Like us on Facebook!
https://www.facebook.com/ThisDayInGoodloveHistory
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Jeff-Goodlove/323484214349385
Join me on http://www.linkedin.com/
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.
Bernard F. Beranek (husband of the 2nd cousin 1x removed)
Yvonne E. Kruse Beranek (2nd cousin 1x removed)
Prince Leopold (15th cousin 3x removed)
Edith I. Mckee Tucker
John C. Ross (half 3rd cousin 4x removed)
John Taliaferro (2nd cousin 8x removed)
Durward R. Winch (1st cousin 2x removed)
Sunday, April 7, Nisan 17, 30 A.D.
Empty tomb discovered.[1]
April 7, 529: The Roman Emperor Justinian issued the first draft of the Corpus Juris Civilis. Justinian codified the ant-Jewish imperial view of the world that began under Constantine. The code made “anyone who was not connected to the Christian church a non-citizen.” More specifically, the principle of "Servitude of the Jews" (Servitus Judaeorum) was established by the new laws, and determined the status of Jews throughout the Empire for hundreds of years. The Jews were disadvantaged in a number of ways. Jews could not testify against Christians and were disqualified from holding a public office. Jewish civil and religious rights were restricted: ‘they shall enjoy no honors’. The use of the Hebrew language in worship was forbidden. Shema Yisrael sometimes considered the most important prayer in Judaism ("Hear, O Israel, YHWH our God, YHWH is one") was banned, as a denial of the Trinity. A Jew who converted to Christianity was entitled to inherit his or her father's estate, to the exclusion of the still-Jewish brothers and sisters. The Emperor became an arbiter in internal Jewish affairs. Similar laws applied to the Samaritans.”[2]
529-559 CE: Byzantine Emperor Justinian the Great publishes ‘Corpus Juris Civilis. New laws restrict citizenship to Christians. These regulations determined the status of Jews throughout the Empire for hundreds of years: Jewish civil rights restricted: “they shall enjoy no honors”. The principle of ‘Servitus Judaeorum’ (Servitude of the Jews) is established: the Jews cannot testify against Christians. The emperor becomes an arbiter in internal Jewish matters. The use of the Hebrew language in worship is forbidden. Shema Yisrael (Hear, O Israel, the Lord is one”)., sometimes considered the most important prayer in Judaism, is banned as a denial of the Trinity. Some Jewish communities are converted by force, their synagogues turned into churches.[3]
530 A.D. Ireland. Brendan the Navigator is said to have beaten the Norsemen to Greenland which was occupied by Paleoeskimo whale hunters. When St. Brendan supposedly found America he was looking for the land promised to the Saints. In Conneticut at Gungy Wamp St. Brendan is thought to have built. It spreads out over 100 acres[4].
530: Pope Boniface II consecrated.[5]
532 CE: Justinian commissioned the Hiasophia, in Istanbul. He intended it to be the largest Christian structure in the world. 12,000 people can fit comfortably inside this space. The dome extends as high as a 15 story building. Tall enough for the statue of liberty to fit in. [6]
532 CE: Rampaging mobs, angry at high taxes, torched the city of Constantinople, as Istanbul was then called. As the riots were quelled an estimated 50,000 people were killed. Downtown Constantinople was in ruins, including the main cathedral. [7]
April 7, 1141: Empress Matilda (25th great grandmother)
Matilda of England
Empress Mathilda.png
Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Germany
Tenure
January 7, 1114 – May 23, 1125
Lady of the English (disputed)
Reign
April 7, 1141 – November 1, 1141
Predecessor
Stephen (as King of England)
Successor
Stephen (as King of England)
[8]
April 7th, 1118 - Pope Gelasius II excommunicated Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor (11th cousin 26, removed).[9]
April 7, 1348: In the first year of the reign of Charles IV, Charles University is founded in Prague. Charles was an enlightened ruler whose years on the throne were good ones for the Jews of Prague. “The long reign of Emperor Charles IV. (1348-78) brought the Prague Jews new privileges and relative calm even. The king ensured protection and, among others, offered a chance for them to settle inside the walls of the arising New Town. A sign of the status of the Jewish community is a banner that has survived, given to the Jews of Prague by Charles IV in 1375. From that year on the Jews would, over the centuries, come to the gates of the ghetto to welcome the kings of Bohemia in Prague. The banner was a shield and legacy of the favors of the ruler’s predecessor, a symbol of ambition and sign of hope.” Today Charles University is the home base for a Jewish Studies program offered to American college students that examines the history of Central European Jewry[10]
April 7 to 9 1378: The papal conclave from April 7 to 9, 1378 was the papal conclave which was the immediate cause of the Western Schism in the Catholic Church. The conclave was one of the shortest in the history of the Catholic Church.[1] The conclave was also the first held in the Vatican and in Old St. Peter's Basilica (the elections and conclaves in Rome prior to the Avignon Papacy having been held mostly in the Basilica of St. John Lateran) since 1159.[2][11]
Proceedings
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/df/Basilica_di_San_Pietro_1450.jpg/220px-Basilica_di_San_Pietro_1450.jpg
http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.23wmf17/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png
The conclave was the first held in Old St. Peter's Basilica.[4]
