Friday, May 30, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, May 30, 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 May 30…

Ada Babb McKinnon (wife of the 1st cousin 6x removed)

Astor Godlove

Ned L. Godsell (3rd great grandnephew of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

John Ryan (husband of the 4th great grandniece of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

Norman M. Snell (husband of the aunt)

Elmer W. Wesley

Merle M. Winch (uncle)

Richard A. Yehle (3rd cousin)

May 30, 1536: – Henry VIII (7th cousin 15x removed) marries Jane Seymour (wife of the 7th cousin 15x removed). [1]


Jane Seymour

Hans Holbein d. J. 032b.jpg


Jane Seymour, portrait by Hans Holbein, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna


Queen consort of England


Tenure

May 30, 1536 – October 24, 1537


[2]

The couple married at the Palace of Whitehall, Whitehall, London, in the Queen's closet by Bishop Gardiner[8] on May 30, 1536. As a wedding gift the King made her a grant of 104 manors in four countries as well as a number of forests and hunting chases, for her jointure, the income to support her during their marriage.[8][3]


Vacant

Title last held by

Anne Boleyn

Queen consort of England
Lady of Ireland
May 30, 1536 – October 24, 1537

Vacant

Title next held by

Anne of Cleves


[4]

Elizabeth (8th cousin 14x removed) was declared illegitimate and deprived of the title of princess.[9] Eleven days after Anne Boleyn's (wife of the 7th cousin 15x removed) death, (May 30) Henry married Jane Seymour, but she died shortly after the birth of their son, Prince Edward, in 1537. From his birth, Edward was undisputed heir apparent to the throne. Elizabeth was placed in his household and carried the chrisom, or baptismal cloth, at his christening.[10]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/78/Elizabeth_I_when_a_Princess.jpg/220px-Elizabeth_I_when_a_Princess.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf1/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

The Lady Elizabeth in about 1546, by an unknown artist

Elizabeth's first Lady Mistress, Margaret Bryan, wrote that she was "as toward a child and as gentle of conditions as ever I knew any in my life".[11][5]

May 30, 1539: the Six Articles and the penalties for failure to conform to them were enacted into law.[6]

May 30, 1560: The French ambassadors, Randan and Montluc, with the ministers of Elizabeth, sign, at Berwick, the preliminaries of a treaty of peace between England, France, and Scotland. [7]

May 30, 1574: Charles IX (brother in law of the 5th cousin 13x removed) dies at Vincennes. His brother Henry III, King of Poland, is proclaimed King of France, and the parliament confers the regency upon Catherine of Médicis^ in the absence of the new sovereign. [8] He owed his selection as ruler Poland to a Jew named Solomon Ashkenazi who was an advisor to the Turkish Sultan.[9]



May 30: 1635: During what will be known as the Thirty Years War (it started in 1618 and ended in 1648) the Peace of Prague is signed marking the start of the end of hostilities. The war will finally end with the Peace of Westphalia. The war was between pitted Protestants against Catholics with Jews caught in the middle For example the Jews of Vienna suffered as a result of the occupation of the city by Imperial soldiers in 1624 when Emperor Ferdinand II confined the Jews to a ghetto. The fighting centered around Germany, Austria, France and the Netherlands and throughout many towns in Germany and Moravia, the Jewish population was expelled, which resulted in thousands of refugees fleeing to Cracow and other Polish cities. These Jews would get caught up in the uprisings that took place in Polish dominated Ukraine. The good news is that the end of the Thirty Years War would mark the rise of a flourishing Protestant Netherlands that would prove a home to European Jews.[10]



May 30, 1636: EDWARD MINTER, 300 acs., last

day of (May 30) 1636, p. 353. At the upper

Chippoecks Cr. on the W. side of a

great Sw. parting this from land of

Benjamin Harrison, Ely. upon sd. Sw.,

Wly. to land of Jerimiah Clements,

abutting Nly. on the maine Riv. & Sly.

into the woods. 50 acs. for trans, of

his now wife Grace Minter & 50 acs.

for trans, of 1 servt. called Richard

Hyfle (Hide) ; 200 acs. by deed of sale

from Charles Foard (Ford), to whom

it was due for trans, of 4 pers: Ann

Emmerton, Hen. Patrick, Edward

Young, Jon. Cooper, servants to Ch.

Ford. Note: This pattent surrendered

& renewed by Sir John Harvy. Rich.

