Thursday, April 10, 2014

This Day in Goodlove history, April 10, 2014

Like us on Facebook!
https://www.facebook.com/ThisDayInGoodloveHistory

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Jeff-Goodlove/323484214349385

Join me on http://www.linkedin.com/

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 10…

Henry C. Connell (half 3rd cousin 4x removed)

Jennie Godlove

Lewis Godlove

Cameron F. Hall (5th great grandnephew of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle.)

James V (4th cousin 14x removed)

Eloise V. Lewis Schrader (3rd great grandniece of the 3rd great granduncle)

Sarah Reeves Mendell (mother in law of the half 2nd cousin 5x removed)

George M. Story (1st cousin 1x removed)

Louisa Taylor

Harriet S. Thomas Martin (wife of the 4th cousin 3x removed)

Sharla K. Wall (3rd cousin 1x removed)

Ronald H. Westphal (2nd cousin)

Sharon K. Williams Garee (3rd great grandniece of the wife of the third great granduncle)

Daniel Winch (half 6th great granduncle)

April 10, 1110:




Emperor Henry V (11th cousin 26x removed) and Matilda (25th great grandmother).

When Matilda was still in early childhood, envoys from Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor, travelled to England and asked for her hand in marriage. In spring of 1110 she was sent to Germany, taking with her a large dowry, estimated at 10,000 marks in silver, to become the bride of the emperor.[4] The couple met at Liège before travelling to Utrecht where, on April 10, they became officially betrothed.[5][1]

April 10, 1512: James V of Scotland (4th cousin 14x removed)





Anonymous portrait of James V, probably contemporary


King of Scots


Reign

September 9, 1513 – December 14,1542


Coronation

September 21, 1513


Predecessor

James IV


Successor

Mary I



Spouse

Madeleine of Valois (1537)
Mary of Guise (1538–42)


more...

Issue


Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney
James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray
Mary, Queen of Scots


House

House of Stewart


Father

James IV of Scotland


Mother

Margaret Tudor


Born

(1512-04-10)April 10, 1512
Linlithgow Palace, Linlithgowshire


Died

December 14, 1542(1542-12-14) (aged 30)
Falkland Palace, Fife


Burial

Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh


James V (April 10, 1512 – December 14, 1542) was King of Scots from September 9, 1513 until his death, which followed the Scottish defeat at the Battle of Solway Moss. His only surviving legitimate child, Mary, succeeded him to the throne when she was just six days old.

James was son of King James IV of Scotland and his queen Margaret Tudor, a daughter of Henry VII of England, and was the only legitimate child of James IV to survive infancy. He was born on April 10, 1512, at Linlithgow Palace, Linlithgowshire and christened the next day, receiving the titles Duke of Rothesay and Prince and Great Steward of Scotland.[1] He became king at just seventeen months old when his father was killed at the Battle of Flodden Field on 9 September 1513.[2]

Titles, styles, honours, and arms[edit]




Full achievement of Arms as King of Scots

April 10, 1512 – September 9, 1513: The Duke of Rothesay[3]

James V of Scotland

House of Stewart

Born: April 10, 1512 Died: December 14, 1542[4]

April 10, 1580: A report was spread that on the 10th of that month (April 10), Lennox and his party intended to seize James VI (6th cousin 12x removed) at Stirling, conduct him to Dumbarton, and thence to France ; so every precaution was taken to counteract this project."^ [5]



Mary Queen of Scots,(5th cousin 13x removed) perceiving that her plans in respect to her son were partially discovered, abandoned for the time all attempts of the kind, and restricted herself to a renewal of her solicitations to the Queen and Council of England that she might be set at liberty. But, shortly thereafter, she ordered the Archbishop of Glasgow to resume his negotiations with the ambassador of Philip II in France, to devise means for carrying off the Scottish prince, and taking him to

Flanders or Spain. [6]



April 10, 1585: Pope Gregory XHI dies at Rome. [7]