Before his death, Gregory XI substantially loosened the laws of the conclave: he instructed the cardinals to begin immediately after his death (rather than waiting the nine days prescribed by the Ordo Romanis) to prevent "factional coercion", he gave the cardinals permission to hold the conclave outside of Rome and move it as many times as necessary, and also seemingly suspended the two-thirds requirement, replacing it with "the greater part" (an ambiguous statement, in the original).[5]
The cardinals were divided into three factions: the first constituting the four Italian cardinals (two Romans, one Florentine, and one Milanese), the second constituting the seven "Limoges" cardinals (referred to individually as "Limousins"[4]), and the third constituting the five remaining French cardinals.[1] The conclave was delayed one day because of a violent storm, and thereafter the seven Limoges cardinals wishing to leave Rome as Gregory XI had authorized them to were persuaded by the others that such an act would place the College in even more danger.[4] It was midnight on the second day before the servants of the cardinals succeeded in clearing the Old Basilica of those not permitted to remain in the conclave.[4]
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, even Robert of Geneva (future Antipope Clement VII) and Pedro Martínez de Luna y Gotor (future Antipope Benedict XIII)—the two claimants of the Avignon line during the ensuing Schsim—were among those who voted for Prignano.[1] Prignano had previously lived in France, which may have softened the blow of his election to many of his French electors.[6] The selection was supposedly "unanimous", with the exception of Giacomo Orsini, who claimed that he was not "free" enough to vote.[1]
Prignano was accompanied by several other prelates (to conceal the identity of the selected candidate) to the Vatican to accept his election.[1] To further the confusion, Orsini gave the Habemus Papam without identifying Prignano.[1]
Upon the conclusion of the election, the Roman mob entered the site of the conclave, under the impression that an aged Roman cardinal Tebaldeschi (who had been left in possession of the papal insignia[1]) had been elected, an impression that the remaining cardinals did not disabuse them of as they fled to their personal quarters.[7] The remaining cardinal informed the crowd of the election of Prignano who was hiding in the "most secret room" until his election could be announced.[8][12]
April 7, 1486: The first prayer book (Siddur) was printed in Italy by Soncino. This was the only time that the Siddur was published during the 15th century. For the most part hand copied manuscripts (of which there were plenty) continued to be used.[13]
April 7 1498: – Charles VIII of France dies and is succeeded by his cousin Louis XII. [14]
April 7, 1506: In Portugal, a group of New Christians was arrested when they were caught conducting a Seder. Although they were released two Dominican firiars “who paraded through the streets with an uplifited crucifix crying Heresia so inflamed the citizenry that 500 hundred New Christians were murdered on the first day of a multi-day massacre.[15]
April 7th, 1521 - Inquisitor-general Adrian Boeyens bans Lutheran books[16]
April 7th, 1521 - Magelhaes' fleet reaches Cebu[17]
April 7, 1549: Knox was licensed to work in the Church of England. His first commission was in Berwick-upon-Tweed. He was obliged to use the recently released Book of Common Prayer, which was mainly a translation of the Latin mass into English and was largely left intact and unreformed. He therefore modified its use along Protestant lines. In the pulpit he preached Protestant doctrines with great effect as his congregation grew.[32]
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/48/Knox%2C_John.jpeg/170px-Knox%2C_John.jpeg
http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf8/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png
John Knox portrait bearing the date 1572
In England, Knox met his wife, Marjorie Bowes. Her father, Richard, was the younger brother of Sir Robert Bowes, a descendant of an old Durham family and her mother, Elizabeth, was an heiress of a Yorkshire family, the Askes of Richmondshire. Elizabeth Bowes presumably met Knox when he was employed in Berwick. Several letters reveal a close friendship between them.[33] It is not recorded when Knox married Marjorie Bowes.[34] Knox attempted to obtain the consent of the Bowes family, but Robert and Richard were opposed to the marriage.[35]
Towards the end of 1550, Knox was appointed a preacher of St Nicholas' Church in Newcastle upon Tyne[18]
April 7, 1704: Children of Mary Taliaferro and Francis Thornton
+ . i. Francis Thornton (b. April 7, 1704 in Essex Co. VA / d. 1749) [19]
April 7, 1720: At one of the last large auto-de-fe's in Madrid, was burned five suspected Jews who were found to have committed the crime of praying in a "secret synagogue" which had been found after the Spanish war of Succession.[20]
1721: David Vance was born in 1721, The s/o Andrew Vance b. 1670, and Jane Wilson "Hoge" Vance b. 1680. [21]
1721 – Treaty with the Province of South Carolina ceded land between the Santee, Saluda, and Edisto Rivers. After this, the first reported band of Cherokee emigres cross the Mississippi River, supposedly led by a warrior named Dangerous Man (Yunwiusgaseti). One group of this band was supposed to have reached the Rocky Mountains and survived into the 19th century. In an attempt to reunite the Cherokee, Sequoyah left Indian Territory for northern Mexico, where he disappeared.[22]
April 7, 1723: Children of Richard Taliaferro and Rose Berryman:
+ . i. John Taliaferro (b. April 7, 1723 in Caroline Co. VA). [23]
JohnTaliaferro10 [Richard Taliaferro9, Sarah Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. April 7, 1723) married
A. Children of John Taliaferro and
**. Zachariah Taliaferro10 [Richard Taliaferro9, Sarah Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. April 7, 1723) married
A. Children of Zachariah Taliaferro and [24]