Kemp, Seer. [11]



May 30, 1762: Anti-Jewish riots broke out in Emden, Prussia.[12]



May 30, 1776



At the time of the outbreak of the American War of Independence Waldeck had nearly a century-old tradition of hiring mercenary troops. In contrast to the Kassel contract for troops, the Waldeck document contained a

paragraph establishing reimbursement of the ruler of Waldeck for every soldier killed or wounded in action. Lord Cambden, a speaker for the King's loyal opposition

alluded to this blood money in a debate in the House of Lords. "The whole is a mere mercenary bargain for the hire of troops on one side, and for the sale of human

blood on the other; and... the devoted wretches thus purchased for slaughter are mere mercenaries in the worst sense of the word." 1)



A decree of 1755 had ordered conscription procedures in Waldeck which allowed only university students exemption from service, but in 1776, the ruler of Waldeck attached

great importance to sending only volunteers to America. At the beginning of the War of Independence two Waldeck regiments were stationed in Holland. A part of the

officers and men transferred to the newly-formed Third English-Waldeck Mercenary Regiment. Nevertheless it was difficult to acquire recruits in the time allotted. Even the poor of Waldeck were not especially anxious to subject themselves to the American adventure. Therefore recruitment abroad, i.e., in other German territories, was required to hire the necessary troops. Instead of a bounty, recruits were offered a daily cash payment. The regiment arrived at the port of Bremerlehe in May 30, 1776 with a two-week delay. Therefore the Second Division could not set sail for America until June 2.[13]



Even as the Hessian riflemen were arriving in America, the British authorized the deployment of five riflemen to each company, arming them with short barreled rifles similar to those carried bgy the Jaegers. Additionally, one company of each regimen’s 10 was designated a “light company” of skirmishers and scouts, and these troops, too, oftren included riflemen. The British employed small numbers of riflmen in support of larger elements, rather than designating them to separate units.

There were exceptions, the most notable being the Corps of Riflemen led by Capt. Patrick Ferguson. A world-class marksman considered the finest rifle shot in the British Army, Ferguson also was the inventive genius who designed the world’s first breech-loaded military rifle, which could fire an astounding six aimed shots per minute. When he demonstrated his rifle for King George III in June 1776, not only did the enthusiastic monarch order it into production, but he authorized Ferguson to recruit his own 100 man Corps of Riflemen to be armed with the revolutionary gun. [14]

Unfortunately for Ferguson, his commander in America, Sir William Howe, did not take well to young upstarts with pet ideas. How publicly welcomed the new unit and its peculiar rifle, but he sought to dispose of both. [15]



May 30, 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.[16] Voltaire French philosopher and author passed away. Voltaire is generally regarded as a great thinker. However, as can be seen from his own words, he was a rabid anti-Semite. He described Jews as being “small, ignorant and crude people.” Voltaire did not base his anti-Semitism on the Jews adherence to their religion. Cure them of their religion, he wrote and there is still the problem of their in-born character.[17]

May 30, 1779

On May 3oth, the fleet sailed up the Hudson, and anchoring off the Phillips house, disembarked the troops for the expedition, making a force of 5,000 men — of which the German contingent included the Guards, the Grenadier battalion of v. Linsingen, and 400 Hessian and Rhenish Yãgers. The Prince Charles regiment had come with the fleet from the south. Although it counted 70 sail, large and small, and 140 flatboats, there was hardly standing room on deck.[18]



May 30, 1779

…I heard assembly blown in the Jager Corps. I hurried back as quickly as possible and found that Major Prueschenck, Captain Lorey, and I, each with one hundred men, were ordered to march immediately to Philipse’s wharf. There we found all the grenadiers of the army, the light infantry, the Legion, Ferguson’s Corps, four English regiments, and Robinson’s provincials. The flatboats were boarded at once, and these troops were all embarked on the transport ships of the Mathew Corps. Eight hundred men were thrown on each ship, whereby everybody was stacked in such an unpleasant position that no one could either sit or lie down. All the horses had been sent back. We had nothing with us but what we carried on our backs, not even a bite of bread.

At daybreak on the 31st this fleet, under Commodore Sir George Collier, set sail under escort of two 64-gun ships, three frigates, and four row galleys. Aided by the flood tide and a mild east wind, the fleet passed up the Hudson River and anchored about midday at Tellar’s Point, where all the troops disembarked under General Pattison except for three English regiments and one hundred jägers under Captain Lorey, which were put ashore at Stony Point across from Tellar’s Point.