April 10, 1599: After Henry IV (father in law of the 7th cousin 11x removed) became king of France, it was of the utmost importance that he provide an heir to the crown in order to avoid the problem of a disputed succession. Henry himself favoured the idea of obtaining an annulment of his marriage to Margaret, and taking Gabrielle d'Estrées as his bride; after all, she had already borne him three children. Henry's councilors strongly opposed this idea, but the matter was resolved unexpectedly by Gabrielle's sudden death in the early hours of April 10, 1599, after she had given birth to a premature stillborn son. His marriage to Margaret was annulled in 1599, and he then married Marie de' Medici in 1600.[8]

April 10, 1606: Letters Patents were granted by James the First King of England, (6th cousin 12 x removed)

&c. to Sir Thomas Gates, Sir George Somers, Knights,

Richard Hackluit, Clerk, Prebendary of Westminster, Edward-Maria

Wingfield, and others * * * adventurers of and for our City of London

* * * for two several Colonies and Plantations to be made in Virginia

and other parts and Territories of America.* [9]



A governing body was established in England called "Our Council of

Virginia" with an approved seal, which was to designate the local Council

in the colony, And it was further decreed, "that all and every the persons

being our subjects, which shall dwell and inhabit within every or any of

the said several colonies and plantations and every of their children, which

shall happen to be born within any of the limits and precincts of the said

several colonies and plantations, shall have and enjoy all liberties, fran-

chises, and immunities, within any of our other dominions, to all intents

and purposes, as if they had been abiding and born, within the realm of

England, or any other of our said dominions." [10]



Wednesday April 10, 1754

Lt. Colonel Washington's (grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) Virginia Regiment arrives in Winchester VA, and is joined by new recruits gathered by Captain Adam Stephen. The regiment thus grows in size to 159 troops. [11]



April 10th, 1760

Thursday April 10th.(George Washington Journal) Mrs. Washington was blooded by Doctr. Laurie who stayd all Night.

This Morning my Plows began to Work in the Clover Field, but a hard Shower of Rain from No. Et. (where the Wind hung all clay) aht. ii Oclock, stopd them for the Remainder of the day. I therefore Employd the hands in making two or three hauls of the Sein, & found that the Herrings were come.

Val Crawford (6th great granduncle) brought 4 Hhds. of my Mountain Tobo. to the

Warehouses in Alexa. two in my own Waggon and with a Plow

such as they use mostly in Frederick came here in the Night.

He informd me of my worthy Overseer Hardwicks lying since

the 17th. LJlto. in Winchester of a Broken Leg.



Valentine Crawford (d. 1777) lived near GW’s Bullskin plantation in

Frederick County and was regularly hired to bring down GWs mountain

tobacco from those quarters. Valentine was the brother of Col. William

Crawford (1732-178e) and half brother to John. Hugh. Richard. and Marcus

Stephenson, sons of Richard and Onora (Grimes) Crawford Stephenson, all of whom appear in the diaries.[12]



James Cleveland to George Washington, April 10, 1775

THE BANCKS OF THE YAUGHIOGY April 10th 1775

With much Difictualy I got out the fifth Day of April to gilberts Simpsons; Wheare I found all the Hands but under stood that ther Was but two Canneu-- Next Day I Went to Majs Crawfords (6th great grandfather( to see Stephenes (half 6th great granduncle) & And Crawfords Stephenes told me that he had been there Tenn Days, gitting the tules I asket him how did you did Expect to git Down he said he had made the hands Digg one Weick,(1) he said made three, I told him two of them seemed old he Told me that tha were the Canneus that weare Got last year For Col Gorge washington I asket him if he Could Not have Got Canneus made by this Time, he said he Could but Major Crawford deseved him by telling him from time to time, that he would Provid Canneus I Asket him if Crawford had faild In So Truth full a promis as he had made to me which you have been informed as you Came by my house I told him he wass to blame then I spock with Crawford But reserved but littel sattes faction then I spock with Mr pasten [?] and asket him what he had Done he told Me he had got the Corn that I ingaged for Mr young & bought bacon & made his Canneus and was Ready to go Down I left Crawfords & have got two More & have got all the bacon that is left & all The rest Except three Caskes of Corn left at Sympsons I am in hopes you Qa~ Contrive to bring With you as I am Shore I shall want it as there Is but 21 Casks left the Caskes holds 3 1/2 busheles of Corn the bacon is all gone but 2 1/2 Casks



[Note 1: 1 Week ?