1757 On April 7, 1757, William Crawford, ensign, was promoted to lieutenant. William Crawford, Lieutenant, April 27-July 25, 3 months, 5 days. £47, 10 shillings.[25]
1757: In the library of Washington and Jefferson
College there is a rare and valuable general atlas of the world,
published at Paris in 1757. In this atlas, entitled "Atlas Universel,
par M. Robert de Vaugondy, Georgraphe Ordinaire du Roy," -etc.,
there is a map, the ninety-eighth of the series, which shows a part
of North America, embracing the Monongahela and Ohio valleys,
and purporting to have been based upon the surveys of Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson made in 1754, and those upon the surveys
of Christopher Gist made in 1751. On the map is represented the
boundary line between Pennsylvania and Louisiana as lying along
the Alleghany Mountains, and Louisiana, as French territory from
the mouth of the Mississippi to the headwaters of all streams
emptying into it. And, strange to say, there is laid down upon it
Chartiers Creek, as emptying from the south into the Ohio, "ou
Splawacippiki," and Pierre Rogue (or Redstone Creek) as flowing
from the east into the Monongahela, "ou Mohongalo." On another
map of the same period whose author cannot now be recalled by
the writer, there is laid down the Wassameking, the small stream
passing around the southwest corner of the Borough of Washington,
and Wissameking was a name in the tongue of the Delaware Indians
meaning "Catfish."
At the time of the publication of this map in 1757 there were
no permanent homes west of the mountains; though here and there
were to be found adventurers, traders and trappers, and doubtless.
some of these had blazed out tracts of land which they hoped to:
hold as their own when protective titles could be obtained.[26]
April 7, 1761: This indenture made this 4th day of March (March 4) 1762 between Richard Stephenson[27] of the County of Frederick and Colony of Virginia, farmer and Onnour, his wife, of the one part and John Carlyle and George William Fairfax of the other part witness that for and in consideration of the sum of 107 pounds 16 shillings and three pence current money of Va. to him the said Richard Stephenson in hand paid by the said John Carlyle and George William Fairfax... whereas.., whereof... by virtue of a bargain and sale to them thereof made by the said Richard Stephenson for one whole year by indenture bearing date the day next before the day of the date of these presents and.., the tract or parcel of land situate in the County of Frederick on the River Shenandoah which was granted unto the said Richard by Jomn Hardin By Deed of Lease & Release Bearing Date the 4 and 5 day of December 1752 it being the tract of land whereon the Bloomery now stands and bounded as by a survey whereof made as follows: beginning at a small walnut on the river side by the mouth of the mill water courses and running thence north 75 — 76 degrees west 40 poles to an elm tree by the road thence north 3 degrees east 24 poles to a bush and stake thence south 40 degrees east 18 poles to a black oak thence south 60 degrees east 38 poles to a white oak thence south 53 degrees east 21 poles to a white oak in the River side, thence up the river south 40 degrees west 34 poles to the beginning containing ten acres of land together with the iron works or bloomery and all houses, buildings, orchard, trees, woods, underwood,water courses, etc.
(two pages of where.., and whereas... etc.).
Witnesses, John Hardin
Valentine Crawford
Edward Masterson
March 4, 1761 received of the within mentioned John Carlyle and George William Fairfax the sum of 107 pounds 16 shillings and 3 pence, it being the consideration of the within deed.
Richard x Stephenson
John Hrdin Onnour x Stephenson
Valentine Crawford
Edward Masterson
At a court held for Frederick County on the 7th day of April 1761, (April 7)
This indenture was acknowledged by Richard Stephenson party thereto and ordered to be recorded.
Teste.
Archibald Wager, C. C..[28]
April 7, 1771: At my Brothers all day writing Instructions & dispatches for Captn. Crawford the Surveyor of our 200,000 Acs. of Land.[29]
April 7, 1772: An interpretation of English law allows the colonists to purchase Indian lands without patents from the Crown.[30]
April 7, 1774: Connolly did return, but in a manner en-
tirely unexpected. He returned with from one hundred and fifty to one hundred and eighty men, " with their colors flying, and Captains,
&c, had their swords drawn." "The first thing they did was to
place sentinels at the court-house door, and then Connolly sent a mes-
sage that he would wait on the magistrates and communicate the
reasons of his appearance:" so says the letter of Thomas Smith to
Governor Penn, dated April 7, 1774. Connolly explained his appear-
ance, saying among other things, " My orders from the Government of
Virginia not being explicit, I have raised the Militia to support the
Civil Authority of that Colony vested in me."[31]
April 7, 1776: McCue, William or Williams. Enlisted in Captain Stephenson's company. In Henry Bedinger's account of the skirmish on Staten Island of April 7, 1776, he says that William McKew took the first prisoner.[32]
April 7, 1778:
Votaire was intiated into the Lodge Les Neuf Soeurs (Lodge of the Nine Muses) in Paris, on April 7, 1778, less than two monthys before his death on May 30th. He was very weak, and was assisted by tow brothers, one of whom was Benjamin Franklin. Because of his frail health, he was exempted from the more rigorous tests experienced during the French rite of initiation. Voltaire was given a gift apron worn by the philosopher Claude Adrien Helvetius, one of the founders of the The lodge of the Nine Muses, who died in 1771.[33]
April 7, 1783
To SIR GUY CARLETON[34]
Head Quarters, April 7, 1783.
