bay.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24th_Iowa_Volunteer_Infantry_Regiment


[23] In response to an urgent request for support from General Lee, the regiment resumed the march at 5:30 a.m. on Friday, April 1, and pushed on twenty-three miles to Natchitoches, covering the distance in seven hours with only four halts for rests. Reaching town at 12:30 p.m., the captain of Company B boasted of the march writing, "we made nearly four miles an hour. That is the fastest marching we have ever done & when you hear any one tell of doing better you can with good reason doubt the truth of his story." [41] Letter, WTR to father April 2, 1864.

Rigby and the Red Oak Boys welcomed the opportunity to rest for several days at Natchitoches, during which time they wrote letters home, played cards, and bathed in the river. Indications, however, were growing stronger that battle was soon imminent and the soldiers from Iowa cleaned their equipment in anticipation of combat.


[24] In response to an urgent request for support from General Lee, the regiment resumed the march at 5:30 a.m. on Friday, April 1, and pushed on twenty three miles to Natchitoches, covering the distance in seven hours with only four halts for rests. Reaching town at 12:30 p.m., the captain of Company B boasted of the march writing, “we made nearly four miles an hour. That is the fastest marching we have ever done & when you hear any one tell of doing better you can with good reason doubt the truth of his story.”

(Letter,William T. Rigby to father, April 2, 1864.)

(William T. Rigby and the Red Oak Boys in Louisiana by Terrence J. Winschel)

http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/bai/winschel.htm




[25] Lieuteneant Lucas reported that the only opposition to the advance was scattered by Brigadier General Albert L. Lee’s Cavalry which was well in advance of the infantry. (A History of the 24th Iowa Infantry 1862-1865 by Harvey H. Kimble Jr. August 1974.)




[26] The head of Franklin’s column reached Natchitoches on April 1, only a day behind the cavalry, having covered the eighty miles from Alexandria in four days. (O. R., xxxiv, Part I, 428, 445.) The Federals found Natchitoches to be a prosperous and handsome town with many expensive buildings, some of them of Spanish architecture. Most of the citizens, even those whose cotton had been burnt by the Confederates, were bitterly and outspokenly hostile toward the invaders, although the female population could not forbear looking through the windows at the passing troops. (Newsome, Experience in the War, p. 123.) Red River Campaign by Ludwell H. Johnson p. 112.




[27] The troops arrived at Natchitoches, La., having marched 290 miles. Ed Wright, (Roster of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion Together with Historical Sketches of Volunteer Organizations 1861-1866 Vol. III, 24th Regiment – Infantry, Published by authority of the general Assembly, under the direction of Brig. Gen. Guy E. Logan, Adjutant General.)

ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ia/state/military/civilwar/book/cwbk 24.txt


[28] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[29] History of the Nineteenth Army Corps by Richard B. Irwin, 1892, page 350.


[30] (State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.)


[31] 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.

Return to Index of Harrison Biographies

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




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


[33] Wikipedia


[34] Winton Goodlove Papers.


[35] The Ku Klux Klan: A Study of the American Mind, by John Moffatt Mecklin, Ph. D. 1924, page 71-72.


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


[37] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/beer-hall-putsch-secures-hitlers-rise-to-power


[38] Source: Encyclopaedia Judaica. © 2008 The Gale Group. All Rights Reserved.




[39] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1759.


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


[49] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1765.


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


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


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


[53]History’s Turning Points, The Atomic Bomb, HISTI.


[54] Encyclopedia Judaica, volume 4, page 346.


[55] Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr. page 200.


[56] The Epic History of Everyday Things, H2, 2011


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


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


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


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


[61] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[62] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[63] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[64] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[65] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[66] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[67] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[68] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[69] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[70] Fullersburge Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[71] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[72] Fullersburge Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[73] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[74] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[75] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[76] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[77] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrrok, IL


[78] Fullersburg Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[79] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[80] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[81] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[82] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[83] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[84] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[85] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL


[86] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook IL


[87] Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve, Oakbrook, IL



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