SIR



Major Crawford Chues to keep John nite[13] he has sent thomas White but he has such a Wound on his foot that I Dont think proper to tack him Down with me jie is baten very bad besides & has a very bad Name with all pursons Next he has but one Shirt So I have Directed Him to return home to Crawford again as he keeps the good & let him have the bad we have Got but i6 Axes & 8 hilling hoes two mat-axes which Is Not tueles a nuf but I shall doe the best I Can While You Come out then Please to bring as much of Every thing as you thinck Proper vallaintine Crawford being from home Stepens has not Got All the things but as I have not had Time to Settele with him I Cant give you al Full a Count of matters as I might Doe one of the Cannues is to Pay for yet 22/6 is the prise one bell at 11/6 these I bought of Gilbert Sympson it being pennsylvania money Intend Down the river to Day if god Permits I am told that I Cant go tell rain Comes but I Intend To trie my best I am so furleaged [?] at this time That prohaps I may Not thinck of all that I Might Do No more at present but If you Will Give me leave to Subcribe my Selef your Frind & humbel Sarvent

JAMES CLEVELAND



N B Please to let Mr John west know that That All his provisions is all lost & two of his Staves one of the best & the thura best As All of his things was lost & one Cros Cut Saw & Seven axes And one pot as I was about five miles from the plase I went to the Spot and have got all my things and Put them in one of the Cannues which is to Be Down this morning if my Cannues Can Swim I Shall go Down with them & Stevens & the remainder of the hands

I find I migt leave one of the sarvents with Mr. Sympson as he Cant Travil & we are loded to the brim all most I have Directed him to sell him if he Cant to put him to the mill to worck as Soon as he is abel So I Conclud your as above[14]



Monday, April 10th, 1775

Crossed the Fallen Timbers. Occasioned by a violent gust of wind from the east. The Trees are either torn up by the roots or broke off near the ground. Some Oaks 2 foot diameter are broke off and the tops carried to a considerable distance. Scarcely one tree left standing. I am told it continues 100 Miles in a west course and about a mile broad. Dined at the Great Meadows, a. large marshy place clear of trees. Saw the vestiges of Fort Necessity. This was a small picketed Fort built by Colnl. Washington in the year 1754. About a mile to the westward of this Fort, General Braddock is buried at a small Run. They tell me he was buried in the middle of the road to prevent the Indians digging up his body. Crossed the Laurel Mountain. Saw the place where Colonel Dunbar was encamped when he received the news of General Braddoçk’s defeat in 1755. Great quantities of broken Bombshells, cannon, bullets, and other military stores scattered in the woods. This is called the Laurel Mountain from the great quantities of Laurel that grow upon it. A most delightful prospect of the country to the westward of it. Called at Gist’s Fort. Crossed the Yaughagany River at the Steward’s Crossings. Got to Zachariah Connel’s, Brother-in-law to George Rice. Much fatigued this evening. Heavy rain most part of the day.[15]



April 10, 1783


Thomas L. Moore…(husband of the 5th great grandaunt)

[16]





April 10, 1794: The establishment of Meason, Dillon & Co. produced large quantities of castings, stoves, pots, dog irons, sugar kettles, salt kettles, and other articles. The following advertisement of theirf business appears in the Pittsburgh Gazette of 1794:

Meason, Dillon & Co.;

Have for Sale at their furnace on Dunbar’s Run, Fayette county, three miles from Stewart’s Crossings, on Youghiogheny river, a supply of well assorted castings, which they will sell for cash at the reduced price of ₤35 per ton.

Union Furnace, April 10, 1794.[17]



Isaac Meason is the husband of the 5th great grandaunt.