Sir: I have been honored with your Excellencys Letter of the 31St of March, enclosing an Extract of a Letter from General Haldimand, with an Extract of a Speech of the Six Nation Indians. The Speech I conceive to be rather uncandid. I have good reason to believe that the Seventies the Indians have experienced, have been drawn upon themselves by their own barbarous Conduct. But as thoseTransactions have not been under my Direction, I am unable to speak of them, but as I have been authorized by Report. The Cruelties exercised on both Sides are intirely repugnant to my Ideas. The Death of Col. Crawford, I do not think was so justly procured as the Indians declare; for I think I am authorized to say, that he was not in the least concerned in the unhappy Massacre of the Moravia people. Your Excely’s Letter, with its Enclosures has been tran mitted to Congress, who will take such Measures as their Wi dom shall direct.
Not having received any official Accounts of Peace, it is n in my power to give General Haldimand those Communications upon that happy Event, which your Excellency mt mates, or that my own Benevolence would Dictate. I have th Honor, etc.[35][36]
April 7, 1788: Rufus Putnam founds Muskingum, near presentday Marietta, Ohio, the first step in the settlement of the Northwest Territory.[37]
April 7, 1792: The Indians had soundly defeated St. Clair’s army. President George Washington demanded that St. Clair resign from the army. St. Clair did so on April 7, 1792. He, however, remained governor of the Northwest Territory and still faced problems with the natives. In 1794, Washington dispatched Anthony Wayne to succeed where St. Clair had failed. [38]
April 7, 1805: As matters developed, the return party did not set out during the summer or fall of 1804, as originally planned. On April 7, 1805, when the captains and the permanent party left Fort Mandan headed up the Missouri, they were able to send back this return group in the keelboat and one canoe. An exact list exists for the group bound for the Pacific, but for the returning body there remain some mysteries. Corporal Richard Warfington was in charge of the party, and the captains both say that he had with him in the keelboat six soldiers and two Frenchmen, with two more Frenchmen in the canoe.
Among the six soldiers were Reed and Newman, expelled from the permanent party. Four other soldiers were intended from the first for the return party, probably Privates John Boley, John Dame, Ebenezer Tuttle, and Isaac White. It seems possible, if unlikely, that the mysterious John Robertson, or Robinson, was one of them, instead of either Tuttle or White (see the sketch of Robertson). [5]
Most of the returning Frenchmen were certainly engagés—hired boatmen—who had been with the expedition from the start. It is quite clear from the records that the captains regarded their status to be entirely different from that of the enlisted men. They were not soldiers and did not require the same care in record keeping as that demanded by the army. Clark's usual difficulties in spelling were compounded with French names, and Lewis's spelling of French names was not much better.
Another factor complicating the records was the custom of the Mississippi valley French of giving dit names, nicknames by which a man might be better known than by his surname. Unlike English nicknames, these might be passed on from father to son and were considered significant enough to be used in official records. Commonly they referred either to a personal characteristic or to a place of origin or residence. Thus we have Louis Blanchette, dit le Chasseur (the hunter), founder of St. Charles, Missouri, and Jacques Chauvin, dit Charlesville, probably after the city in France. Hence, French names in expedition records may be either surnames or dit names, and this may account for some of the inconsistencies in the lists. [6][39]
April 7, 1818
Senator from Champaign County and one of the first Associate Judges of Clark Co.——- — — Page 270: The first Court of Common Pleas held in Clark County after the county was organized was on April 7, 1818, with Orrin Parish as Presiding Judge, Daniel McKinnon, Joseph Tatman and Joseph Layton, Associates.[40]
Is Susannah Tatman, Adam Godlove’s wife, the daughter of Joseph Tatman? (JG, Feb. 25, 2006)
April 7, 1818: The first Court of Common Pleas held in Clark County after the county was organized was on April 7, 1818, with Orrin Parish as Presiding Judge; Daniel McKinnon, Joseph Tatman and Joseph Layton, Associates.[41] ~
April 7, 1823: French army invaded Spain to restore monarchy; resistance crushed by August 31. [42]
April 7, 1841: Harrison's funeral took place in the Wesley Chapel in Cincinnati, Ohio, on April 7, 1841.[78] His original interment was in the public vault of the Congressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C. He was later buried in North Bend, Ohio. The William Henry Harrison Tomb State Memorial was erected in his honor.[79]
Impact of death
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b8/Cincinnati-harrison-statue.jpg/220px-Cincinnati-harrison-statue.jpg
http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf1/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png
Statue of Harrison on horseback in Cincinnati, Ohio
Harrison's death was a disappointment to Whigs, who hoped to pass a revenue tariff and enact measures to support Henry Clay's American System. John Tyler, Harrison's successor and a former Democrat, abandoned the Whig agenda, effectively cutting himself off from the party.[80]
Due to the death of Harrison, three presidents served within a single calendar year (Martin Van Buren, Harrison, Tyler). This has happened on only one other occasion, in 1881, when Rutherford B. Hayes was succeeded by James A. Garfield, who was assassinated later in that year. With the death of Garfield, Chester A. Arthur stepped into the presidency.[81]
Harrison's death revealed the flaws in the constitution's clauses on presidential succession.[82] Article II of the Constitution states that "In case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President, ... and [the Vice President] shall act accordingly, until the disability be removed, or a President shall be elected". Scholars at the time disagreed whether the vice president would become President or merely Acting President. Further, the Constitution did not stipulate whether the vice president could serve the remainder of the president's term, until the next election, or if emergency elections should be held.
