Wednesday, June 18, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, June 18, 2014

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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 June 18…

Amy S. Bargahiser

Lola J. Burch

Daniel L. Burnette

Paul Coon

Jane M. Cover Orr

William Gibson

Abraham Godlove

Dick Mckee

Gabriel D. Smith

George K. Smith

June 18, 1525: In 1525, Henry VIII became enamoured of Anne and began pursuing her. Coincidentally, her father was elevated to the peerage as Viscount Rochford on June 18, 1525.[10] The title referred to the "barony" of Rochford supposedly created in 1488 for his grandfather. The title had fallen into abeyance as Ormond had died without any male heir in 1515.

As Henry's infatuation for Anne intensified, so did her father's titles. Henry arranged for the main claimant to the earldom of Ormond, Piers Butler to renounce all his claims to the titles in 1529. Coincidentally, Piers Butler was rewarded for his generosity by being created Earl of Ossory five days later.

Boleyn's claims to the Earldom of Wiltshire also depended upon his Irish relatives. This time, he had to go back to his maternal great-grandfather, James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond, to establish a claim. [1]

June 18, 1525: Since his birth FitzRoy had remained in the background; such discretion over his son may not have been to the King’s taste and he may have felt his manhood and virility should be publicly vindicated, but he fully made up for his son’s quiet birth and equally quiet Christening when on June 18, 1525, the six-year-old boy was brought to Bridewell Palace on the western edge of the city of London where honours were showered upon him. That morning of the 18th, the six-year-old Lord Henry FitzRoy travelled by barge from Wolsey’s mansion of Durham Place, near Charing Cross, down the River Thames. He came in the company of a host of knights, squires and other gentlemen. At 9am his barge pulled up at the Watergate and his party made their way through the palace to the king's lodgings on the south side of the second floor. The rooms were richly decorated with various members of court and the nobility coming to see FitzRoy's elevation. Among them were numerous bishops, Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, and Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk. The first ceremony when he was being created Earl of Nottingham, FitzRoy was attended by Henry Percy, 5th Earl of Northumberland, who carried the sword of state, along with John de Vere, 14th Earl of Oxford, and William FitzAlan, 18th Earl of Arundel. Six-year old Henry knelt before his father as Sir Thomas More read out the patents of nobility. It had been the first time since the 12th Century when an illegitimate son had been raised to the peerage, when Henry II, King of England created his son William as Earl of Salisbury. However the ceremony was not complete, the onlookers watched as the young Lord Nottingham re-emerged into the chamber. The Earl of Northumberland carried the robes; behind him came Thomas Grey, Marquess of Dorset, carrying the sword; the earl of Arundel, carrying the cap of estate with a circlet; and the Earl of Oxford with a rod of gold. Once again young Henry FitzRoy knelt before his father and as the patent was read he was invested with the trappings of a duke. This time, when he rose to his feet, he was Duke of Richmond and Somerset.

To be a duke was a significant honour. It was the highest rank of the peerage and the office, originally devised by Edward III, King of England for his son Edward, Prince of Wales as the Duke of Cornwall retained its Royal aura. The former Henry FitzRoy was subsequently referred to in all formal correspondence as the “right high and noble prince Henry, Duke of Richmond and Somerset”. As if to compound this sense of royal dignity and endow the child with as much respectability as possible, Henry VIII had granted his son the unprecedented honour of a double dukedom. While he is mostly known as Richmond, some pains were taken to see that he bore both titles in equal weight. The bulk of Lord Richmond’s new lands came from Margaret Beaufort’s estate. These were lands which were the rightful inheritance of King Henry VII when he was Earl of Richmond and the lands which had belonged to John Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, the father of Margaret Beaufort. The use of the Duchy of Somerset must have struck a chord among the courtiers as it was well known that the Beaufort’s eldest child was John Somerset, a royal bastard who had been legitimised following his parent’s adultery and then marriage. A part of the Beaufort connection to the Somerset duchy, the Duke of Richmond was important as the earldom of Richmond had been held by his grandfather King Henry VII and by his great-grandfather Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond. The earldom of Nottingham had been held by Richmond’s great uncle Prince Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York, the second son of Edward IV. Seeing Henry’s obvious pride and affection for his sturdy little son, many of those who witnessed Richmond’s elevation must have wondered if this was what the King had in mind.[13] To support his new status, Henry granted his young son an annum of £4,845.[14] Following the ceremony, what took place was a “great feasts and disguising”. Henry wished to celebrate his six-year-old’s son with customary extravagance. It is unknown if Elizabeth Blount had been present but it is certain that the new duke’s stepfather Gilbert Tailbois was present and must have given her an eye-witnessing account.

It was a proud day for Henry, and for his former mistress Elizabeth, however the ceremony did nothing to spare the Queen’s feelings. She knew she failed in giving England a Prince, and was anxious about her own daughter’s prospects. In a private letter the Venetian ambassador wrote: It seems that the Queen resents the earldom and dukedom conferred on the King’s natural son and remains dissatisfied. At the instigation it is said of her three Spanish ladies her chief counsellors, so that the King has dismissed them from court, a strong measure but the Queen was obliged to submit and have patience.[15]

Also at Richmond’s elevation was Sir Henry Courtenay, his father’s cousin through Catherine of York, the younger sister of Elizabeth of York. He was raised from being merely the Earl of Devon to be the Marquess of Exeter. Sir Thomas Manners, a great nephew of Edward IV through his sister Anne of York was made the earl of Rutland. Henry Clifford was made the new Earl of Cumberland and would cement his ties to the Tudor dynasty by marrying his son and heir, Lord Henry Clifford, to Richmond’s cousin lady Eleanor Brandon, the King’s niece. Even Sir Thomas Boleyn, who was created Viscount Rochford, was family in a way as he was the father of the King’s latest mistress, Mary Boleyn. Richmond’s ceremony was by far most spectacular but it was also a public relations display as the last militant spring of the Yorkist faction Richard de la Pole was dead since the Battle of Pavia. The young Henry Brandon became the new Earl of Lincoln, which had once belonged to the de la Pole family. [2][3]





June 18, 1574: Henry III, having learned the death of his brother, clandestinely leaves Cracow, where he then was, and sets out for France, by Austria and the north of Italy. [4]

June 18, 1633: Charles I of England




Charles I


King Charles I by Antoon van Dyck.jpg


Portrait by Anthony van Dyck, 1636


King of England and Ireland (more...)


Reign

March 27, 1625 –
January 30, 1649


Coronation

February 2,1626


Predecessor

James I


Successor

Charles II (de jure)
Council of State (de facto)


King of Scots (more...)


Reign

March 27, 1625 –
January 30,1649


Coronation

June 18, 1633


Predecessor

James VI


Successor

Charles II



Spouse

Henrietta Maria of France


more...

Issue


Charles II
Mary, Princess Royal and Princess of Orange
James II & VII
Elizabeth
Anne
Henry, Duke of Gloucester
Henrietta, Duchess of Orléans


House

House of Stuart


Father

James VI of Scotland and I of England


Mother

Anne of Denmark[5]






June 18, 1670: Charles was to abandon England's Triple Alliance with Sweden and the Dutch Republic in favor of assisting Louis XIV in conquering the Dutch Republic, which he claimed for his wife Queen Marie Thérèse as part of her unpaid dowry. Provided that the conquest was successfully completed, England was promised several very profitable ports along one of the major rivers that ran through the Dutch Republic. The treaty did not become public until 1830.[31] After her time in England, she returned to France on June 18.[32][6]

June 18, 1684: Mary Smith , b. April 29, 1684[i][ix]; d. June 18, 1684[ii][x][7]

June 18, 1685: Soon after becoming king, James faced a rebellion in southern England led by his nephew, the Duke of Monmouth, and another rebellion in Scotland led by Archibald Campbell, the Earl of Argyll.[64] Argyll and Monmouth both began their expeditions from Holland, where James's nephew and son-in-law, William of Orange, had neglected to detain them or put a stop to their recruitment efforts.[65] Argyll sailed to Scotland and, on arriving there, raised recruits mainly from amongst his own clan, the Campbells.[66] The rebellion was quickly crushed, and Argyll himself was captured at Inchinnan on June 18, 1685.[66] Having arrived with fewer than 300 men and unable to convince many more to flock to his standard, Argyll never posed a credible threat to James.[67] Argyll was taken as a prisoner to Edinburgh. A new trial was not commenced because Argyll had previously been tried and sentenced to death. The King confirmed the earlier death sentence and ordered that it be carried out within three days of receiving the confirmation.[8]