April 10, 1794: Two tracts of land, one called “Stafford,” and the other “Rich Plain,”located where McCormick settled, were warranted to William Crawford, but soon afterwards became the property of William McCormick, and were patented to him May 28, 1795. A saw mill was erected by him on these premises. An agreement was made by McCormick (April 10, 1794) to sell a part of these tracts to John Gilson for ₤252, and on the 7th of December, 1796, the property was deeded by McCormick to Gilson.



spring 1793 Shenandoah County, Va., Frederick Heiskell of Edinburg paid the

and spring 1794 personal property tax for several men who were probably his employees. Among them was [no first name] Gutlope/Gudlope.[18]



April 10, 1815: Volcano, Mount Tambora, Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia; 1815, Apr 10; VEI 7; 150 cubic kilometres (36 cu mi) of tephra;[5] an estimated 200 million tons of sulfur dioxide were emitted, produced the "Year Without a Summer"[11][19]

1815: Y OUNKIN, SAMUEL, farmer; I Sec. 8; P. 0. Riverside; was born in Virginia, November 2, 1798; at the age of seventeen years, he with his parents moved to Perry county, Ohio; he was there raised and learned the trade of tailor, but when he became of age, he followed farming as occupation; he remained in Ohio for twenty-eight years

1815

Barbara Godlove was born about 1815 in Hampshire County and died in Wardensville.[20]



1815-In 1815, Col. Isaac Meason and his sons Isaac and Thomas erected Dunbar Furnace on Dunbar Creek, near the line between Dunbar and Wharton. It was afterwards known as Centre Furnace. The furnace was in blast until 1830 and under the control of Col. Measons sons at the last. In 1830 it was given up. One may yet see the ruins of the old building there. (Circa 1882).[21]



April 10, 1837:


Sophia Sidney, Baroness De L'Isle and Dudley

August 1796

April 10, 1837


Married Philip Sidney, 1st Baron De L'Isle and Dudley, and had issue.


[22]

Sophia Sidney …14th cousin 4x removed


William IV (13th cousin 5x removed) drawn by his daughter Sophia de L'Isle and Dudley in early 1837[23]





April 10, Note: there are duplicate entries here. Benjamin and Maria Fleming April 10, 1838, Vol. 162, page 262. [24]



April 10, 1845: Wm. Crawford Stephenson, (half 3rd cousin 5x removed) son of Marcus and Kathryn Stephenson, was born in Carroll County, near DeWitt, Mo., April 10, 1845 and died February 28, 1931, near Keytesville, Mo., age 85 years, 10 months and 18 days. At the age of 3 years his mother died and he was cared for by his older sisters. When he was 18 years old he joined the Confederate Army and served under General Sterling Price until the close of the war.



On December 21, 1879, he was married to Martha A. Jenkins. To this union six children were born: of the home; Roy, Watertown, South Dakota; Mrs. Stella Mauzey, Mendon; and Mrs. Arbelle Beebe of Marceline. Seven grandchildren also survive.



Only one brother of the family is left to mourn his death, Tolbert Stephenson, all others passing away several years ago.



Mr. Stephenson joined the Methodist church about 45 years ago.



He was a good and kindly neighbor and will be sorely missed.



Rev. Lynn of Huntsville, conducted the funeral services at Bethel church Monday afternoon in the presence of a large concourse of friends and neighbors. Thus ends the earthly life of one of (remainder missing).

-----

Notes alongside obituary handwritten by Mabel Hoover:

“Wm. Crawford Stephenson entered the Civil War 1863 until the close 1865. Pvt. under Gen. Sterling Price. Confederate Army in Tex.”



On December 21, 1879 when William Crawford was 34, he married Martha A. JENKINS. Born on January 20, 1859 in Keytesville, Missouri. Martha A. died in Keytesville, Missouri on April 22, 1925; she was 66. [25]





April 10, 1852: Elizabeth STEPHENSON. (half 2nd cousin 6x removed) Born on December 7, 1796. Elizabeth died on April 10, 1852; she was 55. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.



In February 1813 when Elizabeth was 16, she married Traver MOORE. Born on December 3, 1790. Traver died in Kentucky on December 22, 1874; he was 84. Buried in Moore Cemetery, Kentucky.



They had the following children:

i. Infant Son. Born about 1813.

ii. Infant Daughter. Born in 1815. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.

iii. Harriett. Born in 1817. Harriett died on June 14, 1819; she was 2. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky. [26]



Sun. April 10, 1864:

Marched 8 miles camped in 1 pm went on picket 2 nites without sleep slept

Good on picket on retreat for grandecor for supplies[27]

William Harrison Goodlove (2nd great grandfather) Civil War Diary[28]



April 10, 1865: Applauding their courage and valor, Confederate General Robert E. (husband of the step great granddaughter of the grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) gives his formal farewell to the Army of Northern Virginia.[29]

Lee resisted calls by some officers to reject surrender and allow small units to melt away into the mountains, setting up a lengthy guerrilla war. He insisted the war was over and energetically campaigned for inter-sectional reconciliation. "So far from engaging in a war to perpetuate slavery, I am rejoiced that slavery is abolished. I believe it will be greatly for the interests of the South."[81][30]

April 10, 1865

It (the 24th Iowa) was then ordered to Goldsborough[31], North Carolina where it was transported by rail, arriving on April 10 as the last of Sherman’s army was marching out.. The health of the regiment is good. Supply of clothing, moderate. Arms in excellent condition.[32][33]

Although the regiment had been reassigned to the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division of the X Army Corps, the men were disappointed to learn that the 24th would not join in Sherman’s advance. They would, instead, garrison the city of Goldsboro.[34]

Occupying an excellent campsite left by Sherman’s advancing army, the 24th benefitted from many items left behind. Rigby’s mess secured a large hospital “fly” tent, well furnished with bunks, tables, and chairs. A cooking apartment was attached, complete with a box cupboard. Private Rigby was thrilled to find also a copy ofr Finley’s Western Methodism and Dr. Cutter’s Revised Physiology. [35]

Goldsboro was an important railroad junction and contained a women’s seminary. The citizens were far from hospitable, and Rigby proclaimed: “We would suppose, at least some refinement amo ng the fair sex from the fine edifice erected for their culture. But on an average they are a fair specimen of clay eating, snuff suckers. Their seminary is now devoted to the use of our sick and wounded while its former inmates have gone out to bless the world by encouraging treason, and making clothing for traitors.[36]








The unit was to be used for escorting the President. When Lincoln went to the Old Soldiers home in June, 1864, the unit also had gained the responsibility of guarding Anderson Cottage, where Lincoln stayed.



Lieutenant George Ashmun of this unit responded to the question “How did it happen that , with a guard and escort provided , he was at Ford’s Theatre that eventful night unprotected?”



It had never been thought necessary for him to be guarded when going out for an evening in that way. It was understood that he preferred not to be accompanied in such fashion, when mingling with the people in such places, and in some way the alarm felt during the preceding autumn had lessened. At least the escort heard nothing of the special apprehension and were as unprepared for the attack on him as people in Ohio were. It is true, however that at almost any time a person with Booth’s reckless determination could have reached and killed the President at the White House, or in his walks to the War Department, for it was an almost daily thing to see him walking alone and leisurely to and from his interviews with Secretary Stanton; and it would have been easy for such an assassin to have met him there.[37]

APRIL 10-14, 1865: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Advance on Raleigh April 10-14. [38]

April 10, 1899: Carter Harrison Jr (9th cousin 4x removed) terms as Mayor of Chicago

Inauguration:

2nd term: April 10, 1899 [39]

April 10, 1941: Riots break out in Antwerp against Jews. Also the Croatian state is set up by the Germans and Italians.[40]

April 10, 1942:




Wildcat of VF-6 testing out machine guns aboard USS Enterprise, April 10, 1942


Uncle Howard Snell was on board the USS Enterprise.




April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March begins as the Japanese force American and Philippine prisoners to march 85 miles in 6 days, resulting in over 5200 American deaths. [41]



April 10, 1961 The Internal Revenue Service files an $835,396 tax lien against

Carlos Marcello and his wife. [42]



April 10, 1962 The United States Steel Corporation suddenly announces an immediate

increase of six dollars a ton in the price of steel, four times the cost of the new labor agreement.

Five other steel companies quickly fall into step. Labor leaders express outrage, claiming they

have been betrayed. Roger Blough, chairman of U.S. Steel says that he made no commitment

about prices during the talks on wages. JFK is furious, believing there had been an implicit

agreement by industry leaders to hold prices steady if the workers made concessions. The

Federal Trade commission promises a price-fixing probe. Senator Estes Kefauver announces that

his Anti-trust and Monopoly Subcommittee will investigate the steel industry. The resolve of the

steel magnates breaks when Inland Steel of Chicago, the eighth largest company in the industry,

refuses to raise its prices. Before long, Bethlehem Steel, the nation’s second largest producer,

capitulates, and then U.S. Steel caves in. Steel prices return to the level they had been at the start

of the week, and the seventy-two-hour struggle is over. AQOC



April 10, 1963: The nuclear submarine, Thresher, sinks during a test dive in the Atlantic Ocean, killing all 129 crew members.[43]



April 10, 1963: In a bizarre twist of history, Walker would become the victim of an assassination attempt on April 10, 1963, seven months before Kennedy was killed.

His would-be assassin? Lee Harvey Oswald, a troubled ex-Marine and self-described communist who had defected to the Soviet Union in October 1959 before returning to the United States and settling in Dallas in the summer of 1962.

After Oswald’s arrest in connection with the Kennedy assassination, his wife, Marina, testified that her husband told her he had taken a bus to Walker’s home on Turtle Creek Boulevard and, from outside the home, fired one rifle shot at the former general, who was seated at a desk and visible through a window. The bullet struck the window frame, and Walker sustained only minor injuries.

Marina Oswald said her husband told her Walker was the leader of a “fascist organization.” She could offer no logical explanation for why Lee Oswald, an avowed leftist, would target the right-wing extremist Walker and the president, who was despised by so many on the far right.[44]



April 10, 1963 (9:10 PM) A shot is fired at General Edwin Walker’s home in Dallas. It

misses Walker, who is working at his desk. (The shooting will later be ascribed to Oswald.) Oswald is

allegedly accompanied by Larrie and Bob Schmidt. Walter Kirk Coleman, a fourteen-year-old

neighbor to Walker, tells police he heard the shot and, peeking over a fence, saw some men

speeding down the alley in a light green or light blue Ford, either 1959 or 1960 model. Coleman

also says he saw another car, a 1958 black Chevrolet with white down the side in a church

parking lot adjacent to Walker’s house. The car door was open and a man was bending over the

back seat as though he was placing something on the floor of the car. Later, at the time of the

Warren Commission, Coleman will not be called to testify, and, in fact, tells Walker he has been

ordered not to discuss the incident by authorities. Contemporary news stories of the April 10

incident further quote Dallas police as saying the recovered bullet has been “identified as a 30.06,”

not a 6.5 millimeter Mannlicher-Carcano.

< NOTE:

In 1975, researcher George Michael Evica receives FBI spectrographic analyses of a bullet

(CE399) and bullet fragments reportedly recovered in the assassination investigation.

According to Evica, these scientific reports, termed “inconclusive” by Director Hoover

when reporting to the Warren Commission, reveal: “ ... the bullet recovered in the

assassination attempt on General Walker does not match wither CE399 or two fragments recovered

from President Kennedy’s 1imosene; the Warren Commission’s linking of Lee Harvey Oswald to

the General Walker assassination attempt is seriously weakened.” Further confusion over the

bullet has been raised by Walker himself who today claims the bullet exhibited by the

House Select Committee on Assassinations is not the same bullet recovered from his home

in 1963.[45]

April 10, 1975: Senate Joint Resolution 23, A joint resolution to restore posthumously full rights of citizenship to General R. E. Lee was introduced into the Senate by Senator Harry F. Byrd, Jr. (I-VA). The resolution was to restore the U.S. citizenship to Robert E. Lee effective June 13, 1865. This resolution was the result of a five-year campaign to posthumously restore Robert E. Lee's U.S. citizenship.[111][111][112]

Congressional summary

- Passed/agreed to in Senate: Measure passed Senate.[46]





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


[1] Wikipedia


[2] Wikipedia


[3] Wikipedia


[4] Wikipedia


[5] * See Tytler, vol. viii. p. 63 et seq.


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


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


[8] Wikipedia


[9] ♦Herring's "Statutes at Large," Vol. I, p. 59.




[10] xii. Cavaliers and Pioneers




[11] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm


[12] George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799: The Diaries of George Washington.

The Diaries of George Washington. Vol. 1. 1748-65. Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, eds. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1976.


[13] Dr. John Knight.


[14] The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress 1741-1799

Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers. Published by the Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Edited by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton.--vol. 05




[15] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg. 63




[16] George Rogers Clark Papers at the Virginia State Library and Archives, Reel 11 #742


[17] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882 pg 235.


[18] Shenandoah County, Virginia, Personal Property Tax Lists, 1782-1799, Library of Virginia microfilm, reel 315, exposures 0577 and 0634.


[19] Timetable of major volcanic activity, Wikipedia.


[20] Jim Funkhouser


[21] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania by Franklin Ellis, 1882 pg. 510.


[22] Wikipedia


[23] Wikipedia


[24] Vol. 19-262. Typescript Record of Marriages in Clark County 1816-1865, compiled under a DAR-WPA project. (MIcrofilm copy available through LDS). Volume and page numbers from Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 112.47 Record Books provided by Mrs. G. W. (Sylvia Olson), 1268 Kenwood Ave., Springfield, OH 45505, 28 June 1979.


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


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


[27] In eighteen hundred and sixty-four,

Foot balls, foot balls;

In eighteen hundred and sixty-four,

Foot balls, says I;

In eighteen hundred and sixy-four,

We all skedaddled to Grand Ecore

We’ll all drink stone blind,

Johnny, fill up the bowl!



[Tune: “When Johnny Comes Marching Home”]



The Yankee soldiers sang this and other improvised ballads as they hiked down the long road from Pleasant Hill to Grand Ecore, (Beecher, 114th New York, p. 326.) sometimes ending their ditty with a derisive shout of “Napoleon P. Banks.”(Homans, Mil. Hist. Soc. Mass., VIII, 85-86.) Sneering at the unfortunate Banks was about all the satisfaction to be got from that march. The narrow road had already been badly cut up by the train, which left burning wagons, tents, and other heavy articles in its wake. (O. R., XXXIV, Part I, 609; Part iii, 115.) The Red River Campaign by Ludwell H. Johnson, p. 206




[28] annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


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




[30] Wikipedia


[31] Greensboro is a short distance from James Bennet’s Farm and the site of the surrender of the Confederate Army by General Joseph E. Johnston to the Union General William T. Sherman on April 26, 1865.


[32] (Supplement to the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Part II Record of Events Volume 20 Serial no. 32. Broadfoot Publishing Company Wilmington, NC 1995.)


[33] History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 199.)







[35] Longfley, Annals ofr Iowa (April, 1895), p. 50; Lucas, Iowa Historical Record (July, 1902), p,. 530; Rigby Journal, April 10, 1865; (History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 199.)


[36] Rigby Journal, April 10, 1865. History of the 24th Iowa Infantry by Harvey H Kimball, August 1974, page 200.)


[37] The Magazine of History, Volume III, Number 4, April 1906, p. 253.


[38] History of Logan County and Ohio, O.L. Basking & Co., Chicago, 1880. page 692.


[39] Sources: Assorted notes of Edna B Owsley (Heaton's daughter), The Stormy Years (autobiography of Carter Harrison Jr.), and Ronnie Bodine (President of Owsley Historical Society), The Owsley's an Illinois Family a Birthday Book.

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




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


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


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


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


[44] http://www.dallasnews.com/news/jfk50/reflect/20131012-extremists-in-dallas-created-volatile-atmosphere-before-jfks-1963-visit.ece


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


[46]

No comments:

Post a Comment