Harrison's cabinet insisted that Tyler was "Vice President acting as President". After the cabinet consulted with the Chief Justice Roger Taney they decided that if Tyler took the presidential Oath of Office he would assume the office of President.[43]
April 7, 1853:
Child of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert:
Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany
1853April 7
1853
1884March 28,
1884
Married 1882, Princess Helena of Waldeck and Pyrmont (1861–1922);
1 son, 1 daughter
· [44]
April 7, 1864: The opening of 1864 found the regiment encamped in the mud at Algiers. It moved in early March to join the Red River expedition and reached a point near Pleasant Hill on April 7. Five companies took part in the battle of Sabine Cross-Roads, keeping their position until ordered to retire, and losing 34 in killed, wounded and captured. In the retreat from Grand Ecore the regiment was in several skirmishes, and after reaching Morganza joined in a reconnaissance, in which it lost a number in wounded and Capt. Paul slain.[45]
100_1688[46]
Thurs. April 7, 1864
Started at 5 am went 19 miles
Camped on pleasant hill[47] at 2 pm
Cavalry and rebs skirmishing[48]
Our brigade[49] ordered out to support[50][51]
Rebs run we went back to camp pine woods
All day[52] fine house on hill
Sabine Cross-Roads[53]
100_1703
“The U.S. Civil War Out West.” The History Channel.
April 7, 1865: Battle of Farmville, VA.[54]
April 7, 1873: Sim Whitsett joined the church of his parents in Lee’s Summit where he made his home. He and Martha had a daughter Mary who died in 1872 when she was about a year and a half old. Daughters Helen (born April 7, 1873) and Annie E. Whitsett followed. Martha died in 1878. [55]
. His fourth term followed April 7, 1885 when he defeated Sidney Smith (Republican) & William Bush (Prohibition).
In 1887 after being defeated Carter Harrison III left on a tour of the world. When he returned he once again pursued politics and April 7, 1893 he was again elected mayor, Defeated Samuel W. Allerton (Republican), Dewitt C. Cregier (Un. Citizen) & Henry Ehrenpreis (socialist Labor). But this term was cut short.[56]
April 7, 1903: Carter Harrison Jr terms as Mayor of Chicago:
4th term: April 7, 1903 Defeated Graeme Stewart (Republican), Charles L. Breckon (Socialist), Daniel L. Cruice (Ind. Labor), Thomas L. Haines (Prohibition) & Henry Sale (Socialist-Labor).[57]
April 7, 1910
Mr. and Mrs. William Goodlove attended church at Alburnett Sunday morning and took dinner with the H. J. Stick’s.[58]
April 7, 1932: James Darius Powell (b. July 31, 1859 in GA / d. April 7, 1932).[59]
April 7, 1933: Hitler approved decrees banning Jews and other non-Aryans from the practice of law and from jobs in the civil service (Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service). Jewish government workers in Germany are ordered to retire. The term Nichtarier ("non-Aryan") became a legal classification in Germany. This made it "legal" to discharge Jews from their position in the universities, hospitals, and legal professions. The law was called the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service. The non-Aryan clause would be extended over the next year to include everything i.e. all professional occupations, athletic competition and military service.[60] Quotas are applied in Germany to the number of Jewish students allowed in institutions of higher education.[61]
April 7, 1933: Two factors which had deleterious effects on the nuclear energy project were the politicisation of the education system under National Socialism and the rise of the Deutsche Physik movement, which was anti-Semitic and had a bias against theoretical physics, especially including quantum mechanics.[37]
Emigrations
Adolf Hitler took power on January 30, 1933. On April 7, the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service was enacted; this law, and its subsequent related ordinances, politicized the education system in Germany. This had immediate deleterious effects on the physics capabilities of Germany. Furthermore, combined with the deutsche Physik movement, the deleterious effects were intensified and prolonged. The consequences to physics in Germany and its subfield of nuclear physics were multifaceted.