The march of the main corps, under the Commander in Chief and Major Generals Vaughan and Kospoth, took place along the bank toward Verplanck’s Point. The Americans had constructed a fort there for the protection of this passage of the river, where a battery was cut in the rocks at Stony Point. Since the work on the right bank was open, it was abandoned at once by the enemy and occupied by General Pattison toward evening, but Fort Lafayette on Verplanck’s Point was a good defensive position and garrisoned with a Carolina battalion and six 12-pounders.

General Vaughan advanced at once against the fort with two hundred jàgers, Ferguson’s Corps, and the English grenadiers to assault all the approaches, and at the same time the row galleys drew close to the fort so that they could fire upon it. Firing began immediately between the galleys and the guns of the work. The enemy work was summoned at once, but the commandant refused to surrender and declared he would resist. The army encamped so that the enemy corps under General McDougall could not attempt a rescue.

The row galleys fired upon the fort until nightfall, for it was unap­proachable from the land side in front of heavy guns because of the inaccessible terrain. The jagers and Ferguson had to approach as close as possible on the land side in order to harass the garrison of the fort with rifle fire, but this could not help much since the whole fort was built of rocks and building stones.[19]




1779 MAP OF THE EUROPEAN SETTLEMENTS IN NORTH AMERICA, [1][20]



May 30 and 31, 1780

On the 30th and 31st the jãger detachment and the English and Hessian grenadiers were embarked on transport vessels in the Cooper River above the city. Today all the warships which were to protect the fleet sailed to Five Fathom Hole.[21]

May 30th, 1782



May 3Oth.—We march’d early this day steering N.West along this path called after Bouquet— A number of horses being lost—2 Companies were left on the ground.

A short distance from our encampment we saw a large Deer Lick, and 2 miles farther on we struck a path crossing ours in a rectangle almost. this is the strait path from Sandusky to Wheeling and crosses the Muskingham about 10 Miles from the upper Moray. Town.

“One of our pilots (Zaines) proposed striking this path in “a strait direction from the Mingoe Bottom—and the other “a path to the N.E. of us, about 8 miles from our first en­“camping ground, between the 8 forks of Yellow Creek.”

Here we left Bouquet’s road & followed this Warrior’s path running N.W. towards Mohickin John’s Town, where the fort Laurens road joins it.

two days before us a party of 60 Warriors had travelled along here towards our frontiers. Of 3 horse tracks, who had kept a-head of us from the Moray. Towns to observe our motions one had followed the Warriors and 2 kept before us on the Sandusky course.—The Woods were on fire at different places. At 11 o’clock we were joined by the remaining party & grossed immediately after a Bad Defile: marching down a rocky hill, at the foot of which we had to cross a Creek & immediately again to ascend a steep rocky hill covered by an open Wood. A place formed to obstruct numbers with a handfull of Men, particularly as the Hill on the north Side commands the other, on this side the Creek.

the Country in general is level, rich, well timbered and intersected by a great many runs, who are accompanied by excellent Bottoms.

In the evening we entered a Bottom several miles long, watered by different winding runs & terminated by Kill Buck’s Creek. We crossed it about Miles [sic] from Kill Buck’s former town & encamped along it at the upper end of the Bottom. the north Banks of this Water were so steep & miry that we were baffled in several places in our attenipts to get out of the Creek. the easiest ford is in a curve of the Creek to your Right hand as the common path leads, and then you are obliged to go a piece in the Water up the Creek.

I calculate this day’s march at near 20 miles. We passed several encampments of this party of Warriors going to our frontiers, who probably proceeded but slow, and detained hunting. It would have been necessary to have sent a runner back to apprize our frontiers of this impending danger. the letters were wrote & we could but get one Man willing to undertake carrying them; on condition, another one would accompany him. But as no other could be found, the matter fell through.[22]



X.— MOORE TO IRVINE.



IN Council,, PHILADELPHIA, ,May 30, 1782.

Sir:—Your favors of the 2d, 3d and 9th of the present month, with the representations made by Colonel Williamson[23] and Colonel Marshel,[24] have been read in council and shall be immediately laid before congress[25] as a matter of high importance to the reputation of this state, and to the generl interest and honor of the United States. We request that you will continue your inquiries on this subject and transmit us such information from time to time as may come to’your knowledge tending to elucidate this dark transaction.[26]



The proposed immigration appears to be a dangerous meas­ure; and if the circumstances which you mention respecting Mr. J— can be ascertained, he ought to be secured as a British emissary employed to inveigle away our citizens and place them in a situation whicli must compel them to put themselves under the protection of the British as the only means by which they can be secured from the ravages of the Indians. Such an event would afford a plausible story, which the British would seize with avidity and represent at every court in Europe as an instance of submission to them on the part of America; a story which might be extremely injurious to America, and such as no man who has a due regard to his country would give a countenance to by any act of his.

