Wednesday, April 9, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, April 9, 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.

Zachery A.D. Freeman (step grandson of the 1st cousin 1x removed)
Rosa J. Goodlove Wright (1st cousin 3x removed)
Isaac Hedrick (nephew of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)
Charles M. Hunt (1st cousin 3x removed of the ex)
Emma Kirby Lyons (2nd great grandaunt of the ex)
Abraham LeFevre (2nd great granduncle of the wife of the 1st cousin 3x removed)
Candice C. Leland (1st cousin 2x removed)
Charles B. Nunemaker (3rd cousin)
Rachel Reed Bavington (wife of the half 1st cousin 5x removed)
Peggy J. Sadler Marugg (wife of the 1st cousin 1x removed)
William D. Smith (2nd cousin 2x removed)
Ann STEVENSON (half 3rd cousin 5x removed)
April 9th, 475: - Byzantine Emperor Basiliscus issues a circular letter (Enkyklikon) to the bishops of his empire, supporting the Monophysite christological position.
April 931: King Rudolf II of Upper Burgundy, and Hugh, Count of Provence and effective ruler of Lower Burgundy, held competing claims to the vacant throne of Emperor in Italy. By 926, Hugh forced Rudolf to flee Italy, establishing de facto control over the Italian peninsula. Hugh later induced the Italian nobility to recognise his son Lothair II of Italy as their next king and crowned him in April 931. Hugh and Rudolf II eventually concluded a peace treaty in 933, with Rudolf II renouncing his claims to the Italian throne and Hugh granting control over Lower Burgundy to Rudolf II, which he combined with Upper Burgundy into a new Kingdom of Burgundy. To seal the peace, Rudolf II betrothed his infant daughter Adelaide to Hugh's son Lothair.
In 940, Margrave of Ivrea Berengar II, the grandson of former King Berengar I, led a revolt of Italian nobles against his uncle, Hugh. Forewarned by Lothair, Hugh exiled Berengar II from Italy and Berengar II fled to the protection of Otto's court in 941. In 945, Berengar II returned from exile in Germany and was welcomed by the Italian nobility. With the aid of hired mercenaries, Berengar II defeated Hugh in battle and forced him into permanent retirement in Provence.

April 972: Otto the Great’s (4th cousin 33x removed) later years werel marked by conflicts with the Papacy and struggles to stabilize his rule over Italy. Reigning from Rome, Otto sought to improve relations with the Byzantine Empire, which opposed his claim to emperorship and his realm's further expansion to the south. To resolve this conflict, the Byzantine princess Theophanu married his son, Otto II, (5th cousin 32x removed) in April 972.

April 9, 1682: French explorer La Salle reaches the mouth of the Mississippi River and claims the territory for King Louis XIV. ( brother in law of the 8th cousin 10x removed) The French ‘claimed Fayette County district, basing their claim on the expedition La Salle made down the Mississippi River’ in 1682, and took formal possession.

April 9, 1737
During 1737 those Delawares still in Pennsylvania were learning a bitter lesson about just how dishonorable the whites could be in their treaty making. The treat William Penn had made with them half a century earlier had a clase in it that had never been acted upon. Now, 19 years after his death, the Proprietary of Pennsylvania took advantage of it in a way that would never have occurred to Penn himself The treaty signed by the Delawares stated that the Proprietary of Pennsylvania was given title to lands west and north o the Delaware at Philadelphia “as far as a man can go in a day and a hall.” In that remark the Delawares had meant this to be nothing more than a good brisk walk of perhaps 30 miles. The distance had never actually been measured out, and now with good land availability diminishing in the Philadelphia area, the proprietors elected to interpret the nebulous remark in their own way. With considerable care, beginning at the farthest inward bend o the Delaware River within Philadelphia, they cleared a very straight path angling only slightly north of due west. Then they carefully selected a man noted or his athletic abilities and stamina, and one minute after midnight on the appointed day, April 9, 1737, they set him running as fast and as steadily as he could on that path. At the end of 36 hours he collapsed, having accomplished the feat of running a full 150 miles. This was the spot from which the Proprietary o Pennsylvania established the western boundary. The Pennsylvanians laughingly referred to there after as the “Walking Treat. ” The Indians were justifiably angry, but they had made a bargain and reluctantly adhered to it. Whatever Delaware and Shawnee villages remained within the new limits o Pennsylvania were abandoned, and their native inhabitants moved to the valleys of the Wyoming and Shamokin or farther west, many all the way to the Muskingum in the Ohio.

1737


It is perhaps ironic that Penn’s former companion, Ebenezer Zane, died that very year, and Zan’s son, William Andrew, at 25, happily married and still living in Moorefield on the South Branch of the Potomac, sired a son. IN honor of his own newly deceased father, William named the infant Ebenezer. It was this Ebenezer Zane, and his brothers and sister yet to be born, who would, in time to come, make a lasting mark on the upper Ohio River Valley.
The elder Ebenezer Zane had another son, Isaac, who was born the year before William Andrew. Isaac, however, was captured near their South Branch Potomac cabin in Moorefield, Va., by a band of Wyandots when he was only nine years old. He was carried deep into the Ohio country to Tarhe’s Town, on the headwaters of the Mad River, at the site of present Zanesfield, Ohio. There he was adopted into the tribe, adapted well to Indian life and subsequently married the daughter of Chie Tarhe, The Crane. Eventually Isaac Zane became a chief in his own right, and though he never returned to live among the whites, he did return on one occasion to Wheeling and visited his grown up nephew, Ebenezer.


April 9, 1777
The Committee of Treasury reported,
That there is due to Christopher Ludwig, for maintaining Hessian prisoners, and for cash he paid to several Hessian deserters who brought in their arms, the sum of [£46 9 6/90=] 123 84/90 dollars.2
April 9, 1782: 5A very important advantage has lately been gained over our savage enemies on the frontiers of this state, by a party of the back county militia. We hope to give particulars in our next”—.. Pennsylvania Packet, April 9, 1782 (No. 868).

April 9, 1782
“Sir:— I received this afternoon a letter of the Reverend Nathaniel [Seidel], bishop of the united churches of the brethren, residing at Bethlehem [Pa.], dated the 5th instant. He informs me that the same day a melancholy report [see the foregoing ‘Relation’] was brought to him by one Mr. Leinbach, relative to a murder committed by white men upon a number of Christian Indians at a place called Muskingum [upon the branch now known as the Tuscarawas]. He continues in his letter that the same Mr. Leinbach is to proceed the next day to Philadelphia, in order to give congress information how he came to the knowledge of that event, so that congress, unless it had already a better account of the affair than he can give, might, upon his report, take some measures with respect as well of the mischief already done as more which might be done, and thus prevent the total extirpation of a congregation of Indians converted to the faith of Jesus Christ, and the judgments of Almighty God against our dear country, which stands much in need of His divine protection. The bishop desires me to give attention to Mr. Leinbach’s report (I have done it), and to direct him where he should make his addresses. I make bold, sir, to address him to you, and to beg the favor that you introduce him, if possible, this night, with the delegates of the state of Virginia, from whence, it is said, the mischief originated, and tomorrow morning with congress.
“Your humanity, sir, gives me confidence to use the freedom to trouble you this day the day set apart for the service of men to their God — about a cause which is most properly His own. The tragic scenes of erecting two butcher-houses or sheds and killing in cold blood ninety-five brown or tawny sheep of Jesus Christ1 one by one, is certainly taken notice of by the Shepherd, their Creator and Redeemer. I am, with particular respect, sir, your most obedient, humble servant, L. WEiss [Moravian Att’y].

“SUNDAY, April 9, 1782. To CHARLES THOMSON, Esquire, secretary of congress. By [favor of) Mr. FREDERICK LEINBACH.”

“Sir:— The enclosed intelligence [Leinbach’s ‘Relation,’ previously given was communicated to congress on Monday last. For your further information respecting the channel of intelligence, I beg leave to send you a letter I received on Sunday from Mr. L. Weiss. It is the desire of congress that your excellency and the honorable council would be pleased to cause inquiry to be made into this matter. - . . CHAS. THOMSON [Sec’y of Congress].
April 9, 1782. His excellency, William Moore, Esp., president of the state of Pennsylvania.
1802 - April 9 - Litigation at New Madrid: Benjamin Harrison, Sr. (5th great granduncle)vs. George N. Reagan. Suit re sale of two pieces of land by Reagen to Benjamin Harrison, Jr. Matter arbitrated and Harrison., Sr. ordered to pay expenses December 6. 1804.
April 9, 1846: Ann Stephenson: Born on April 9, 1846. Ann died in Kentucky on August 19, 1865; she was 19. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.
April 9, 1863: Mcleanesville, NC, Aprile 9th, 1863
Gov Vance: (3rd cousin 6x removed)
"I have threatend for some time to write you a letter-a crowd of we Poor wemen went to Greenesborough yesterday for something to eat as we had not a mouthful meet nor bread in my house what did they do but put us in gail Jim Slone, Linsey Hilleshemer and several others I will not mention-thes are the ones that put us to gail in plase of giveing us aney thing to eat and I had to com hom without aneything-I have 6 little children and my husband in the armey and what am I to do. . . . if you dont take thes yankys a way from greenesborough we wemen will write for our husbans to come . . . home and help us. . . ." -- Yours very Respectfuly, Nancy Mangum
Many believe that the most remarkable Vance policy was his insistence of the rule of law in the midst of the devastation and confusion of Civil War. North Carolina courts continued to function during the war, and North Carolina stands alone as the only state which never suspended the writ of habeas corpus.
Sat. April 9 , 1864
At pleasant hill started back with train
Went all day and night rested 2 hrs
Before day heavy battle at pleasant hill
Gen Smith com marched 50 miles without sleep.
William Harrison Goodlove (2nd great grandfather) Civil War Diary, 24th Iowa Infantry.

April 2-9, 1865
24th Iowa Infantry Returned to Morehead City, where it remained until April 9.

April 9, 1865: The Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, commanded by General Robert E. Lee, (husband of the step great granddaughter of the grandnephew of the wife of the 1st cousin 10x removed) surrenders to Union forces, commanded by General Ulysses S. Grant, at Appomattox Court House, Virginia.

Lee was out of alternatives and surrendered to General Grant at the McLean House in Appomattox, Virginia. He delivered the surrender himself rather than send a subordinate as he knew of the sense of insult his father had felt when the British made their capitulation at Yorktown via the most junior officer present, and that only after a sergeant had been rejected by George Washington. After the war the men had to get back to whatever life they could salvage, the South had to be rebuilt, and Lee had to feed his family. His respect in the South was undiminished and though he faced the threat of legal action job offers came in, some of which could have made him wealthy.

April 9, 1865: Union General Ulysses S. Grant's campaigns bore down on the Confederacy in 1864 and 1865, and despite inflicting heavy casualties, Lee was unable to turn the war's tide. He would ultimately surrender to Grant at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865. By this time, the former had assumed supreme command of the remaining Southern armies; other Confederate forces swiftly capitulated after Lee's surrender. Lee rejected the proposal of a sustained insurgency against the North and called for reconciliation between the two sides.
After the war, as President of what is now Washington and Lee University, Lee supported President Andrew Johnson's program of Reconstruction and intersectional friendship, while opposing the Radical Republican proposals to give freed slaves the vote and take the vote away from ex-Confederates. He urged them to rethink their position between the North and the South, and the reintegration of former Confederates into the nation's political life. Lee became the great Southern hero of the War, a postwar icon of the "Lost Cause of the Confederacy" to some. But his popularity grew even in the North, especially after his death in 1870. He remains one of the most revered, iconic figures of American military leadership.[8]


Stained glass of Lee's life in the National Cathedral, depicting his time at West Point, service in the Corps of Engineers, the Battle of Chancellorsville, and his death

Lee abandoned Richmond and retreated west. Lee then made an attempt to escape to the southwest and join up with Joseph E. Johnston's Army of Tennessee in North Carolina. However, his forces were soon surrounded and he surrendered them to Grant on April 9, 1865, at Appomattox Court House, Virginia.[80] Other Confederate armies followed suit and the war ended.
April 9, 1865: Correspondence from J.S. Crawford to brother, April 9, 1865 regarding personal matters [F.10]
April 9, 1866: Congress passes a Civil Rights Act over President Johnson’s veto, granting citizenship to all people born in the United States, except Indians.

April 9, 1894: Aaron Smith12 (5th cousin 6x removed) [Richard W. Smith11 , Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. January 16, 1817 in Franklin Co. GA / d. August 21, 1887 in Haralson Co. GA) married Rhoda Lewallen (b. March 4, 1824 in Habersham Co. GA / d. April 9, 1894 in Haralson Co. GA), the daughter of Worthy Lewallen and Elizabeth Burt, on July 22, 1841 in Carroll Co. GA.

April 9, 1917: The United States crucially reinforced the strength of the Allied naval blockade of Germany, in effect from the end of 1914 and aimed at crushing Germany economically. American naval forces reached Britain on April 9, 1917, just three days after the declaration of war.

April 9, 1924: The Dawees Plan is formulated to reorganize German war debt and help stabilize its economy.

April 9, 1934: Evelyne Gottlieb, born April 9, 1934 in Berlin. Resided Berlin. Deportation: ab Westerbork. August 7, 1942, Auschwitz. Todesort Auschwitz, declared legally dead.

April 9, 1940: German forces invade Denmark and Norway.

April 9, 1941: German forces occupy Salonika.

April 9, 1942: American forces surrender to the Japanese at Bataan.

April 9, 1961 Fidel Castro appears on Havana TV warning, “the extremely vigilant
and highly-prepared Cuban people would repel any invasion attempt by the counterrevolutionaries
now massing in Florida and Guatemala who are sponsored and financed by the
United States.”

April 9, 1963 Major Eloy Gutierrez Menoyo, leader of Alpha 66, announces that the raids on Cuba will continue despite action by the U.S. government.

April 9, 2002: Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother: 9th cousin 1x removed of Gerol Goodlove


April 9, 2002: Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon
The Queen Mother


Portrait by Richard Stone, 1986

Queen consort of the United Kingdom
and the British Dominions

Tenure 11 December 1936 –
6 February 1952
Coronation
12 May 1937
Empress consort of India

Tenure 11 December 1936 –
14 August 1947

Spouse George VI

Issue
Elizabeth II
Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon

Full name
Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon[a]

House
House of Windsor (by marriage)

Father Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne

Mother Cecilia Cavendish-Bentinck

Born August 4, 1900
London or Hitchin

Died March 30, 2002 (aged 101)
Royal Lodge, Windsor, Berkshire

Burial April 9, 2002
St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle





El grew camellias in every one of her gardens, and as her body was taken from Windsor to lie in state at Westminster Hall, camellias from her own gardens were placed on top of the flag-draped coffin.[121] More than 200,000 people over three days filed past as she lay in state in Westminster Hall at the Palace of Westminster. Members of the household cavalry and other branches of the armed forces stood guard at the four corners of the catafalque. At one point, her four grandsons Prince Charles, Prince Andrew, Prince Edward and Viscount Linley mounted the guard as a mark of respect known as the Vigil of the Princes—an honour only bestowed once before, at the lying in state of King George V.
On the day of her funeral, April 9, the Governor General of Canada issued a proclamation asking Canadians to honour her memory that day.[122] In Australia, the Governor-General read the lesson at a memorial service held in St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney.[123] In London, more than a million people filled the area outside Westminster Abbey and along the 23-mile (37 km) route from central London to her final resting place beside her husband and younger daughter in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle.[124] At her request, after her funeral the wreath that had lain atop her coffin was placed on the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior, in a gesture that echoed her wedding-day tribute 79 years before.[125]
[edit] Public perception
Despite being regarded as one of the most popular members of the royal family in recent times who helped to stabilise the popularity of the monarchy as a whole,[126][127] Elizabeth was subject to various degrees of criticism during her life.
Kitty Kelley alleged that during World War II Elizabeth did not abide by the rationing regulations.[128][129] This is contradicted by the official records,[130][131] and Eleanor Roosevelt during her wartime stay at Buckingham Palace reported expressly on the rationed food served in the Palace and the limited bathwater that was permitted.[132][133]
Further allegations that Elizabeth used racist slurs to refer to black people[128] were strongly denied by Major Colin Burgess.[134] Major Burgess was the husband of Elizabeth Burgess, a mixed-race secretary who accused members of the Prince of Wales's Household of racial abuse.[135] Queen Elizabeth made no public comments on race, but according to Robert Rhodes James in private she "abhorred racial discrimination" and decried apartheid as "dreadful".[136] Woodrow Wyatt records in his diary that when he expressed the view that non-white countries have nothing in common with "us", she told him, "I am very keen on the Commonwealth. They're all like us."[137] However, she did distrust Germans; she told Woodrow Wyatt, "Never trust them, never trust them."[138] While she may have held such views, it has been argued that they were normal for British people of her generation and upbringing, who had experienced two vicious wars with Germany.[139]
In 1987, she was criticised when it emerged that two of her nieces, Katherine Bowes-Lyon and Nerissa Bowes-Lyon, had both been committed to a psychiatric hospital because they were severely handicapped. However, Burke's Peerage had listed the sisters as dead, apparently because their mother, Fenella (the Queen Mother's sister-in-law), "was 'extremely vague' when it came to filling in forms and might not have completed the paperwork for the family entry correctly".[140] When Nerissa had died the year before, her grave was originally marked with a plastic tag and a serial number. The Queen Mother claimed that the news of their institutionalisation came as a surprise to her.[141]
[edit] Legacy


Bronze Statue of Queen Elizabeth on The Mall, London, overlooked by the statue of her husband King George VI
Sir Hugh Casson said she was like "a wave breaking on a rock, because although she is sweet and pretty and charming, she also has a basic streak of toughness and tenacity. ... when a wave breaks on a rock, it showers and sparkles with a brilliant play of foam and droplets in the sun, yet beneath is really hard, tough rock, fused, in her case, from strong principles, physical courage and a sense of duty."[142] Peter Ustinov described her during a student demonstration at the University of Dundee in 1968, "As we arrived in a solemn procession the students pelted us with toilet rolls. They kept hold of one end, like streamers at a ball, and threw the other end. The Queen Mother stopped and picked these up as though somebody had misplaced them. [Returning them to the students she said,] 'Was this yours? Oh, could you take it?' And it was her sang-froid and her absolute refusal to be shocked by this, which immediately silenced all the students. She knows instinctively what to do on those occasions. She doesn't rise to being heckled at all; she just pretends it must be an oversight on the part of the people doing it. The way she reacted not only showed her presence of mind, but was so charming and so disarming, even to the most rabid element, that she brought peace to troubled waters."[143]
She was well known for her dry witticisms. On hearing that Edwina Mountbatten was buried at sea, she said: "Dear Edwina, she always liked to make a splash."[104] Accompanied by the gay writer Sir Noël Coward at a gala, she mounted a staircase lined with Guards. Noticing Coward's eyes flicker momentarily across the soldiers, she murmured to him: "I wouldn't if I were you, Noël; they count them before they put them out."[144] After being advised by a Conservative Minister in the 1970s not to employ homosexuals, the Queen Mother observed that without them, "we'd have to go self-service".[144] On the fate of a gift of a nebuchadnezzar of champagne (20 bottles' worth) even if her family didn't come for the holidays, she said, "I'll polish it off myself."[145] Emine Saner of The Guardian suggests that with a gin and Dubonnet at noon, red wine with lunch, a port and martini at 6 pm and two glasses of champagne at dinner, "a conservative estimate puts the number of alcohol units she drank at 70 a week".[146] Her extravagant lifestyle amused journalists, particularly when it was revealed she had a multi-million pound overdraft with Coutts Bank.[147]
Her habits were often parodied (with relative affection) by the satirical 1980s television programme Spitting Image – which portrayed her with a Birmingham accent and an ever-present copy of the Racing Post. She was portrayed in the 2002 television film Bertie and Elizabeth by Juliet Aubrey, the 2006 film The Queen by Sylvia Syms and the 2010 film The King's Speech by Helena Bonham Carter, who was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and won a BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for her portrayal. She was also played by Olivia Colman in the 2012 film Hyde Park on Hudson, which featured Elizabeth and Albert's visit to President Roosevelt's estate.


The Queen Elizabeth Way Monument, near Toronto, with the effigies of Queen Elizabeth and King George VI

April 9, 2005:

Charles, Prince of Wales
November 14, 1948 July 29, 1981
Divorced 28 August 1996 Lady Diana Spencer
Prince William, Duke of Cambridge
Prince Harry of Wales

April 9, 2005 Camilla Shand






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