An immediate consequence upon passage of the law was that it produced both quantitative and qualitative losses to the physics community. Numerically, it has been estimated that a total of 1,145 university teachers, in all fields, were driven from their posts, which represented about 14% of the higher learning institutional staff members in 1932–1933.[38] Out of 26 German nuclear physicists cited in the literature before 1933, 50% emigrated.[39] Qualitatively, 10 physicists and four chemists who had won or would win the Nobel Prize emigrated from Germany shortly after Hitler came to power, most of them in 1933.[40] These 14 scientists were: Hans Bethe, Felix Bloch, Max Born, Albert Einstein, James Franck, Peter Debye, Dennis Gabor, Fritz Haber, Gerhard Herzberg, Victor Hess, George de Hevesy, Erwin Schrödinger, Otto Stern, and Eugene Wigner. Britain and the USA were often the recipients of the talent which left Germany.[41] The University of Göttingen had 45 dismissals from the staff of 1932–1933, for a loss of 19%.[38] Eight students, assistants, and colleagues of the Göttingen theoretical physicist Max Born left Europe after Hitler came to power and eventually found work on the Manhattan Project, thus helping the USA, Britain and Canada to develop the atomic bomb; they were Enrico Fermi,[42] James Franck, Maria Goeppert-Mayer, Robert Oppenheimer, Edward Teller, Victor Weisskopf, Eugene Wigner, and John von Neumann.[43] Otto Robert Frisch, who with Rudolf Peierls first calculated the critical mass of U-235 needed for an explosive, was also a Jewish refugee.
Max Planck, the father of quantum theory, had been right in assessing the consequences of National Socialist policies. In 1933, Planck, as president of the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft (Kaiser Wilhelm Society), met with Adolf Hitler. During the meeting, Planck told Hitler that forcing Jewish scientists to emigrate would mutilate Germany and the benefits of their work would go to foreign countries. Hitler responded with a rant against Jews and Planck could only remain silent and then take his leave. [62]
April 7, 1934: Several thousand Americans attended a pro-Nazi rally in Queens, New York.[63]
April 7, 1939: Italy invades and annexed Albania[64] Jews were exiled from the coastal port cities and moved to Albania’s interior. Several Austrian and German families took refuge in Tirana and Durazzo in 1939 in hope of making it eventually to the United States or South America. Many Jewish refugees also passed through Albania on their way to Palestine. These refugees were well treated by the Italian forces and by the local population. Jewish refugee families began to scatter throughout Albania and assimilate into society. Jewish children continued to attend school, but under false names and religions. Italians rejected the Final Solution and therefore did not implement anti-Jewish laws. Nevertheless, many Albanians joined the SS Division “Skanderbeg.” Some Jewish refugees were eventually placed in a transit camp in Kavaje, and from there sent to Italy. At one point, nearly 200 Jews were placed in the Kavaje camp. Some Albanian officials tried to rescue these Jews of Kavaje, by issuing identity papers to hide them in the capital Tirana.[65]
April 7, 1941: The 30,000 Jews of Radom are placed in two ghettos.[66] Two separate ghettos were established in Radom, Poland. [67] Radom's Jewish community dated back to the Middle Ages. Nine tenths of the Jewish population of 25,000 perished in the Holocaust. According to some reports, the remaining Jews did not return because of the anti-Semitic riots that took place in Poland after the war.[68] At Kielce, Poland, 16,000 local Jews and about a thousand Jewish deportees from Vienna are herded into a ghetto area.[69]
April 7, 1943: The Spanish Ambassador has lunch with Winston Churchill at which time the Prime Minister protested in the strongest possible language to the closure of the border between France and Spain to Jewish refugees trying to escape across the Pyrenees. Churchill’s threatening tone had its effect when a “few days later the Spanish authorities had re-opened the border to Jewish refugees.”[70]
April 7, 1943: 1943(2nd of Nisan, 5703): During the Holocaust in the western Ukraine, the Germans order 1,100 Jews to undress to their underwear and march through the city of Terebovlia to the nearby village of Plebanivka. They were then shot dead and buried in ditches.[71]
April 7, 1944: Alfred Wetzler and Rudolf Vrba escape from Auschwitz and reach Slovakia, bearing detailed information abouyt the killing of Jews in Auschwitz. Their report, which reaches the free would in June, becomes known as the Auschwitz Protocols.[72]
April 7, 1961 Richard Bissell approves shipping weapons to Dominican
conspirators who plan to kill Rafael Trujillo in the apartment of his mistress. The weapons are
shipped via diplomatic pouch. (The Bay of Pigs disaster will change everything. The CIA will not
want to risk another failure. The agency will eventually prevail upon Henry Dearborn, the U.S. consul in
Ciudad Trujillo, to try to dissuade the conspirators, but the plot will have picked up momentum and will
not be braked.) [73]
On April 7, 2005, during the 109th Congress, United States Senator John McCain introduced an amendment to NAGPRA which (section 108) would have changed the definition of "Native American" from being that which "is indigenous to the United States" to "is or was indigenous to the United States."[17] However, the 109th Congress concluded without enacting the bill. By the bill's definition, Kennewick Man would have been classified as Native American, regardless of whether any link to a contemporary tribe could be found. Proponents of this definition argue that it agrees with current scientific understanding, which is that it is not in all cases possible for prehistoric remains to be traced to current tribal entities, partly because of social upheaval, forced resettlement and extinction of entire ethnicities caused by disease and warfare. Doing so would still not remove the controversy surrounding Kennewick Man as then it would have to be decided which Native American group should take possession of the remains if he could not be definitively linked with a current tribe. To be of practical use in a historical and prehistorical context, some argue further that the term "Native American" should be applied so that it spans the entire range from the Clovis culture (which cannot be positively assigned to any contemporary tribal group) to the Métis, a group of mixed ancestry who only came into being as a consequence of European contact, yet constitute a distinct cultural entity. [74]
Re: please explain the godlove/didawick of Hardy County WV
jan (View posts)
Posted: April 7, 2005 5:55PM GMT
Classification: Query
Surnames:
i have no names. you can contact however, donna godlove. she has info on the internet in reference to the godloves. if you go under godlove ancestry message boards you will find her there. sorry
April 7, 2012
[75]
[76]
[77]
[78]
[79]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor. Page 199.