The recruiting service is of so much importance that we cannot forbear to inquire anxiously what success you have in it and to request you will transmit to us a return of the recruits you have obtained as early as possible.

As to the expedition you mentioned, we can only say, we confide in your zeal and prudence to direct the force which may be in your power in the most effectual manner for covering the frontiers.1A



May 30, 1783 The Pennsylvania Evening Post becomes the first daily newspaper in the United States.[27]



May 30, 1784”The regiment departed from New York on November 21

1783 and arrived at Breznerlehe on April 20, 1784.

They returned to their quarters in Melsungen on May 30, 1784.


May 30, 1806:

Dickinson killed in duel; Jackson wounded. [28]


Jackson's duel with Charles Dickinson

http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/images/jackson2.jpgAndrew Jackson had a fierce will and sometimes savage temper, both illustrated in the following, in which some background is provided as it illustrates the society Jackson lived in:

In 1805 a friend of Jackson's deprecated the manner in which Captain Joseph Ervin had handled a bet with Jackson over a horse race. Ervin's son-in-law, Charles Dickinson became enraged and started quarreling with Jackson's friend which lead to Jackson becoming involved. Dickinson wrote to Jackson calling him a "coward and an equivicator". The affair continued, with more insults and misunderstandings, until Dickinson published a statement in the Nashville Review in May 1806, calling Jackson a "worthless scoundrel, ... a poltroon and a coward".

Jackson challenged Dickinson to a duel very much according to the customs of the time in the south. Dickinson, known as one of the best shots in Tennessee if not the best, had choice of weapons and chose pistols.

Dickinson fired the first shot, which broke two of Jackson's ribs and lodged two inches from his heart. Dickinson then had to stand at the mark as Jackson, clutching his chest, aimed slowly and shot him fatally.

Though acceptable by the code of the times, many people considered it a cold-blooded killing. I presume the rules of engagement were for each man to draw and fire at the same time, upon hearing the signal, but if one fired, there was no "second round" until the other man fired. The implication is that magnanimity would have required Jackson to fire into the air rather than taking a slow deliberate aim at 24 feet.

Jackson's wound never healed properly and abcesses formed around the bullet, causing pain and some debilitation for Jackson's remaining 39 years. [29]

May 30, 1807: The first service found against it only 1756 instead of and to May 30, 1807 Werneck raised with the castle church to the Kuratie. [30] (History of Werneck’s Catholic Church, It was indicated that Franz Gottlop was a Catholic. Perhaps there was a conversion during this period.) In the year 1628 by the Fürstbischoff at that time Adolf by honour mountain a dreistöckiger Getreidespeicher one built. This in the year 1631 of Sweden was robbed, but was not burnt down how often usual. In the northern part this Getreidespeicher was furnished to 1668 a hall with an altar in honours Maria Verkündigung and an organ. This hall raised wurde1691 by Gottfried from Guttenberg to the branch church (the Pfarrei Ettleben). The municipality Werneck a corner belonged up to the year 1910 to the Pfarrei Ettleben. In the context of the new building of the lock developed there its own castle church, which was inaugurated on August 29, 1745 by the Fürstbischoff Friedrich Karl von Schönborn. The first service found against it only 1756 instead of and to May 30, 1807 Werneck raised with the castle church to the Kuratie.

(Translation)[31]

May 30, 1831: OLIVER CRAWFORD, b. May 17, 1805, Clark County, Kentucky; d. July 06, 1876, Estell County, Kentucky; m. DELINA PRUNTY ESTES, May 30, 1831, Madison County, Kentucky. [32]

April 29-May 30, 1862: . Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry at the Russell House, near Corinth[33]

Mon. May 30[34], 1864

Started out on a troop day scout on chapalia Byo marched 20 miles fired into at dark by bushwhackers[35] camped at 10 at night

capt Paul killed 4 wounded in re[36]

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary, 24th Iowa Infantry)[37]



May 30, 1864: Samuel Godlove of the Iowa 24th Infantry Regiment, D Co., Battle at Rosedale Bayou, Louisiana on May 30, 1864.

April 29, May 30, 1865: . Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry at the Grand Review[38]

May 30, 1901: C. H. Harrison (before 1861 - after 1901)

Grant Co., KY

Surnames Mentioned: HARRISON HUME DICKERSON BEASLEY

C. H. HARRISON. None of the younger members of the Grant County bar stand higher among the people of the county than does C. H. Harrison. He has been an active practitioner since June 18, 1885. He is a son of Urial Harrison and Mary F. (Hume) Harrison. He attended the best schools in Williamstown, and for a season attended Centre College at Danville. When he grew to manhood's estate he selected the law as his profession and went into the law office of W. W. Dickerson and after two years of close application was admitted to the bar and begin his life's work. Three years ago he formed a partnership with C. H. Beasley, and the firm of which he is a member is doing a large and lucrative business. In politics Mr. Harrison is a Republican and stands high in the councils of his party. He is a prominent member of the Knights of Pythias and a member of the Baptist Church. [39]



May 30, 1922: The Lincoln Memorial is dedicated in Washington D.C.[40]



May 30, 1941: Baghdad is taken by the British.[41]

Early May 30, 1942: battered, patched, but battleworthy, Yorktown stood out of Pearl Harbor, bringing up the rear of Task Force 17, RADM Fletcher commanding. [42]

May 30, 1942: Task Force 17 (TF17), with Rear Admiral Frank J. Fletcher in Yorktown, left Pearl with two cruisers and six destroyers as CTF-17; as senior officer present, Rear Admiral Fletcher became "Officer in Tactical Command." The usual commander of the Enterprise task force, Vice Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey, was kept in hospital at Pearl with a stress-related skin condition. Each side launched air attacks during the day in a decisive battle. [43]



May 30, 1961 The Kennedys leave from Idlewild Airport for Europe, to arrive in Paris

tomorrow. The Paris visit with Gen. Charles de Gaulle will prove to be an overwhelming

success.

JFK has secretly recruited Dr. Max Jacobson to join the presidential entourage. The New

York-based Jacobson is known among numerous celebrities as “Dr. Feelgood” for his willingness

to inject amphetamines (laced with such things as steroids and animal cells) into wealthy clients.

“Speed” is now thought to be harmless and is frequently used by entertainers. According to

evidence amassed by C. David Heymann, including Jacobson’s unpublished autobiography, the

president and the first lady “had developed a strong dependence on amphetamines” by the summer of

1961. RFK is suspicious of Jacobson and tries to discourage his brother from taking the injections.

At Bobby’s urging JFK agrees to submit all of his medications to the Food and Drug

Administration for analysis. When the FDA reports that Jacobson’s medications contain

amphetamines and steroids, JFK declares: “I don’t care if it’s horse piss. It works.” When Jacobson

writes a letter of resignation and presents it to the president, JFK tears it up and exclaims: “That’s

out of the question.”

n As Rafael Trujillo is being chauffeured down the seaside highway en route to a

rendezvous with his mistress, his car is overtaken and forced to a stop. He dies fighting back.

The news is relayed to JFK in Paris. Trujillo’s son, Ramfis, is also in Paris. He reacts to the news

of his father’s death by chartering an Air France 707 and returns home. Upon landing, he has all

the known conspirators run down and executed. One presidential assistant, Richard Goodwin,

is demanding that the U.S. call out the fleet and send in the Marines. [44]




[45]



May 30, 2012: In the journal Geophysical Research Letters, suggest the super-eruption would have spread up to 990 million pounds (450 million kilograms) of poisonous sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere. This air pollution would have cooled the Northern Hemisphere, driving down temperatures by 1.8 to 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (1 to 2 degrees Celsius) for two to three years, enough to have severe effects on the environment. (For comparison, the air pollutants generated by the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo reduced global temperatures by about 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit (0.5 degrees Celsius).

The researchers noted that the Campi Flegrei super-eruption took place in what was already an especially cold, dry period in the last Ice Age. "The eruption would have made conditions even worse for the Neanderthal and modern human populations," researcher Antonio Costa, a volcanologist at the University of Reading in England and the Italian National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology in Naples, told OurAmazingPlanet.

Fluorine-laden ash from the eruption that later became incorporated into plant matter eaten by these hominids could have also potentially caused a condition known as fluorosis, which can lead to eye, tooth and organ damage. In addition, sulfur dioxide, fluorine and chlorine emissions from the volcano would have generated intense acid rain downwind of the volcano.

The researchers plan to look at other super-eruptions, such as the Toba outburst about 75,000 years ago, "which was much larger than the Campanian Ignimbrite," Costa said. "We can also study the Yellowstone super-volcano."[46]





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


[1] http://www.tudor-history.com/about-tudors/tudor-timeline/


[2] wikipedia


[3] wikipedia


[4] wikipedia


[5] wikipedia


[6] wikipedia


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


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


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


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


[11] Cavaliers and Pioneers


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


[13] VEROFFENTLICHUNGEN DER ARCHIVSCHULE MARBURG INSTITUT FÜR ARCHIVWISSENSCHAFT Nr. 10 WALDECKER TRUPPEN IM AMERIKANISCHEN UNABHANGIGK EITSKRIEG (HETRINA) Index nach Familiennamen Bd.V Bearbeitet von Inge Auerbach und Otto Fröhlich Marburg 1976


[14] American Rifleman, Riflemen of the Revolution, May 2009, page 42.


[15] American Rifleman Magazine


[16] The Journal of the Masoninc Society, Autumn, 2010, Issue 10.


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


[18] The German Allied Troops in the North American War of Independence, 1776-1783 by Max von Eelking pgs. 172-173




[19]


[20] [1] by Thos. Kitchin, Hydrographer to His Majesty, from A Philosphical and Political History of the Settlements and Trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies, by Abbe Raynal, Dublin, 1779 per page 590 of Phillips.






[21] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs.242-243


[22] Journal of a Volunteer Expedition to Sandusky, Baron Rosenthal, “John Rose”.


[23]These words only tend to increase the anxiety to know the particulars of “the representations” made by Marshel and Williamson concerning the “Gnadenhuetten affair.”


[24]The fact that the letters of Marshel and Williamson here referred to, and which had been obtained by Irvine, were the official reports of the expedition ‘that resulted in the killing of the Moraviah Indians “the Gnadenhuettan affair” naturally awakens an interest in their recovery; all efforts, however, in that direction have thus far been fruitless.


[25]The two letters were sent by the governor to the Pennsylvania delegates in congress, as the following proceedings show:







[27] On This Day in America by John Wagman


[28] http://www.wnpt.org/productions/rachel/timeline/1791_1811.html


[29] http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/biographies/andrew-jackson/jacksons-duel-with-charles-dickinson.php


[30] (Translation)

http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/werneck_synagoge.htm




[31] http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/werneck_synagoge.htm


[32] http://penningtons.tripod.com/jepthagenealogy.htm


[33] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[34] Expedition from Morganza to the Atchafalaya River May 30-June 6. (UNION IOWA VOLUNTEERS, 24th Regiment, Iowa Infantry: http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/template.cfm?unitname=24th%20Regiment%2C%20Iowa%20Infantry&unitcode=UIA0024RI)


[35] “We were called bushwhackers, as a term of reproach, simply because our attacks were generally surprises, and we had to make up by celerity for lack of numbers. Now I never resented the epithet of “bushwacker” although there was no soldier to whom it applied less, because bushwhacking is a legitimate form of war, and it is just as fair and equally heroic to fire at an enemy from behind a bush as a breastwork or from the casemate of a fort.” Memoirs of Colonel John S. Mosby (1887).

http://spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USACWmosby.htm




[36] The Twenty-fourth Iowa had a skirmish with the enemy while engaged in a reconnoitering expedition from Morganza, in which Captain B. G Paul, of Company K, was killed, and four enlisted men were wounded. The losses of the regiment while connected with the troops commanded by General Banks had reached the aggregate number of 48, and the results accomplished, during that period of its service, were not only not commensurate with the loss, but the officers and men of the regiment were fully justified in the opinion that the sacrifice had been in vain, and they were rejoiced to know that a change for the better was in prospect.

(Roster of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion Vol. III, 24th Regiment-Infantry ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgienweb/ia/state/military/civilwar/book/cwbk 24.txt.


[37] Annotated by Jeffery Goodlove


[38] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[39] Source: Souvenir Edition, The Williamstown Courier, Williamstown, Ky, May 30, 1901, reprinted September 19, 1981 by the Grant County KY Historical Society.


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


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


[42] http://www.cv6.org/1942/midway/default.htm


[43] http://www.theussenterprise.com/battles.html




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




[45] LBJ Presidential Library, Austin TX February 11, 2012


[46] Copyright 2012 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. [46]

No comments:

Post a Comment