June 18, 1745: from page 165 of "Christopher Gist of Maryland and some of his Descendants, 1679-1957," by Jean Muir Dorsey and Maxwell Jay Dorsey (Urbana, Ill), 1958 (John S. Swift Company, Inc., Chicago, Ill): "On June 18, 1745, John Gist of Truro Parish, Fairfax Co., VA, planter, and Mary, his wife, leased from Sampson Darrell, Gent. [1712-1777] of the same parish, 106 acres of land for and during the space of their natural lives. The land was bounded by the kine of William Spencer and Doeg Run (Fairfax Co DB A, No. 1 Part 2, Page 404)... George Washington bought this land from Sampson Darrell on August 12, 1760. At this time, John Gist of Fairfax County for 30 pounds released any claim to the land to George Washington...(Fairfax Co DB D, No. 1 Part 2, Pages 757-759)...John Gist was living in Cameron Parish, Loudoun Co., VA., in 1762..." [end of Christopher Gist material]. [9]

June 18, 1768: The Haidamak Massacres (Ukraine) reached Uman. The peasant serfs and Cossacks rioted much in the same vein as Chemielnicki one hundred and twenty years earlier. At Uman the Poles and Jews defended the city together under the Polish commander Ivan Gonta. The next day, convinced by Zheleznyak the Polish revolutionary, that only the Jews would be attacked, Gonta allowed the fortified city to be entered without a fight. (This would not be the last time that the Poles sold out the Jews in an attempt to save their own skins. And it was not the last time that those who murdered the Jews would in turn slaughter them.) Approximately 8000 Jews were killed, many of them trying to defend themselves near the synagogue. As soon as the Jews were all massacred the Haidamaks (the paramilitary bands) began to kill the Poles. Although the Haidamaks began in the 1730's the main rioting was during the years 1734, 1750 and 1768 .It is estimated that during these years 20,000 Jews were killed. The Haidamaks became part of the Ukrainian national movement and are celebrated in folklore and literature.[10]



June 18, 1777: Continental Congress journals identify Colonel George Morgan

George Morgan was responsible for supplying the western troops during at least part of the

Revolutionary War. According to Volume 8, ―Journals of the Continental Congress‖, page

476, on June 18, 1777 Congress recorded:

That the commissary general be directed to supply Colonel George Morgan, with five

hundred bushels of salt, to be forwarded to Fort Pitt, for curing91 the provisions directed

by Congress to be stored there.[11]



“June 18, 1777 - At daybreak an enemy corps moved against the left flank of Cornwallis’ Corps. The farthest forward pickets of the Hessian Grenadiers immediately sent out a patrol to reconnoiter the enemy. This patrol had hardly neared the woods on our front when the rebels came out of the same. The rebels would have surrounded our picket if a jaeger company, with an amusette, had not come to their help, fortunately, and driven the enemy back with their fire. The rebels fled back into the woods. We had two subalterns and one private killed, three grenadiers and two jaegers wounded, the latter being captured by the enemy. Otherwise the army remained quiet.

Jaegers with Amusette

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimJmUKEAqY_pez1xA5qLzRNvYQeUYM-MxldTHfHaQlRiTXXLxo9M83b_uJ32gZ89JCghki7tGvkcIpocGHU1hPij3SWBz57-slHJZJ44WEz2yh4ECvurqgGYdXvQa70QRJ_F-ItQYFMnwc/s400/Jaegers.jpg
Great painting of Hessians with the large calibre musket called an 'amusette'. [12]



June 18, 1778

Threatened by a French blockade, the British evbacuate Philadelphia, during the Revolutionary War.[13]



June 18, 1781

“Agreeable to a Publick notice given by Coll. Hays to the Pricipal Inhabitants of the County of Westmoreland to meet at Capt. John McClellan’s, on the 18th Day of June, 1781.

“And Whereas, There was a number of the Principal people met on sd Day, and unanimously chose John Proctor, John Pomroy, Charles Campbell, Sam’l Moorhead, James Barr, Charles Foreman, Isaac Mason [Meason], James Smith, and Hugh Martain a Committee to Enter into resolves for the Defence of our frontiers, as they were informed by Christ. Hays, Espr. That their proceedings would be approvd. Of by Council.

“1st Resolved, That a Campaign be carried on with Genl. Clark.

“2nd Resolved, That Genl. Clark be furnished with 300 men out of Pomroy’s, Beard’s, and Davises Battalion.

“3rd Resolved, That Coll. Archd. Lochry gives orders to sd. Colls. To raise their quota by Volunteers or Draught.

4thly. Resolved, That ₤6 be advanced to every volunteer that marches under the command of Genl Clark on the proposd. Campaign.

5th. And for the further Incouragement of Voluntiers, that grain be raised by subscription by the Different Companies.

6th. That Coll. Lochery concil with the Officers of Virginia respectin the manner of Draughting those that associate in that State and others.

“7th. Resolved, That Coll. Lochry meet Genl Clark and other officers and Coll. Crawford on the 23d Inst. To confer with them the day of Rendezvouse.

“Signd. By order. Of Committee, John Proctor, Prest. [14]



IRVINE TO COL. EVANS.



FORT PITT, June 18, 1782.

Sir:—I received your letter by Mr. Thomas in answer to mine of the 5th of April, and have ever since that time ex­pected a direct application from you for a supply of ammuni­tion, but your silence on that head leads me to think you had been provided at some other quarter; however, if you have not, and will take the trouble to send, I will furnish you with some; and, any assistance in my power to afford, you may de­pend on. I am informed by the secretary at war of Virginia that a company has been sent from Hampshire to your relief or assistance.



June 18-19, 1782

I had now the satisfaction to find my jaw began to mend, and in four or five days could chew any vegetable proper for nourishmet, but finding my gun only a useless burden, left in the wilderness. I had no apparatus for making fire to sleep by, so that I could get but little rest for the gnats and musketoes; there are likewise a great many swamps in the beech ridge, which occasioned me very often to lie wet; this ridge through which I traveled , is about 20 miles broad, the ground in general very level and rich, free from shrubs and brushes; there are, however, very few springs, yet wells might easily be dug in all parts of the ridge; the timber on it is ver lofty, but it is no easy matter to make a straight course through the same, the moss growing as high upon the South side of the trees as upon the North.[15]













June 18, 1798: * The Naturalization Act, passed on June 18. [16]







Description: I-04b



1752/1755

Franz Gottlob born.



1744?/1752-55? born in Werneck, principality of Würzburg[17] (now in Bavaria).



Francis’ year of birth is problematical. Lyman Chalkley cites a deposition by Francis “Cutliff” who was 61 in late June 1805.[18] This translates as a birth year of 1743 or 1744 and is consistent with the age Francis reported in the 1830 census: at least 80, but under 90. Using this date of birth, Francis was about 91 when he died in 1835.[19]



In a letter to Annie Cline, Judge Jacob Didawick, a grandson of Francis, wrote that his grandfather was 84 when he died.[20] This translates as a birth year of 1750 or 1751, which is close to the birth year for Franz Gottlob estimated from HETRINA. HETRINA has three references to Franz. Two of those estimate his birth year as 1752-1753 and one 1754-1755.[21]



June 18, 1798: Gabriel D. Smith (b. June 18, 1798 in Elbert Co. GA / d. October 3, 1880 in GA).

[22]**. Gabriel D. Smith, Jr.11 [Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. June 18, 1798 in Elbert Co. GA / d. October 3, 1880 in Carroll Co. GA) married Nancy E. Cain (b. January 21, 1802 in GA / d. September 27, 1885 in Carroll Co. GA) in 1821 in Franklin Co. GA. [23]



June 18, 1807: Order of battle of the Guard Infantry Division in June 1807
Commander - GdB Hulin
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1st Brigade - GdB Dorsenne
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1st Regiment of Grenadiers (2 battalions)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2nd Regiment of Grenadiers (2 battalions)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2nd Brigade - GdB Soules
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1st Regiment of Chasseurs (2 battalions)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2nd Regiment of Chasseurs (2 battalions)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2nd Brigade - GdB Boyer de Rebeval
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1st Regiment of Fusliers (2 battalions)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2nd Regiment of Fusliers (2 battalions)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Divisional artillery [24]

Joseph Leclere was said to have been one of Napoleon’s Bodyguards and is the 5th great grandfather of Jeffery Lee Goodlove.

June 1810: Taylor married Margaret Mackall Smith, whom he had met the previous autumn in Louisville. "Peggy" Smith came from a prominent family of Maryland planters; she was the daughter of Major Walter Smith, who had served in the Revolutionary War.[5] The couple had six children:
•Ann Margaret Mackall Taylor (1811–1875),[6] married Robert C. Wood, a U.S. Army surgeon she had met while living Fort Snelling, in 1829.[7]
•Sarah Knox Taylor (1814–1835),[6] married Jefferson Davis in 1835, whom she had met through her father at the end of the Black Hawk War; she died at 21 of malaria in St. Francisville, Louisiana, shortly after her marriage.[8]
•Octavia Pannill Taylor (1816–1820)[6]
•Margaret Smith Taylor (1819–1820),[6] died in infancy along with Octavia when the Taylor family was stricken with a "bilious fever"[9]
•Mary Elizabeth Taylor (1824–1909),[6] married William Wallace Smith Bliss (died 1853) in 1848[10]

Richard "Dick" Taylor (1826–1879),[6] Confederate Army general during the Civil War[11] [25]

June 18: 1812: Congress approves (with all federalist voting no) and President James Madison officially declared war on England June 18, beginning the War of 1812. [26][27] The United States has entered its first World War. [28]

June 18, 1812, the United States declared war on Great Britain. Since the British had a strong presence in Southern Canada and Detroit, this necessitated an American military presence in Ohio. The Army in Ohio was to consist mainly of Militia from Ohio, Kentucky and Pennsylvania. There were also to be mustered two regiments for federal service in Ohio; the 18th & 19th US Infantry.



June 1812: Historical Description

When war was declared in June 1812, the Americans had but 7,000 troops in the whole of the west, and their leading general, William Hull, was an old man and little respected. The British essentially controlled the Great Lakes and had the numerous Indian tribes as allies, and their initial efforts were crowned with success. Harrison had established a reputation as a victorious general when he defeated the Indians in 1811 at the Battle of Tippecanoe, and he was governor of the virgin Indiana territory, so many eyes turned to him to take an active military role. [29]

June 18, 1812: Conrad Goodlove (add) 61 years a resident of the county and State aforesaid who being duly sworn according to law declares that he is the identical Conrad Goodlove who was a private and acted part of the time as orderly seargant in the company commanded Captain Samuel McCord in the Regiment of Light horse mounted volunteers commanded by Colonel Duncan McArthur in the war with Great Britain declared by this United States on the 18th day of June (June 18) 1812. That he volunteered at Urbana Champaign county Ohio and marched from there to upper Sandusky and from thence to the Rapids and was in actual service about ninety days and continued in actual service in said war for more than fourteen days to (---) about the time above specified[30]

1812

John Battaile married Mary Willis Daingerfield. He was a Captain in the War of 1812.[31]



June 1815: 12TH. PRESIDENT, UNITED S ZACHARY * (12TH US PRESIDENT) TAYLOR:

June 1815: Twelfth President of the USA.ZACKARY WAS 12TH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES BETWEEN 1849 & 1850 HE PASSED AWAY IN OFFICE AFTER 16 MONTHS IN OFFICE. AS A CAPTAIN HE WAS SUCCESSFUL AT FORT HARRISON AGAINST A BAND OF 400 NATIVES LED BY TECUMSEH. IN JUNE 1815 HE



June 18, 1815: Napoleon was defeated at the Battle of Waterloo. According to one account, fifty-two French Jews lost their lives in the battle. This defeat marked a return of the reactionaries to power in Europe. The laws of emancipation that had benefited the Jews of Europe were rolled back. It would take many decades for the Jews of Europe to win them back.[32]



June 1818



With the other townships of the county, it was organized, as the township of Moorefield, in June, 1818, and was so named in remembrance of Moorefield in the "Old Dominion," whence some of the early settlers came.[33]





Saul Henkle (married Conrad and Caty Goodlove), who, in 1818, when the county was organized, was the first Clerk; [34]




abt. 1818, d. 1837

John MARSH, b. VA 1794

Maria DYE in 1833

Nathan, Mary J. and John D., deceased by 1908


















Abraham GODLOVE b: JUNe 18, 1818 in Virginia



RETURNED HOME TO PLANT CORN. [35]

June 1820: After graduation, Polk traveled to Nashville to study law under renowned Nashville trial attorney Felix Grundy. While working for Grundy, he served as clerk of the Tennessee State Senate from 1819 to 1822, a position which enabled him to learn the routine of the legislature. Polk was admitted to the bar in June 1820, and established his own practice in Columbia, Tennessee while the Senate was in recess. His first case was to defend his father against a public fighting charge, a case which he won. He worked with Aaron V. Brown, future Governor of Tennessee and Postmaster General. [36]



June 1825: FROM THE harper's FERRY FREE PRESS OF JUNE 1825.



A party of ladies and gentlemen repaired on Friday,

the tenth of June,(June 10) to a spring (Air. D. Morgan's, near

Shepherdstown) for the purpose of celebrating the

day, pursuant to an arrangement made 50 years be-

fore. The circumstances which gave rise to this truly

interesting celebration have been related to us as fol-

lows, by a gentleman who was present.



In the spring of 1775 General Washington selected

Hugh Stephenson and Daniel Morgan, afterwards

Colonel Hugh Stephenson and General Morgan, to

command two companies of men, the quota Virginia

had been required to furnish.



Altho' at the time Boston was invested with a large

military force, and the prospects of Americans were

enveloped in impenetrable gloom, yet so great was

the love of liberty which animated our forefathers,

that two volunteer comi)anies were instantly raised,

one at She])herdstown, and the other at Winchester.

They turnetl out for twelve months, furnished their

own rifles and equipment, and marched to Boston in

twenty-one days.



A barbecue was given by Colonel William Morgan,

to Stephenson's company, on the 10th day of June, (June 10)

1775, the period of its organization, at thcspring above

mentioned, which has ever since been known by the

name of Stephenson's spring.

\



190 GEORGE MICHAEL BEDINGER



Then it was that a prophetic and truly patriotic

song was sung (of which we hope to obtain a copy)

and an agreement made by these heroes of the olden

time, that the survivors of the perils they were then

about to encounter and of the ravages of time, should

"meet at that spring and on that day fifty years to

come," which agreement has thus been redeemed.



Out of the ninety-seven* gallant spirits who com-

posed the company, five only are living, and of the

latter number but two were present, namely, Major

Henry Bedinger, of Berkeley County, \^irginia, and

Major M. Bedinger, of Kentucky.' The other three

are Judge Robert White of Winchester, and General

Samuel Finley and William Hulse, Esq., of Ohio, all

of whom it is understood would have attendctl had

they not been prevented by old age and infirmity. A

few of those who fought in '76, and one who sur-

vived the slaughter at St. Clair's defeat, were among

the number present at this celebration.



Soon after the company had partaken of an elegant

dinner given by Mr. Daniel Morgan, Captain Harper,

with a detachment of artillery, was seen at a distance

advancing with colours flying and music playing to pay

suitable honors to the occasion. The sound of the

music, and the appearance of the martial column, be-

ing unexpected, must have struck the minds of this

remnant of Ivevoinlionary veterans with alternaiely

joyful and gloomy reminiscences of "limes long past!"

The thrill of joy at the recollection of the "well fought

field;" and the gloom of melancholy at the remem-

brance of the immense sacrifice of valuable lives,

which the gain of freedom cost our now happy coim-

try.



*A mistake. There were one hundred men.







H oaov;







GEORGE MICHAEL BEDINGER 191



The salutes were then gone through, and the very

interesting ceremony of presenting one of Stephen-

son's Company (Major Michael Fjedinger) to the sons

and grandsons of his compeers in arms ; he passing

through the ranks and shaking each cordially hy the

hand.



Whilst this was performing and the eyes and atten-

tion of the spectators were intently fixed ui)on the

touching scene, guns were fired, at a signal previously

agreed upon, by a detachment of artillery stationed

on an eminence for that jDurpose.



Afterwards a number of national airs were played

in the first style by the band, and two patriotic songs

were sung by Major Michael Uedingcr (69 years of

age) he being earnestly solicited, — the very same that

had been sung at that spot fifty years before.



Several toasts were drunk and Auld Lang Syne was

played by the martial band, which had a very solemn

and grand efifect.



The train of reflections produced by the veterans,

their anecdotes, collected from real life in the course

of three generations, "all of which they saw, and part

of w^hich they were," may be more easily imagined

than described. Indeed the gifted pen of the author

of "The Spy" would not be disgraced by the subject.



They recalled to the mind the American Colonies

when they presented little more than a vast, unculti-

vated wilderness, the population declared to be in a

state of rebellion ; advancing, they met the gibbet ;

retreating, death or slavery; turning to the right they

encountered bayonets; to the left, scalping knives;

without money, without friends, and almost without

hope !



But now America's sails whiten every ocean, and

her sons visit every clime. In literature and arts, too. [37]





June 1827:

Nashville Central Committee completed report on marriage.[38]




The Duke's influence at Court was ended by the death of George IV in June 1830 and the succession of the Duke of Clarence as William IV. Wellington wrote that "The effect of the King's death will ... be to put an end to the Duke of Cumberland's political character and power in this country entirely".[64] King William lacked legitimate children (two girls having died in infancy)[51] and Ernest was now heir-presumptive in Hanover, since the British heir-presumptive, Victoria, as a female could not inherit there. William realized that so long as the Duke maintained a power base at Windsor, he could wield unwanted influence. The Duke was Gold Stick as head of the Household Cavalry; William made the Duke's post responsible to the Commander in Chief rather than to the King, and an insulted Ernest, outraged at the thought of having to report to an officer less senior than himself, resigned. King William again emerged triumphant when the new queen, Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, wished to quarter her horses in the stables customarily used by the consort, but which were then occupied by Ernest's horses. Ernest initially refused the King's order to remove the horses, but gave in when told that William's grooms would remove them if Ernest did not move them voluntarily.[64] However, Ernest and William remained friendly throughout the latter's seven-year reign.[65] Ernest's house at Kew was too small for his family; the King gave the Duke and Duchess lifetime residence in a nearby, larger house by the entrance to Kew Gardens.[66] Ernest opposed the Reform Act 1832, and was one of the "diehard" peers who voted against the bill on its final reading when most Tories abstained under threat of seeing the House of Lords flooded with Whig peers.[67]

Ernest was the subject of more allegations in 1832, when two young women accused him of trying to ride them down as they walked near Hammersmith. The Duke had not left his grounds at Kew on the day in question, and was able to ascertain that the rider was one of his equerries, who professed not to have seen the women. Nevertheless, newspapers continued to print references to the incident, suggesting that Ernest had done what the women stated, and was cravenly trying to push blame on another. The same year, the Duke sued for libel after a book appeared accusing him of having his valet Neale kill Sellis, and the jury found against the author.[c] Also in 1832, the Cumberlands suffered tragedy, as young Prince George went blind. The Prince had been blind in one eye from infancy; an accident at age thirteen took the sight of the other. Ernest had hoped his son might marry Princess Victoria and keep the British and Hanoverian Thrones united, but the handicap made it unlikely George could win Princess Victoria's hand, and raised questions about whether he should succeed in Hanover.[68]

The Duke spent William's reign in the House of Lords, where he was assiduous in his attendance. Wrote newspaper editor James Grant, "He is literally—the door-keeper of course excepted—the first man in the House, and the last out of it. And this not merely generally, but every night."[69] Grant, in his observations of the leading members of the House of Lords, indicated that the Duke was not noted for his oratory (he delivered no speech longer than five minutes) and had a voice that was difficult to understand, though, "his manner is most mild and conciliatory."[69] Grant denigrated the Duke's intellect and influence, but stated that the Duke had indirect influence over several members, and that, "he is by no means so bad a tactician as his opponents suppose."[70]

Controversy arose in 1836 over the Orange Lodges. The lodges (which took anti-Catholic views) were said to be ready to rise and try to put the Duke of Cumberland on the Throne on the death of King William. According to Joseph Hume, speaking in the House of Commons, Princess Victoria was to be passed over on the grounds of her age, sex, and incapacity.[71] The Commons passed a resolution calling for the dissolution of the lodges. When the matter reached the Lords, the Duke defended himself, saying of Princess Victoria, "I would shed the last drop of my blood for my niece."[72] The Duke indicated that the Orange Lodge members were loyal and were willing to dissolve the lodges in Great Britain. According to Bird, this incident was the source of the widespread rumours that the Duke intended to murder Princess Victoria and take the British Throne for himself.[73] [39]

June 1829: Robert E. Lee was commissioned a brevet second lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers.[24] After graduation, while awaiting assignment, he returned to Virginia to find his mother on her deathbed. [40] Being excluded from the provisions of amnesty & pardon contained in the proclamation of the 29th Ulto; I hereby apply for the benefits, & full restoration of all rights & privileges extended to those included in its terms. I graduated at the Mil. Academy at West Point in June 1829. [41]



June 18, 1830: EF says? a surveyor by profession; settled near Catfish Camp in 1776 after which he served in the Continental Line, and with General McIntosh at Fort Laurens in 1778; Deputy Surveyor General in Yohogania, now Washington County; surveyed in this county in 1780 under Virginia certificates; Brigade Major in Crawford?s Expedition; commanded a division after Colonel Burton was wounded; died June 18, 1830, at the home of a daughter at Sewickly Bottom;? PMA- says that Daniel Leet was a friend of General Washington and a Major in the Continental Army where he had a distinguished career. It is fully possible that this Daniel Leet was a surveyor for the Ohio Company of Virginia hoping to ensure land for top men of Virginia including George Washington and George Mason.[46][42]








June 1832


June - The Turtle Bayou Resolutions are adopted by colonists, accusing the Mexican government of constitutional violations.[43]




June 1836 – Federal troops under General John E. Wool, with support from East Tennessee volunteers under Brigadier General R. G. Dunlap, move into the Cherokee Nation to prevent disorder.[44]

June 1838: In addition, some Cherokees traveled from east to west more than once. Many deserters from the Army's boat detachments in June 1838 later emigrated in the twelve Ross wagon trains. There were transfers between groups, and later join ups and desertions were not always recorded. [45]

June 18, 1839: Anne Carter Lee (Annie); June 18, 1839 – October 20, 1862; died of typhoid fever, unmarried. [46]

June 1840: While on a public carriage ride, Albert and the pregnant Victoria were shot at by Edward Oxford, who was later judged insane. Neither Albert nor Victoria was hurt and Albert was praised in the newspapers for his courage and coolness during the attack.[35] Albert was gaining public support as well as political influence, which showed itself practically when, in August, Parliament passed the Regency Act 1840 to designate him regent in the event of Victoria's death before their child reached the age of majority.[36] [47]

June 1842: The defiant Whig Congress would not raise tariffs if it would affect the distribution of funds to states. In June 1842 they passed two bills that would raise tariffs and unconditionally extend the distribution program. Believing it improper to continue distribution at a time when federal revenue shortage necessitated increasing the tariff, Tyler vetoed both bills, burning any remaining bridges between himself and the Whigs.[54] His firm resolve finally prompted the Whig-controlled Congress to pass the Tariff of 1842, which he signed into law, increasing import duties without extending distribution.

Impeachment attempt]

Shortly after the tariff veto, Whigs in the House of Representatives initiated the first impeachment proceedings against a President in American history. This was not only a matter of the Whigs supporting the Bank and tariff legislation which Tyler vetoed. Until the presidency of the Whigs' arch-enemy Andrew Jackson, Presidents vetoed bills rarely, and then generally on constitutional rather than policy grounds. So Tyler's actions also went against the Whigs' idea of the presidency.[55] [48]



June 18, 1842



Letter form George M. Bedinger relative to pension application

Lower Blue Licks 18th June 1842



I receivd you letter of the 25th ulto. I am sorry, that I was not able to answer you Immediately, owing to the low and debilitated State of my body, mor especially, the lameness of my right hand, (the fingers of which are stiff and croocked). I made attempts to write to you, (almost daily) intending to give you a brief Statement (or history) of all my Military Services for 75 when I was a volunteer under Capt. Hugh Stephen who was (the Oldes in rank of Captain in the army (a that time)from Virginia) to the last of my Services (as a major under Generals St. Clair…[49]



It is written in the Moore family Bible in Harrison County Kentucky, owned by the late Judge Richard Mendtee Collier, that Thomas H. Moore died of the fever in Texas during the summer of 1842.[50]



1842

In 1842 the former governor, Joseph Vance, was nominated on the Whig ticket for congressman from the tenth district and won over Samuel Mason, by whom he had been defeated eight years previously.; He remained in Washington for two terms (1843-1847) and was one of the most active members of the house of representatives. For three years chairman of the committee on claims, he was a strong advocate of governmental economy. He objected to the annexation of Texas and bitterly opposed the Mexican War as a war of aggression.[51]



June 1844: The members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints had been persecuted for their beliefs ever since Joseph Smith founded the church in New York in 1830. Smith's claim to be a modern-day prophet of God and his acceptance of polygamy proved controversial wherever the Mormons attempted to settle. In 1839, Smith hoped his new spiritual colony of Nauvoo in Missouri would provide a permanent safe haven for the Saints, but anti-Mormon prejudice there proved virulent. Angry mobs murdered Smith and his brother in June 1844 and began burning homes and threatening the citizens of Nauvoo.

Convinced that the Mormons would never find peace in the United States, Smith's successor, Brigham Young, made a bold decision: the Mormons would move to the still wild territories of the Mexican-controlled Southwest. Young had little knowledge of the geography and environment of the West and no particular destination in mind, but trusting in God, he began to prepare the people of Nauvoo for a mass exodus. [52]

June 1845: In the 1836 election, Jackson's chosen successor Martin Van Buren defeated Whig candidate William Henry Harrison, and Old Hickory left the White House even more popular than when he had entered it. Jackson's success seemed to have vindicated the still-new democratic experiment, and his supporters had built a well-organized Democratic Party that would become a formidable force in American politics. After leaving office, Jackson retired to the Hermitage, where he died in June 1845.[53]



June 1845: The British Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting was held at Cambridge in June 1845, giving its president John Herschel a platform to counter Vestiges. His presidential address contrasted the "sound and thoughtful and sobering discipline" of the scientific brotherhood with the "over-hasty generalisation" and "pure speculation" of the unnamed book. He had a cold and his words were badly delivered, but they appeared in newspapers across the country as its most prestigious man of science dismissing the book. For the rest of the week attacks on Vestiges continued. In the geology section, Roderick Murchison used his lecture to clear up the confusion between competing views, and say that "every piece of geological evidence sustained the belief that that each species was perfect in its kind when first called into being by the Creator". Sedgwick set aside his differences with Murchison to summarise his forthcoming Edinburgh review and agree in opposing the evolutionary ideas and the "desolating pantheism" of the book.[22] [54]

June 1852: Notes for LORENA MOORE:
Stillborn infant daughter buried in Mother's arms.

Buried June 1852, MT Zion Cemetery, Franklin, North Carolina [55]

June 1857: Mary Elizabeth Warren (b. June 1857 in GA / d. abt. 1940).[56]

June 18, 1858: Darwin was hard at work on his "big book" on Natural Selection, when on June 18, 1858 he received a parcel from Wallace, who stayed on the Maluku Islands (Ternate and Gilolo). It enclosed twenty pages describing an evolutionary mechanism, a response to Darwin's recent encouragement, with a request to send it on to Lyell if Darwin thought it worthwhile. The mechanism was similar to Darwin's own theory.[40] Darwin wrote to Lyell that "your words have come true with a vengeance, ... forestalled" and he would "of course, at once write and offer to send [it] to any journal" that Wallace chose, adding that "all my originality, whatever it may amount to, will be smashed".[41] [57]

June 1859: On her return Victoria wrote to Derby reprimanding him for the poor state of the Royal Navy in comparison to the French one.[102] Derby's ministry did not last long, and in June 1859 Victoria recalled Palmerston to office.[103] [58]

June 1862: Robert E. Lee oversaw substantial strengthening of Richmond's defenses during the first three weeks of June 1862. In the spring of 1862, as part of the Peninsula Campaign, the Union Army of the Potomac under General George B. McClellan advanced upon Richmond from Fort Monroe, eventually reaching the eastern edges of the Confederate capital along the Chickahominy River. Lee then launched a series of attacks, the Seven Days Battles, against McClellan's forces. Lee's assaults resulted in heavy Confederate casualties. They were marred by clumsy tactical performances by his division commanders, but his aggressive actions unnerved McClellan, who retreated to a point on the James River and abandoned the Peninsula Campaign. These successes led to a rapid turnaround of Confederate public opinion, and the newspaper editorials quickly changed their tune on Lee's aggressiveness. After the Seven Days Battles until the end of the war his men called him simply "Marse Robert", a term of respect and affection. [59]

June 1863: George Washington Custis Lee was promoted to Brigadier General.[2] Lee was discouraged from taking a field command by Davis, but encouraged by his father.[5] Lee asked his father for a field command, but his father replied that his highest duty was obedience to his superiors.[5] For the most part, he obeyed Davis, but during the Battle of Gettysburg, Lee was given the command of the troops in Richmond. In 1864, Lee was placed in command of Richmond's local defenses against General Grant and General Benjamin Butler.[2] He did so well that he was given command of Richmond's eastern defenses at Chaffin's Bluff.[2] [60]



June 1863: The critical decisions came in May–June 1863, after Lee's smashing victory at the Battle of Chancellorsville. The western front was crumbling, as multiple uncoordinated Confederate armies were unable to handle General Ulysses S. Grant's campaign against Vicksburg. The top military advisers wanted to save Vicksburg, but Lee persuaded Davis to overrule them and authorize yet another invasion of the North. The immediate goal was to acquire urgently needed supplies from the rich farming districts of Pennsylvania; a long-term goal was to stimulate peace activity in the North by demonstrating the power of the South to invade. Lee's decision proved a significant strategic blunder and cost the Confederacy control of its western regions, and nearly cost Lee his own army as Union forces cut him off from the South. Lee had to fight his way out at Gettysburg.[76] [61]

June 18, 1863: On March 18, 1824 at St George's, Hanover Square, Westminster, Henrietta Mildred married Oswald Smith (July 7, 1794 – June 18, 1863) of St Marylebone and Blendon Hall in Kent. The parish register gives one of the few clues to her date of birth, as she is noted as "a minor". Oswald was the second son of George Smith.[3][4].[62]

Her father was Oswald Smith, of Blendon Hall (July 7, 1794 – June 18, 1863), and her mother was Henrietta Mildred Hodgson (c. 1805–1891). Her paternal grandparents were George Smith and wife Frances Mary Mosley, daughter of Sir John Parker Mosley, 1st Baronet, and wife Elizabeth Bayley, granddaughter of Nicholas Mosley and wife Elizabeth Parker, and sister of Sir Oswald Mosley, 2nd Baronet, great-great-grandfather of Oswald Mosley.[63]

June 1864: The Siege of Petersburg lasted from June 1864 until March 1865, with Lee's outnumbered and poorly supplied army shrinking daily because of desertions by disheartened Confederates. [64]

June 1864: Meigs played a critical role in developing Arlington National Cemetery, both during the Civil War and afterward.

Although most burials initially occurred near the freedmen's cemetery in the estate's northeast corner, in mid-June 1864 Meigs ordered that burials commence immediately on the grounds of Arlington House. Brigadier General René Edward De Russy was living in Arlington House at the time and opposed the burial of bodies close to his quarters, forcing new interments to occur far to the west (in what is now Section 1 of the cemetery). But Meigs still demanded that officers be buried on the grounds of the mansion, around the Lee's former flower garden.[65]

Sat. June 18[66], 1864

In camp very warm 99 Ill and 21 Iowa reg came in camp

Gen Sickels[67] arrived at Orleans

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary, 24th Iowa Infantry)[68]



June 1865: From April to June 1865, Robert E. Lee and his family resided in Richmond at the Stewart-Lee House.[88] [69]



June 1866: On a June night in June 1866 the Ku Klux Klan was born. [70]



June 18, 1867:



[71]



[72]



June 18, 1867: JOHN C. CRAWFORD, b. September 23, 1823, Haywood County, North Carolina; d. June 18, 1867, Atascisa County, Texas. [73]



June 18, 1874: Newton Henry Smith14 [Bennet A. Smith13, Aaron Smith12, Richard W. Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. June 18, 1874 in Carroll Co. GA / d. October 6, 1949 in Cullman Co. AL) married Sarah King (b. April 17, 1876 in Carroll Co. GA / d. November 29, 1948 in Cullman, AL), the daughter of William King and Lucinda Burt. [74]





June 18, 1885: 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. [75]

[76]

1886

http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/getfile.ashx?id=579d4bd80d2143f3a4af5f07ece1d1f5&width=292

“Portraits of the Great Poets of Israel.” Commercially produced lithograph based on an illustration printed in the Hebrew newspaper Ha-Asif, 1886. (1) Mikhah Yosef Lebensohn, (2) Yehudah Leib Gordon, (3) Naftali Herts Wessely, (4) Adam ha-Kohen (Avraham Dov Lebensohn), and (5) Avraham Ber Gottlober. (YIVO[77]

1886

[78]

Indian Canoe

[79]

1886: The first dishwasher was invented, in Illinois.[80]

June 18, 1890: Lola Jane Burch (b. June 18, 1890 / d. January 31, 1971 in CA).[81]

June 1892: Harriet Dorcie Rowell (b. June 1892 in AL).[82]



June 1897: Maude Cavender (b. June 1897 in GA). [83]



June 18, 1897: Newton Henry Smith (b. June 18, 1874 in GA / d. October 6, 1949 in AL).[84]





June 18, 1903

Miss Cora Goodlove is spending this week in Wildcat Grove. (Winton Goodlove’s note:This is one of the few times aI have found mention a Wildcat Grove. This was the community where my great great granddad, Conrad Goodlove, settled when he came to Iowa. It was in sections 5 and 6 of West Marion Twp.)[85]

June 18, 1905: "First Princess of Oz and Owner of Island." June 18, 1905, unidentified Chicago newspaper clipping in the L. Frank Baum file at the New York Public Library of the Performing Arts[86]





June 18, 1915:

Laura:

I have only one John from that area with Civil War service. That’s John Abraham Godlove, b. October 7, 1843, Wardensville, Hardy Co., (W) Va.; died June 18,1915, Hampshire Co., W. Va.; buried Fairlawn Cem., west of Gore, Frederick Co. Va.
He served as a private in Co. I, 18th Va. Cav.

He married Mary---.
Children: Irvin (b. ca.1877-78); Charles W. (1883-1899).
This is probably incomplete. I haven’t tried to trace all Godlove descendants.

If this is your John, I can provide three generations of ancestors. Write me at:
j.a.funkhouser@worldnet.at.net.

Jim Funkhouser[87]



Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were married on June 18, 1939 . [88]

June 18, 1939: On August 17, 1942 Convoy 20 left Drancy, France for Auschwitz with 581 children. On board was Paulette Gotlib born in Paris (12) February 19, 1936, age 6. Her brother Simone born June 18, 1939, age 4, was also on board. Their home was 35, r Francois Arago, Montreuil, France. Prior to deportation to Auschwitz they were held at Camp Pithiviers[89]. Pithiviers is of global historical interest as one of the locally infamous World War II concentration camps where children were separated from their parents while the adults were processed and deported to camps farther away, usually Auschwitz. [90] Also on board was Rachla Gotlib born March 22, 1908 from Chanciny, Poland. On board from Vienne Austria was Gertrude Gottlieb born July 6, 1901 and Michel Gottlieb born November 27, 1897.[91]



June 18, 1941: Turkey and Germany sign a friendship treaty.[92]



June 18, 1942: One thousand Jewish men are deported from Przemysl to the Janowska camp in Lvov, Ukraine.[93]



June 18, 1943: Rudolf Gottlieb, born November 8, 1880 in Budapest, resided Leipzig. Deportation: from Leipzig, June 18, 1943, Theresienstadt. Date of death: November 28, 1943.[94]

June 18, 1943: Luise Gottlieb, born Gottlieb, October 19, 1886 in Leipzig. Resided Leipzig.Deportation: from Leipzig, June 18, 1943, Theresienstadt. May 16, 1944, Auschwitz. [95]



October 17, 1901-June 18, 1945


Covert Laferne Goodlove











Birth:

October 17, 1901


Death:

June 18, 1945


http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif



Burial:
Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale)
Glendale
Los Angeles County
California, USA
Plot: Eventide, Map 1, Lot 477, Space 3



Created by: Chris Mills
Record added: Feb 22, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 85410280









Covert Laferne Goodlove
Cemetery Photo
Added by: P. David Eastburn






[96]



June 18, 1963 RFK, attending an Equal Employment Opportunity meeting, begins

openly arguing with LBJ, ostensibly over minority opportunity. “ Johnson, obviously angry, slumped

grimly in his chair, his eyes half closed. It was pretty brutal . . . very sharp. It brought tensions between

[the two] right out on the table and very hard . . . After making the Vice President look like a fraud . . .

[Kennedy left.]” [97]



June 18, 1979: Signing of SALT II Treaty in Vienna with Brezhnev.[98]



June 18, 2007: An exhibition of manuscripts of scientist Sir Isaac Newton – never before revealed to the public which opened on June 18, 2007, at the Jewish National and University Library at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, at an exhibition opening comes to an end. The manuscripts include details of Newton's alchemy experiments, his interest in ancient history and apocalyptic prophecies. Furthermore, they reveal his deciphering of what he considered to be ''secret knowledge'' – knowledge encoded in the sacred texts of ancient cultures and other historical records – including his attempts to extract scientific information from the biblical and Talmudic descriptions of the Tabernacle and the Temple. Newton's writings on Judeo-Christian prophecy reveal that he thought of himself as a kind of prophet. These manuscripts back up speculations that Sir Isaac Newton was a Grand Master of the Priory of Sion secret society (1691-1727), a post also said to have been held by the likes of Leonardo Da Vinci, Botticelli and Victor Hugo, and which inspired Dan Brown's bestseller, 'The Da Vinci Code. Of special interest in this exhibition are manuscripts and illustrations relating to the Temple as well as a passage copied by Newton from Maimonides' writings; manuscripts containing Newton's comments on Hebrew expressions, and excerpts from the Shema prayer; Newton's calculations of the end of the world, which he estimated to be in 2060; and Newton's rejection of the Trinity. For further details about the exhibition, please visit the following site:

http://jnul.huji.ac.il/dl/mss/newton [22][99]




•June 18, 2012:

FILE - This photo from documents released by the U.S. Attorney's office on Monday, June 18, 2012 shows the fossil of a Tyrannosaurus bataar dinosaur at the center of a lawsuit demanding its return to Mongolia. A Florida man was charged Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2012 with smuggling dinosaur fossils into the United States, including the nearly complete Tyrannosaurus specimen, federal prosecutors said. Eric Prokopi, a self-described "commercial paleontologist" who buys and sells whole and partial dinosaur skeletons, was arrested at his home in Gainesville, Fla. according to a complaint unsealed by prosecutors. (AP Photo/U.S Attorney Office for the Southern District of New York, File)

Enlarge Photo

Associated Press/U.S Attorney Office for the Southern District of New York, File - FILE - This photo from documents released by the U.S. Attorney's office on Monday, June 18, 2012 shows the fossil of a Tyrannosaurus …more bataar dinosaur at the center of a lawsuit demanding its return to Mongolia. A Florida man was charged Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2012 with smuggling dinosaur fossils into the United States, including the nearly complete Tyrannosaurus specimen, federal prosecutors said. Eric Prokopi, a self-described "commercial paleontologist" who buys and sells whole and partial dinosaur skeletons, was arrested at his home in Gainesville, Fla. according to a complaint unsealed by prosecutors. (AP Photo/U.S Attorney Office for the Southern District of New York, File) less

MIAMI (AP) — A Florida man was charged Wednesday with smuggling dinosaur fossils into the United States, including a nearly complete Tyrannosaurus Bataar skeleton from Mongolia, federal prosecutors said.

Eric Prokopi, a self-described "commercial paleontologist" who buys and sells whole and partial dinosaur skeletons, was arrested at his home in Gainesville, according to a complaint unsealed by prosecutors. He was charged with smuggling goods into the U.S. and interstate sale and receipt of stolen goods.

He also faces one count of conspiracy to smuggle illegal goods, possess stolen property and make false statements. If convicted on all of the charges, he could face up to 35 years in prison.

Prokopi made an appearance Wednesday in federal court in Gainesville, where U.S. District Judge Gary R. Jones ordered him to be held on $100,000 bond. Prokopi must also surrender his passport and be kept under home detention. He did not enter a plea.

The arrest was handled by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said the investigation "uncovered a one-man black market in prehistoric fossils." The U.S. government seized the Tyrannosaurus skeleton earlier this year after it was sold by an auction house for $1.05 million.

Prokopi did not immediately respond to a phone call, but his attorney has said he did nothing wrong.

Prokopi has been involved in a lawsuit in New York over the auction because the Mongolian government has said it may belong to that country. Prokopi's attorney in the lawsuit, Michael McCullough, has said his client is entitled to keep the creature he spent a year putting together at great expense.

McCullough has said the U.S. government was incorrect when it alleged that the skeleton pieces were brought into the country in one $15,000 shipment. He said there were three other shipments and only 37 percent of the completed skeleton came from one specimen.

Federal prosecutors said Prokopi misrepresented the identity, origin and value of the skeleton of the Tyrannosaurus bataar, a dinosaur that lived approximately 70 million years ago.

Prokopi also is accused of illegally importing from Mongolia the skeleton of a Saurolophus, another dinosaur from the late Cretaceous period that he sold to a gallery in California along with fossils of two other dinosaurs native to Mongolia, Gallimimus and Oviraptor mongoliensis. He also imported the fossilized remains of a Microraptor, a small, flying dinosaur from China, the complaint said.

Prokopi brought the fossils into the country between 2010 and 2012, prosecutors said.[100]

Dating Evidence: Relics Could Be of John the Baptist

ScienceDaily (June 18, 2012) — New dating evidence supports claims that bones found under a church floor in Bulgaria may be of John the Baptist, who is described in the Bible as a leading prophet and relative of Jesus Christ. A team from the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit at Oxford University dated a knucklebone from the right hand to the 1st century AD, a date which fits with the widely held view of when he would have lived. The researchers say they were surprised when they discovered the very early age of the remains adding, however, that dating evidence alone cannot prove the bones to be of John the Baptist.

The bones were originally discovered in 2010 by archaeologist Kazimir Popkonstantinov, excavating under an ancient church on an island in Bulgaria known as Sveti Ivan, which translates into English as St John. The knucklebone was one of six human bones, including a tooth and the face part of a cranium, found in small marble sarcophagus under the floor near the altar. Three animal bones were also inside the sarcophagus. Oxford professors Thomas Higham and Christopher Ramsey attempted to radiocarbon date four human bones, but only one of them contained a sufficient amount of collagen to be dated successfully.

Professor Higham said: "We were surprised when the radiocarbon dating produced this very early age. We had suspected that the bones may have been more recent than this, perhaps from the third or fourth centuries. However, the result from the metacarpal hand bone is clearly consistent with someone who lived in the early first century AD. Whether that person is John the Baptist is a question that we cannot yet definitely answer and probably never will."

Former Oxford student Dr Hannes Schroeder and Professor Eske Willerslev, both from the University of Copenhagen, also reconstructed the complete mitochondrial DNA genome sequence from three of the human bones to establish that the bones were all from the same individual. Significantly, they identified a family group of genes (mtDNA haplotype) as being a group most commonly found in the Near East, which is better known as the Middle East today -- the region where John the Baptist would have originated from. They also established that the bones were probably of a male individual after an analysis of the nuclear DNA from samples.

Dr Schroeder said: "Our worry was that the remains might have been contaminated with modern DNA. However, the DNA we found in the samples showed damage patterns that are characteristic of ancient DNA, which gave us confidence in the results. Further, it seems somewhat unlikely that all three samples would yield the same sequence considering that they had probably been handled by different people. Both of these facts suggest that the DNA we sequenced was actually authentic. Of course, this does not prove that these were the remains of John the Baptist but nor does it refute that theory as the sequences we got fit with a Near Eastern origin."

The Bulgarian archaeologists, who excavated the bones, also found a small tuff box (made of hardened volcanic ash) close to the sarcophagus. The tuff box bears inscriptions in ancient Greek that directly mention John the Baptist and his feast day, and text asking God to 'help your servant Thomas'. One theory is that the person referred to as Thomas had been given the task of bringing the relics to the island. An analysis of the box has shown that the tuff box has a high waterproof quality and is likely to have originated from Cappadocia, a region of modern-day Turkey. The Bulgarian researchers believe that the bones probably came to Bulgaria via Antioch, an ancient Turkish city, where the right hand of St John was kept until the tenth century.

In a separate study, another Oxford researcher Dr Georges Kazan has used historical documents to show that in the latter part of the fourth century, monks had taken relics of John the Baptist out of Jerusalem and these included portions of skull. These relics were soon summoned to Constantinople by the Roman Emperor who built a church to house them there. Further research by Dr Kazan suggests that the reliquary used to contain them may have resembled the sarcophagus-shaped casket discovered at Sveti Ivan. Archaeological and written records suggest that these reliquaries were first developed and used at Constantinople by the city's ruling elite at around the time that the relics of John the Baptist are said to have arrived there.

Dr Kazan said: "My research suggests that during the fifth or early sixth century, the monastery of Sveti Ivan may well have received a significant portion of St John the Baptist's relics, as well as a prestige reliquary in the shape of a sarcophagus, from a member of Constantinople's elite. This gift could have been to dedicate or rededicate the church and the monastery to St John, which the patron or patrons may have supported financially."

The scientific analysis of the relics undertaken by Tom Higham and Christopher Ramsey at Oxford, and their colleagues in Copenhagen was supported by the National Geographic Society. The documentary 'Head of John the Baptist', featuring the scientists' work was shown on the National Geographic Channel on 17 June 2012.

http://images.sciencedaily.com/2012/06/120618151228.jpg

Bones claimed to be of John the Baptist that were analysed by the research team. Clockwise from top left, the knucklebone, ulna, part of cranial bone and molar (together) and rib. (Credit: Oxford University)[101]





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[1] Margaret Butler


[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Fitzroy,_1st_Duke_of_Richmond_and_Somerset


[3] References^ Hutchinson, Robert, House of treason: rise and fall of a Tudor dynasty (London, 2009), pg. 58.

1. ^ Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son (Stroud, 2004) pg. 25.

2. ^ Lipscomb, Suzannah, 1536: The year that changed Henry VIII (London, 2009) pg. 90.

3. ^ Norton, Elizabeth, Bessie Blount: Mistress to Henry VIII (Stroud, 2011) pg. 137.

4. ^ Weir, Alison, Henry VIII: king and court (London, 2002) pg. 220.

5. ^ Mattingly, Garrett, Catherine of Aragon, pg. 145.

6. ^ Lipscomb, Suzannah, 1536: The year that changed Henry VIII, pg. 91.

7. ^ Norton, Elizabeth, Bessie Blount: mistress to Henry VIII, pg. 121.

8. ^ Norton, Elizabeth, Bessie Blount: mistress to Henry VIII, pg. 181.

9. ^ Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 34.

10. ^ Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 35.

11. ^ Jones, Philippa, The other Tudors, pg. 80.

12. ^ Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 39.

13. ^ Hutchinson, Robert, A Tudor dynasty: The rise and fall of the house of Howard, pg. 59.

14. ^ Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 45.

15. ^ Murphy 2001, 61

16. ^ State Papers Henry VIII, vol. 4 part 4 (1836), 464–5, Magnus to Wolsey February 14, 1527.

17. ^ Scarisbrick, J. J., English Monarchs: Henry VIII, University of California Press

18. ^ Weir, Alison (2000). The Six Wives of Henry VIII. Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-3683-4. |accessdate= requires |url= (help)

19. ^ Lacey, Robert (1974). The life and times of Henry VIII. Praeger. |accessdate= requires |url= (help)

20. ^ Tjernagel, Neelak Serawlook (1965). Henry VIII and the Lutherans: a study in Anglo-Lutheran relations from 1521 to 1547. Concordia Pub. House. |accessdate= requires |url= (help)

21. ^ Elton, Geoffrey Rudolph (1991). England under the Tudors, Volume 4. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-06533-X. |accessdate= requires |url= (help)

22. ^ Cawley, Charles (June 3, 2011), English Earls 1067-1122, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, retrieved March 2012 ,[better source needed]

23. ^ Cawley, Charles (June 3, 2011), English Kings, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, retrieved March 2012 ,[better source needed]

24. ^ Elton 1977, p. 255.

25. ^ Murphy,172–174

26. ^ Gairdner, James, ed., Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII, vol. 11 (1911), no. 40 & preface

27. ^ Murphy, 174

28. ^ I.e. Mary and Elizabeth, Henry VIII's daughters.

29. ^ Thomas Fuller, The Church History of Britain, III, 232, cited in Murphy, 243.

30. ^ Jones, Philippa., The Other Tudors (London, 2009) Pg. 77




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


[5]


[6] Wikipedia


[7] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[8] wikipdia


[9] Proposed Descendants of William Smith




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


[11] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 103.


[12] http://flintlockandtomahawk.blogspot.com/2011/09/jaegers-with-amusette.html


[13] On this Day in America, by John Wagman.


[14] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, edited by Franklin Ellis. Vol 1 Philadelphia: L.H. Everts and Co. 1882


[15] Narrative of Dr. Knight


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


[17] August Woringer, “Protocoll der Amtshandlungen, die der Feldprediger G. C. Cöster bei den beiden löblichen Regimentern von Donop and von Lössberg und anderen verrichtet,” Deutsch-amerikanische Geschichtsblätter, XX-XXI (1920-1921), p. 299. James Funkhouser j.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net


[18] On 29 June 29, 1805, Francis Cutliff, age 61, made a deposition in Winchester in the case of Walter Crockett of Wythe v. Gordon Cloyd and others, O. S. 33: N. S. 11 (Lyman Chalkley, Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish, II: 73. James Funkhouser j.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net


[19] Fifth Census of the United States, 1830, Virginia, Hampshire County, p. 14A. James Funkhouser j.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net


[20] Typescript of letter received from Ashley Teets, August 2, 2004. This letter has circulated in the Godlove family for years. I do not know if the original exists. James Funkhouser j.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net


[21] Jim Funkhouser


[22] Proposed Descendants of William Smith


[23] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[24] http://napoleonistyka.atspace.com/IMPERIAL_GUARD_infantry_1.htm


[25] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zachary_Taylor


[26] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove:Conrad and Caty, 2003


[27] On this Day in America, by John Wagman.


[28] First Invasion: The War, HISTI, 9/12/2004


[29] http://www.raabcollection.com/william-henry-harrison-autograph/william-henry-harrisons-first-commander-northwest-army


[30] Ref 21. Conrad and Caty; 2003




[31] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett p. 1810.9


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


[33] HCCO


[34] HCCO


[35] http://www.geni.com/people/Zachary-S-Taylor-12th-President-of-the-USA/6000000002143404336


[36] http://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=mcafee&p=how+is+george+washington+related+to+all+50+presidents




[37] http://www.archive.org/stream/georgemichaelbed00dand/georgemichaelbed00dand_djvu.txt


[38] http://www.wnpt.org/productions/rachel/timeline/1824_1845.html


[39] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Augustus_I_of_Hanover


[40] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Lee


[41] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Lee


[42] http://genforum.genealogy.com/leete/messages/309.html


[43] http://www.drtl.org/Research/Alamo2.asp


[44] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


[45] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_trail_of_tears


[46] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Lee


[47] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert,_Prince_Consort


[48] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Tyler


[49] The George M. Bedinger Papers in the Draper Manuscript Collection, Transcribed and indexed by Craig L. Heath pg.134.


[50] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1778.


[51] The Ohio Historical Society, S. Winifred Smith, ohiohistory.org/onlinedoc/ohgovernment….


[52] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/mormons-begin-exodus-to-utah


[53] http://www.history.com/topics/andrew-jackson


[54] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vestiges_of_the_Natural_History_of_Creation


[55] Crawford Coat of Arms.


[56] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[57] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Origin_of_Species


[58] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_of_the_United_Kingdom


[59] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Lee


[60] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington_Custis_Lee


[61] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Lee


[62] wikipedia


[63] wikipedia


[64] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Lee


[65] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montgomery_C._Meigs


[66] June 18, 1864: Union war hero Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain is severely wounded at Petersburg, Virginia, while leading an attack on a Confederate position. Chamberlain, a college professor from Maine, had taken a sabbatical to enlist in the Union army. As commander of the 20th Maine, he earned distinction at Gettysburg when he shored up the unionb left flank and helped save Little Round Top for the Federals. His bold counterattack against the Confederates would earn him the Congressional Medal of Honor. Civil War 2010 Calendar


[67] Daniel Edgar Sickles (1819–1914): A native of New York City, Sickles was a member of Congress when he shot and killed Philip Barton Key, the son of Francis Scott Key the composer of The Star Spangled Banner. The younger Key had been having an affair with Sickle’s wife. A judge acquitted Sickles after he declared in court that he had forgiven his wife for her indiscretion. Sickels’ Civil War career began as colonel with the Seventieth New York in June 1861 and he was made brigadier general by September 1861. Sickels took charge of Third Corps from Joseph Hooker after Chancellorsville. At Gettysburg, Sickles advanced his men from their assigned sector at Cemetery Hill without permission from commanding officers, and subsequently lost a leg in the retreat. He mustered out as a major general January 1, 1868 and served in Congress during the 1890s. He chaired the New York State Monuments Commission for 26 years until forced out by scandal.

Civil war generals

http://www.indianahistory.org/library/manuscripts/collection_guides/P0132.html


[68] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[69] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Lee


[70] The Ku Klux Klan, The History Channel


[71] Maximilian & Carlota: Last Empire in Mexico, The Witte Museum, San Antonio, February 2, 2014, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[72] Maximilian & Carlota: Last Empire in Mexico, The Witte Museum, San Antonio, February 2, 2014, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[73] Crawford Coat of Arms


[74] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


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

Other Kentucky Biographies.


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Return to Index of Harrison Biographies


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


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


Last Updated: 28 January 1998
© 1998 Josephine Bass and Becky Bonner. All rights reserved.


Becky Bonner E-Mail Address: bbbonner@cox.net
Josephine Lindsay Bass E-Mail Address: jbass@digital.net




[76] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/harrbios/chharrKY.htm


[77] http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Gottlober_Avraham_Ber


[78] Art Museum, Austin TX. February 11, 2012


[79] Art Museum, Austin TX. February 11, 2012


[80] March 15, 1810, John H. Taylor was born in Montgomery Co. OH (Father of Samuel H. Taylor who was married to Nancy Godlove).


[81] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[82] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[83] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[84] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[85] Winton Goodlove papers.


[86] wikipedia


[87] http://boards.ancestry.com/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=20&p=surnames.godlove


[88] http://library.thinkquest.org/10826/rosenber.htm


[89] “Memorial des enfants deportes de France” de Serge Klarsfeld


[90] Wikipedia.org


[91] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page unknown.


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


[93] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1771.


[94] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.


[95] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg


[96] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSiman=1&GRid=85410280&


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


[98] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 498.


[99] [22] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[100] http://news.yahoo.com/fla-man-charged-ny-dinosaur-fossils-case-183421980--finance.html


[101] http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/06/120618151228.htm

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