[2] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[3] www.wikipedia.org
[4] Who really discovered America, HIST, 6/22/2010.
[5] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/germany.htm
[6] Building in the Name of God. HISTI 6/9/2006
[7] Building in the Name of God. HISTI 6/9/2006
[8] Wikipedia
[9] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1118
[10] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[11] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_conclave,_1378
[12] Wikipedia
[13] Thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com
[14] http://www.tudor-history.com/about-tudors/tudor-timeline/
[15] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[16] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1521
[17] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1521
[18] Wikipedia
[19] Proposed descendants of William Smith.
[20] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[21] Tihttp://timothyv.tripod.com/index-338.htmlmeline
[22] Timeline of Cherokee Removal
[23] Proposed descendants of William Smith
[24] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe
[25] The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Scholl, 1995
[26] http://www.mdlpp.org/pdf/library/1905AccountofVirginiaBoundaryContraversy.pdf
[27][27] At the time this deed was dated, it may be observed and is reasonably true, that Richard Stephenson (step-father of William and Valentine Carawford), had become weary of his work at the bloomer, after he had already spent 10 to 20 of his best years in partnership at the ironworks. No records are available to show there were any change in this partnership. All we know is, that he and his wife Onnor were selling by deed, to John Carlyle and George William Fairfad, in 1761-1762. Richard and Onnour Stephenson had complete control at this time, since they alone were the grantors, with their names and marks appearing at the conclusion of this instrument.
Apparently Richard Stephenson was failing in health at this time, as three years later we find him making his last will and testament.
From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, 1969, page 69-70.
[28]One of the grantees mentioned in this historical document and having a strong relationship to the Washington family, was George William Fairfax. John Carlyle had married sarah Fairfax, sister of Lawrence Washington’s wife, ‘nn (Fairfax) Washington.
From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser , 1969. pp. 68-69.
[29] George Washington’s Diaries, An Abridgement, Dorothy Twohig, Ed. 1999
[30] On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[31] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt
[32] http://genealogytrails.com/wva/jefferson/revwar_bios.html
[33] The Journal of the Masoninc Society, Autumn, 2010, Issue 10.
[34] Carleton. Sir Guy Carleton. (1724-1808). 1st Baron Dorchester. Carleton began his military service in North America in 1758 serving under Wolfe against Montcalm. He served consecutively as lieutenant governor of Canada, and then acting governor and finally governor. He was largely the author of The Quebec Act of 1774. Although the act went a long way in appeasing the French-Canadians in the areas of law, religion, and territorial questions, the act impacted the settlers in western PA in as negative a fashion possible. The Act placed the administration of all lands west of PA under the authority of Quebec. All claims and objectives of PA and VA settlers were null and void. It is not an understatement to claim that if nothing else had happened, this one act would have been enough to drive western PA into the arms of the rebels from MA and VA.
In 1776, Carleton led British forces in Canada in expelling Benedict Arnold and Richard Montgomery and their rebel forces out of Quebec—and Canada. He then led British forces down Lake Champlain where he took Crown Point. In spite of his heroics, he was replaced by General John Burgoyne in the field and by Sir Frederick Haldimand as governor. This action was the result of a basic disagreement he had with Lord George Germain, the British Colonial Secretary. Carleton did not want to use Indians in the fight against the rebels. This mirrored the feeling of George Washington. They both wanted to keep the Indians out of the fight, but from a practical point of view, each wanted the Indians to cooperate in all other ways. This non-use of Indians in the fight was probably residue Carleton harbored after seeing first hand the brutal actions taken by Indians against prisoners and civilians in the conduct of the French and Indian War. This attitude might be considered the moral high ground, but the leaders in London wanted to put down the rebels—in any way necessary. After the British defeat at Yorktown in February 1782, Carleton replaced Sir Henry Clinton as British Commander in North America and assumed the difficult task of ending the war—border disputes, loyalist emigration, suspension of hostilities, and so forth. He was again appointed governor in 1786 and served in that post for another ten years.
http://www.thelittlelist.net/cadtocle.htm
[35] 1n the writing of Jonathan Trumbull, jr.
[36] The Writings of George Washington from the original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799, John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor, Volume 26.
[37] On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[38] http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/image.php?rec=557&img=960
[39] The Lewis and Clark expedition.
[40] Page 112.40 Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett
[41] The History of Clark County, Ohio. W. H. Beers & Co. 1881. pg. 270
[42] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824
[43] Wikipedia
[44] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_of_the_United_Kingdom
[45] Source: The Union Army, vol. 4
[46] History Channel, Civil War in the West.
[47] Pleasant Hill, established in the early 1850’s had a population of about 100-200, and was located in a clearing in the woods on the edge of an old field at the intersection of the road between Mansfield and Grand Ecore, and one from Texas and Fort Jessup to Blairs Landing on the Red River. It had about twelve or fifteen houses, a Methodist Church, possibly a Baptist Church a short distance away, a post office, a hotel, three storehouses, a school building for girls, and the as yet uncompleted Pearce Payne Methodist College for boys. http//rootweb.com/~ladesote/civreac.htm
[48] On April 7 the head of the Union infantry column reached Pleasant Hill. Probing on in advance were three brigades of Lee’s cavalry division. Thus far all had gone well for the troopers. Due to Taylor’s almost complete lack of mounted troops at the opening of the campaign, the Federal cavalry had so far encountered the enemy only in minor skirmishes, and it was still a question as to how the men would perform in a large-scale engagement. Lee himself must have frequently brooded on this subject, for his command was not one that would ordinarily inspire its leader with much confidence. Of the ten regiments Lee had with him in the advance, five were mounted infantry. In the words of Brigadier General William Dwight, these men “were not good riders, and did not understand how to take care of their horses properly. They were infantry soldiers who had been put on horseback…” (O. R., xxxiv, part I, 485.)
[49] The brigade was ordered to move forward and support the cavalry, but, after marching about one mile, found that enemy had retired. (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/usgienweb/ia/state/military/civilwar/book/cwbk 24.txt.
[50] On the afternoon of the 7th Lee’s amateur equestrians encountered four regiments of Green’s cavalry at Wilson’s Farm, three miles beyond Pleasant Hill, and a lively action was opened. On this occasion the Confederates, instead of falling back, charged with a yell, much to the consternation of the Federals. After some hot exchanges, Northern reserves rallied to the support of the leading brigade, which had borne the brunt of the charge, and drove back the attackers. Com. Con. War, p. 58; O. R. xxxiv, Part I, 450, 616-617.
April 7, 1864 Wilson’s Farm, LA
U.S.A. 14 Killed, 39 Wounded
C.S.A. 15 Killed, 40 Wounded
100 Missing or Captured.
(Civil War Battles of 1864;) http://users.aol/dlharvey/1864bat.htm
[51] The cavalry commander, Brigadier General Albert Lee, a thirty year old former Kansas lawyer, began to reflect intently on the disadvantages of his situation, particularly with regard to those 300 wagons directly in his rear, between him and the nearest infantry support. Several times already he had asked Franklin to let him shift his train back down the column, combining it with the infantry’s, but Franklin had declined; let the cavalry look after its own train, he said…He repeated his plea for reinforcements to Colonel John S. Clark, one of Banks’s aides, who came forward that night to see how things were going….Eventually Banks agreed that caution was in order, overruled Franklin, and directed him to send a brigade of infantry to reinforce the cavalry by daybreak. The Civil War Red River to Appomattox by Shelby Foote page 41`
[52] Banks expected his advance guard to clear the way and ordered his troops into bivouac. http:www.civilwarhome.com/redrivercampaign.htm
[53]
While driving from Texas A&M where Jacqulin had played in a college showcase soccer tournament, my dad spied this road sign between College Station and Tomball TX. It illustrates the importance of Texas as a supplier of men and materials to the Confederate war effort. Photo, Jeffery Goodlove, December 8, 2007.
[54] (State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.)
[55] http://whitsett-wall.com/Whitsett/whitsett_simeon.htm
[56] 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
[57] 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
[58] Winton Goodlove Papers
[59] Proposed Descendants of William Smyte
[60] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[61] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1759.
[62] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_energy_project
[63]
[64]
[65] [65] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
• [66] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1765.
[67] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[68] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[69] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[70] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[71] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/
[72] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1778.
[73] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf
[74] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennewick_Man
[75] Zilmer Hiking Trail Kettle Moraine North State Park, April 7, 2012
[76] Zilmer Hiking Trail Kettle Moraine North State Park, April 7, 2012
[77] Zilmer Hiking Trail Kettle Moraine North State Park, April 7, 2012
[78] Zilmer Hiking Trail Kettle Moraine North State Park, April 7, 2012
[79] Zilmer Hiking Trail Kettle Moraine North State Park, April 7, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment