Tuesday, September 9, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, September 9, 2014

11,759 names…11,759 stories…11,759 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, September 9, 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.



Mellisa Bacon (3rd great grandaunt)

Homer Godlove

Parlee Godlove

Walter Godlove

Lulu B. Hardin Harrison (wife of the 5th cousin 2x removed)

Jacob S. Lewis (husband of the 2nd great grandniece of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

James W. Sherman 2nd cousin 1x removed)

Nancy A. Thrap Godlove

September 9, 1513: Thomas Howard helped to defeat the Scots at the Flodden. He was made a Knight of the Garter after the accession of King Henry VIII, and became the King's close companion, with lodgings at court.[2 Howard's first wife Anne died in 1510,[5] and early in 1513 he married Elizabeth, the daughter of Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham, and Eleanor Percy, the daughter of Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland. [1]

September 9, 1543: Mary, Queen of Scots


Mary, [2] the Queen of Scotland is crowned at Stirling by Cardinal Beaton. [3]


Mary Stuart

Mary Stuart Queen.jpg


Portrait of Mary after François Clouet, c. 1559


Queen of Scots


Reign

December 14, 1542 – July 24, 1567


Coronation

September 9, 1543


Predecessor

James V


Successor

James VI


Regent
•James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran (1542–1554)
•Mary of Guise (1554–1560)


[4]

September 9, 1545: The twenty-third Chief, Ewen Raadh nan Cath, of Straghuordill, was summoned before Parliament and charged with rebellion by acts dated, April 26th, 1531 and September 9th, 1545 (temps. James V. and Mary). The summons was finally deserted, August 4, 1546.[5]

September 9, 1556 - Pope Paul IV refuses to crown Ferdinand of Austria emperor[6]



September 9, 1572: La Mothe Fènêlon had, at Oxford, his first audience of Elizabeth since the arrival of the news of the Saint Bartholomev^[7] massacre. He tried to justify the conduct of the king, by the neces-

sity which compelled him to act as he had done ; but Elizabeth expressed her great regret and astonishment that the admiral and the Protestants should have been so cruelly punished, without the interven-

tion of the law.f [8]



September 9, 1585. — Pope Sixtus V signs a bull of excommunication against the King of Navarre and the Prince of Conde.



At this period, in Scotland^ the character of parties had again become distinctly marked. Arran, seeing that he must renounce the support of Elizabeth, who no longer disguised her inimical designs against him,

had united himself to the adherents of Mary. Father Holt^ a Jesuit, who had been arrested at Leith two years previously, and was still detained prisoner in Edinburgh castle, served as the medium of his communications with the Catholics and other partizans of Mary, as well in Scotland, as in France and England. Gray, on his part, directed in secret the majority of the enemies of Arran, and endeavoured with Wotton to effect the return of the rebel lords who had fled to England. [9]



September 9, 1675

The New England Confederation declares war on the Wampanoag Indians led by King Philip.[10]





1676

’ This fort was built in 1676.[11]



.September 9, 1711: Philip Smith , b. June 1, 1695; m. September 9, 1711 to Mary Mathews [i][xii]. He inherited "Fleet's Bay" in Northumberland County, VA.



September 9, 1724: Endymion Smythe (b. unk / d. September 9, 1724).[12] Endymion Smythe8 [Phillip Smythe7, Thomas Smythe6, John Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. unk / d. September 9, 1724) married Elizabeth Larget.

More about Endymion Smythe:
Endymion was the 3rd Viscount Strangford. [13]



September 9, 1755: The Battle of Lake George British Colonel William Johnson's forces win, making Johnson the first British hero of the war. [14]



September 9, 1763

George Washington’s Mississippi Company receives a grant of 2.5 million acres of land between the Ohio and Wisconsin Rivers.[15]



September 9, 1774: In a letter dated, "Royal Oak, Sept. 9th (September 9). 1774," Major Arthur Campbell made a report of the attack upon the Henry family, which he said occurred the morning of the previous day, that is the 8th of September (September 8), 1774. Henry was standing in his door when two Indians fired at him, inflicting a mortal wound. He realized that he could do nothing for the protection of his wife and children and Major Campbell says: "He immediately ran to the woods; and shortly after, accidentally met with Old Jno. Hamilton who concealed him in a thicket until he should go and alarm the Fort, and bring him assistance. Hamilton had the courage to go to Henry's House; but saw nothing, either of the Indians, or of the woman and children." The woman and three children had been killed and scalped and piled up a short distance from the house, and in that way escaped Hamilton's notice, which caused him to report their capture. Hamilton was one of the enlisted men at Witten's fort at the Crab Orchard, which was about three miles distant from the scene of the massacre; and his name appears upon the list of the garrison as "John Hambleton."

On his way to the fort, Hamilton met John Bradshaw, whom Bickley says had settled in the valley, two miles west of the present town of Tazewell, in 1771. Bradshaw had been alarmed by discovering some Indian signs in his corn field that morning and had started over to Rich Valley, in the present Smyth County, where his family had gone on a visit. He struck out through the woods, passed by the Henry home, and at a point about three miles from the scene of the tragedy came upon a place where twelve or fifteen Indians had breakfasted, as shown by provisions they had left, and other signs. From that place he followed the tracks of the red men a short distance and found they were directing their course toward the Rich Valley. He made a rapid journey to that valley and gave warning that night to as many of the settlers as possible; and they began to gather at a Mr. Harrison's who lived on what Major Campbell called "the main path to Clinch in the Rich Valley, opposite to the Town-House." Other inhabitants of the valley fled to the fort at Royal Oak; among these was the wife of Ensign John Campbell, who was in charge of the garrison at Witten's fort; and Archibald and John Buchanan with their families. The families of the two Buchanan’s made a narrow escape from the Indians. These Buchanan’s were brothers, and cousins of Colonel John Buchanan, the surveyor. John Buchanan lived in the Locust Cove, and his wife was a sister of Colonel Buchanan. Archibald Buchanan, lived near the mouth of Cove Creek that empties into the North Fork of Holston. He afterwards moved to the present Washington County, and is the ancestor of most of the Buchanan’s who now live in Tazewell County, his brother John being the ancestor of the other Tazewell Buchanan’s. After murdering the Henry family, the Indians, evidently, crossed Clinch Mountain into Poor Valley and passed over Brushy Mountain into the Locust Cove; and then traveled down Cove Creek to where it enters the North Fork of Holston River. A short distance above that point, about a mile above the mouth of Cove Creek, they made Samuel Lammey a captive. They must have come upon Lammey alone, as his family had been sent to Campbell's fort at Royal Oak, after the warning given by Bradshaw to the Rich Valley settlers. The Indians then started on their homeward journey, crossed the Clinch Valley, with their prisoner, passed through Roarks' Gap, and followed Dry Fork to its confluence with Tug River.
The next attack made by the Indians also occurred within the bounds of the present Tazewell County. There were three Indians in the attacking party, and they were evidently a part of the band that massacred the Henrys and went over to Rich Valley. It was the custom of the Indians when they made hostile visits to the border settlements to break up into small bands and scatter their attacks upon the cabins of the most isolated and unprotected inhabitants. This plan made escape easier from pursuing parties sent out by the settlers. [16]




September 9-1776:

The first rifles were issued with the mark "U.S."


[17]

September 9, 1777

Accordingly after reconnoitering the enemy, Washington at two o’clock in the morning of the ninth, withdrew towards Chadd’s Ford, on the Brandywine, and on the evening of that day, entrenched himself upon the high ground on the left, or east bank of the creek. Maxwell’s light infantry occupied the advanced posts, and during the night of the tenth, threw up defences on the right, or west bank, at the approaches to the ford.

On the evening of the ninth, the British marched forward in two columns. Lieut. Gen. Knyphausen, with the left, encamped at New Garden and Kennett Square; Cornwallis with the right occupied a piece of ground below, at Hockesson meeting house.[18]



September 9, 1783: Nancy Anna Thrap b: September 9, 1783 in MD d: March 10, 1845 in Perry Co., OH buried Holcomb Cemetery

....... +John Godlove b: 1777 in VA m: May 19, 1805 in Muskingum Co., OH d: 1864 in ? buried at Riverside Cemetery Washington Co., IA

....... 4 Sarah A. Godlove

....... 4 Rebecca Godlove b: Abt. 1807 d: November 14, 1899 in Perry Co., OH[19]



"Sir: September 9. 1787?



The honorable situation in which the county of Fayette is placed by the

punctual discharg-e of her taxes, reflects hi;?h credit upon the officers employ-

ed in the laying, collecting- and paying: the same, as well as upon the county

at larg-e. May you long continue, and I hope you will long continue in the

same laudable situation. Your example will have a good influence upon oth-

ers, so that you not only do your duty yourselves, but in some degree pro-

cure the same to be done by others. The bearer is riding the State for money,

but from you we ask none. You have anticipated our demand, and I know

will continue to send it dow^n as fast as you receive it.



I am. with respect. Sir,



Your most ob't. very hum.ble serv't.

"Ephraim Douglass, Esq. JOHN NICHOLSON.



Treasurer Fayette County."



*'I trust there will be no difficulty about the order of Col. Por-

ter, (g)[20] His public as well as private character, and the necessities

of the Commissioners at the time, I hope will excuse me for ad-

vancing the money without your order.



"I have the honor to be, most respectfully,



''Sir, your very obedient servant,



''EPHRAIM DOUGLASS.

"David Rittenhouse, Esq."



Besides the moneys he had to collect and remit as County Treas-

urer, he had also, as Clerk of the Courts, to collect and remit

tavern license fees, fines and forfeitures, and fees on marriage

licenses. Concerning the latter, he writes, in January 1785, that

having "ten marriage licenses, their number will not be likely to

diminish so long as there is no penalty for marrying before almost

any body without a license." He writes again in August that "there

are yet nine marriage licenses on hand, and very little demand for

them."



We could illustrate these now forgotten difficulties to a much

greater extent by letters and extracts from the papers of Gen. Dou-

glass now before us, but having some of another class to copy, we

must hasten on.



Gen. Douglass brought out to Uniontown, shortly after he came

here, a small stock of goods, the proceeds of some of his peltries,

which were packed over the mountains from Shippensburg, at five

dollars per hundred weight. He never, we believe, renewed the

stock, but soon began investing his surplus funds in town lots and

lands.



Besides his other offices, he was, in 1785, app6inted to survey

part of District No. 3 of Depreciation Lands, north of the Alle-

gheny river, which he seems to have executed chiefly by the aid of

one Robert Stevenson. We find, however, among Gen. Douglass*

papers a beautiful copy of the map of the lands in his own hand-

writing. It is of a part of the district chiefly in Allegheny county,

being three miles wide and over thirty miles long, embracing two

hundred and eighteen tracts. For this service he got £763, of

which he paid Mr. Stevenson above half the sum.



General Douglass held also, about 1785, the appointment of

Agent for the sale of confiscated estates of Tories in Fayette. We are glad to say that he had but one case, and he a non-resident.

That was to sell the lands of Dr. Anthony Yeldall, of Philadelphia,

who owned the Mendenhall Dam tract, now owned by William

Wood and David Poundstone. The General sold, it we believe, to

one James M'Donald. Yeldall was supposed to own another tract

on the high hill west of McClellandtown, held in the name of Ed-

ward Green, now owned, we believe, by John Wilson, Esq., and

Messrs. Parshall and Renshaw, and the Agent sold it to, perhaps,

Alichael Cock; but Green afterwards recovered it, as really his

property and not Yeldall's.



In April 1793, Governor Mififlin commissioned Douglass to be

Brigadier General of the county of Fayette, and tradition yet pre-

serves the memory of his splendid erect appearance on his charger

in the field, and the rigid exactness of his commands. He took

pride in appearances, and for many years drove the only landau or

four wheeled carriage in the county.



Gen. Douglass was a man of high stature and most imposing ap-

pearance, remarkably neat and exact in gait and dress, with long

queue and powdered hair.(h)[21] He was a peer among the great and

high minded judges and attorneys of his day— Addison, Ross,

Smith, Brackenridge, Meason, Galbraith, Hadden, Lyon, Kennedy,'

&c.; enjoying their society and confidence. He had a repulsive

sternness and awe-inspiring demeanor which repelled undue famil-

iarity and rendered him unpopular with the masses. His temper

v/as very irritable, and he was subject to impetuous rage. He was

conscious of these frailties, and assigned them as a reason why he

never married. Yet he was a man of great liberality, generous

and kind to the poor, and especially to a friend in need. It is said

that in a season when a great scarcity of grain was threatened, he

providently bought up large quantities at fair prices, which, when

the expected wants of his neighbors came upon them, he sold at

cost, or lent to be repaid in kind and quantity after the next har-

vest. But the most striking proof of his generosity is the follow-

ing, which we find among his papers. To understand its force the

reader must remember that at its date Gen. St. Clair had become

old, broken in spirit, and very poor, eking out a subsistence for

himself and an afflicted family by keeping" a poor old log tavern by

the way side, on Chestnut Ridge mountain, in Westmoreland :[22]







September 9, 1780: A brutal civil war between colonists continued to rage in South Carolina. The Whig frontiersmen, led by a group of self-proclaimed colonels of the rebellion, Isaac Shelby, Elijah Clarke, and Charles McDowell conducted hit and run raids on Loyalist outposts. To protect his western flank, Cornwallis gave Major Patrick Ferguson command of the Loyalist militia. Cornwallis invaded North Carolina on September 9, 1780. [23]



September 9, 1781:



Shortly after their arrival here at Louisville, Gen. Clark had assigned squads of his men at the neighboring stations up Beargrass Creek to aid in their protection. One of these squads was commanded by Lt. William Crawford, son of Valentine Crawford, whose second in command was Ens. Thomas Ravenscraft. Among the privates were the brothers Thomas and Joseph Mason and the tough little Irishman, Samuel Murphy, late of Butlers(?) Rangers. They were assigned to Wells’ Station, nine miles above Louisville on Beargrass Creek, This little company, on September 9, went out hunting for buffalo with some of the resident Kentuckians and were having a wonderful time when a large party of Indians under Shemeneto, Thayendanegea[24]
Scan_1[25]


and Alexander McKee showed up and chased them for many miles. They finally reached refuge of sorts at Squire Boone’s Station, established by Daniel Boone’s brother. Here they discovered that two men had just been killed while working in one of the adjacent cornfields and the residents were very fearful of venturing out. [26]




1816

September 9, 1816

Age 26

Birth of Robert Tyler

Charles City, Virginia, United States




[27]



Fri. September 9, 1864

Clear day was after rations

Got bu of apples and peck of peaches

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[28]



September 9, 1864: During Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan's Valley Campaigns of 1864, Torbert commanded the Cavalry Corps of the Army of the Shenandoah and was promoted to brevet major general on September 9, 1864. He received brevet promotions in the regular army for his service at Gettysburg, Haw's Shop, Winchester, and Cedar Creek. Torbert commanded the vestigial Army of the Shenandoah from April 22, 1865, to June 27, 1865. Wesley Merritt commanded Torbert's former corps under Sheridan in the last campaigns of the Civil War in Virginia.



September 9, 1865: In the fall of 1863, Gov. Tod organized a company for special duty at the White House in Washington, as a guard for the President. The company consisted of one man from each county in the State and was called the Union Light Guard (also known as the Seventh Independent Troop, Ohio Cavalry.)[29] The company was mustered in at Columbus on December 12, 1863. [30] By December 23, the “Union Light Guard,” also known as the Seventh Independent Troop, Ohio Cavalry, was ready and began heading to Washington. [31]



It was mustered out at Washington, September 9, 1865.. (included David McKinnon.)[32]



The relationship of David McKinnon to the family is not known at this time.



Later in the war, the Union Light Guard from Ohio, also known as the Black Horse Cavalry, guarded Lincoln on his commute. The President complained about his escorts, particularly because he thought noisy and possibly too inexperience for their new duties.[33]



President Lincoln protested to Army Chief of Staff Henry Halleck against a small detachment of cavalry which had been detailed without his request, and partly against his will, by the lamented General Wadsworth, as a guard for his carriage in going to and returning from the Soldiers’ Home. The burden of his complaint was that he and Mrs. Lincoln couldn’t hear themselves talk for the clatter of their sabers and spurs; and that , as many of them appeared new hands and very awkward, he was more afraid of being shot by the accidental discharge of one of their carbines or revolvers, than of any attempt on his life or for his capture by the roving squads of Jeb Stuart’s[34] cavalry, then hovering all round the exterior works of the city.[35]



When the President and his escorts left the Soldiers’ Home grounds, they turned south onto the Rock Creek Church Road, a winding dirt roadway that led to several wartime hospitals. Mount Pleasant Hospital, Columbia College Hospital, and Carver Hospital were all located near Rock Creek Church Road to the west, but the closest hospital was Harewood Hospital, established on the former Corcoran estate just south of the Soldiers’ Home. Living near so many hospitals, the President often saw ambulances carrying the wounded as he road to and from the Soldier’s Home.[36]



On his way there he often passed long lines of ambulances, laden with the suffering victims of recent battle. A friend who met him on such an occasion, says, “When I met the President, his attitude and expression spoke the deepest sadness. He paused, and, pointing his hand towards the wounded men, he said, “Look yonder at those poor fellos. I cannot bear it! This suffering, this loss of life, is dreadful!” Recalling a letter he had written years before to a suffering friend whose grief he had sought to console, I reminded him of the incident, and asked him, “Do you remember writing to your sorrowing friend these words: “And this too shall pass away. Never fear. Victory will come.” “Yes” replied he, “victory will come, but it comes slowly”.[37]



September 9, 1894: Clark Rodgers Harrison, born on November 20, 1891 in Range Township, Madison County, Ohio. Clark Rodgers died in Columbus, Ohio on October 27, 1957; he was 65.

On November 22, 1914 when Clark Rodgers was 23, he married Lulu Belle HARDIN, in McKenzie, Carroll County, Tennessee. Born on September 9, 1894 in Liberty Township, Highland County, Ohio. Lulu Belle died in Columbus, Ohio on March 8, 1952; she was 57.[38]



September 9, 1911: Nellie Lelia Nix (b. September 9, 1911 / d. September 4, 1977).[39]





September 9, 1939

Canada declares war on Germany. [40]





September 9, 1941: The Zidovsky Kodex (Jewish Code) is invoked in Slovakia, defining who is a Jews.[41]



September 9, 1942: The convoy arrived in Auschwitz on September 9. Before arrival, an undetermined number of men were selected in Kosel (see Convoy 24). In Auschwitza itself, 59 men were selected and given numbers 63164 through 63222; 52 women were given numbers 19243 through 19294. The rest were immediately gassed.



The registry of the Ministry for War Veterns shows 12 survivors, all men. In Belgium we found nbames of 22 additional deportees, also all men, who returned to Belgium in 1945 without going first through France. Thus there were 34 survivors of record.[42]



Convoy 30, September 9, 1942



In Convoy 30 of September 9, 1942, there was a clear predominance, in decreasing order, of Poles, Germans, and Austrians. More than 100 children under 17 were among the deportees.



On board Convoy 30 was Chaim Gottlieb, born August 15, 1898 from (stateless).[43]



The list is in very poor condition. The names are almost all disappearing from thje onionskin, which was typed on through blue or black carbon. It is divided into eight sublists, with a total of 1,017 names.



1. Camp of Septfonds—206 names, of which 8 were crossed out, leaving 198 people departing. Among them were many families.

2. Camp of Les Milles—70 names. Almost all were Germans, and among them were families.

3. Various camps. These were adults of both sexes, from such camps as Montmelian, Venissieux, Vinezac etc.

4. Camp of Rivesaltes—155 names. No place of birth is given; and age is indicated instead of the precise date of birth. The Jews in this group were Poles, Germans, and Austrians. There were many families.

5. Poitiers—100 names. Most were Poles. Here, too, were many families.

6. Camp of Casseneuil—291 names. Seventeen were crossed out, leaving 274 names of deportees. All the people were arrested in the Southwest of France (from Nerac, Agen, Marmande, Casteljaloux, Allons, Buzet, Lusignan, etc.).

7. Camp of Saint-Sulpice—116 names. There were couples and families in this group.

8. Last minute departures—38 names. These deportees came from several different camps (including, among others, Rivesaltes and Les Milles).



The routine telex (XXVb-155) of September 9 was sent by the anti-Jewish section of the Gestapo—composed by Heinrichsohn and signed by Rothke—to its three recipients, Eichmann, the Inspector of Concentration Camps, and the Commandant of Auschwitz. It announces the departure on the same day at 8:55 AM from Le Bourget/Drancy station of a transport of 1,000 Jews under the directiuon of Feldwebel Rossler. In this telex the con voy is referred to as number D 901/24. This is incorrect, since the preceeding convoy of September 7 bore that number, and the one prior to that (September 4) was number D 901/23.[44]



The convoy arrived in Auschwitz on September 11. Twenty three men were selected for work and received numbers 63471 through 63493. A considerable number of men had been previously selected in Kosel for work (see Convoy 24). Sixty eight women were also left alive and were given numbers 19414 through 19481. The rest were gassed immediately.



The Ministry for War Veterans lists only 22 survivors from this convoy in 1945. One of them was Aron Gogiel, who managed to save his three sons and come home with them. Our research in Belgium enabled us to add 21 names to the list of survivors of this convoy, for a total of 43.



The list of Deportees on Convoy 31 included Joseph Gottlieb, born October 10, 1880, and Mato Gottlieb, born April 21, 1893. Both were from Poland.[45]



September 9, 1942: Two thousand Lublin Jews are deported to Majdanek.[46]



September 9, 1942: On the morning of September 9, scout planes reported a large, unescorted Japanese convoy steaming off Mindanao’s east coast, hugging the shoreline to avoid American naval forces but only 60 miles distant from RAdm. L.T. DuBose’s Task Unit 38.3—cruisers Santa Fe and Birmingham plus Destroyer Division 110: Laws, Prichett, Morrison and Longshaw. Carrier aircraft attacked before Morrison’s force could arrive so they found the convoy scattered , but for nearly two hours took remnants under fire, sinking 9,000 to 15,000 more tons of Japanese shipping. [47]



September 9, 1959: David Solomon Warren (b. July 4, 1871 in GA / d. September 9, 1959).[48]



September 9, 1963 Eugene Hale Brading, an ex-convict suspected of having ties

with organized crime in Southern California has a new driver’s license made for himself today, in

the name of Jim Braden. (Immediately following JFK’s assassination a man named Jim Braden will be arrested

and taken in for interrogation because he had been in the Dal-Tex Building, overlooking Dealey Plaza, without a good

excuse.) [49]



The Gilmer Mirror (Texas)
September 9, 1965
Page 1

Woman Lying On Highway Fatally Hurt

An unusual accident on Highway 155 took the life of a Duncanville woman and increased the traffic death total for Upshur County to 18 so far this year, 16 of them on rural highways and two inside the Gilmer city limits.

Latest victim was identified as Melba Christine Youngblood, 41, who was fatally injured when struck by a car as she was lying on Highway 155 at the roadside park one and one-half miles north of Big Sandy.

A sister made the identification and told officers she had called her the night before to say she was going to hitch hike to New Orleans and had a ride with three sailors.

The woman was struck by a car driven by Jerry Don Moore, 23, of Tyler. He was driving on Highway 155 about 2:15 am Saturday when the accident occurred.

Moore said he saw some luggage on the highway and that as he dodged it he ran over her where she was lying in the road He was absolved of any blame in the accident.

Moore picked the woman up and took her to Hawkins to a doctor. An ambulance was called and she was transferred to a Gladewater hospital where she died about 10:00 Saturday morning. She never regained consciousness after she was brought to the hospital.

She carried no identification other than the letters found in her luggage. [50]

September 9, 1966: Josephine Duncan Born on September 26, 1898 in Dover, Kingfisher, Oklahoma. Josephine died in Stigler, Oklahoma on September 9, 1966; she was 67. Buried in Shady Point, Oklahoma.

On November 14, 1917 when Josephine was 19, she married William Jesse HOPKINS, in Antlers, Pushmataha, Oklahoma.[51]



September 9, 1970: James Henry Nix (b. April 14, 1887 / d. September 9, 1970).[52] James Henry Nix14 [Marion F. Nix13, John A. Nix12, Grace Louisa Francis Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. April 14, 1887 / d. September 9, 1970) married Mammie Unk. (b. August 14, 1902 / d. November 19, 1983). He married Josephine Best (b. Unk. / d. February 26, 1929).[53]

September 9, 1884: Scamp was decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on April 28, 1988. ex-Scamp entered the Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program in Bremerton, Washington, in 1990 and on September 9, 1994 became the first hulk to complete the program and ceased to exist.

Honors and awards

Scamp earned three campaign stars for service in the Vietnam War.[54]











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[1] Wikipedia


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


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


[4] wikipedia


[5] Clan Mackinnon, compiled by Alan McNie 1986


[6] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1556


[7] * The instructions were given to Killegrew, viva voce, by Elizabeth herself, in presence of Leicester and Burleigh, who alone were entrusted with the correspondence on this subject. See the details in History of Scotland, by P. F. Tytler, vol. vii. pp. 378-95.


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


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


[10] ON This Day in America by John Wagman.


[11] .... H. H. Hardesty’s Historical and Genealogical Encyclopedia, Virginia Edition, p. 357., Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence, pg 299.


[12] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[13] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[14] http://www.sparknotes.com/history/american/frenchindian/timeline.html


[15] ON This Day in America by John Wagman.


[16] http://genealogytrails.com/vir/fincastle/county_history_3.html


[17] http://www.talonsite.com/tlineframe.htm


[18] The Battle of Brandywine, Joseph Townsend


[19] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/u/d/Penny-J-Gudgeon/ODT6-0001.html


[20] (g) Father of Ex-Governor David R. Porter, who had recently been engaged

as a Commissioner to run and mark our Western and Northern boundaries.




[21] (h)He was, moreover, when in his prime, a man of great athletic vig-or and

endurance. It is related of him, that having been taken prisoner by the Indi-

ans, in the winter, he enticed his keepers to the river to try their skill with

him in skating:. After amusing them for a while by letting them excel him

he at length put spurs to his skates and away he went with such rapidity and

continuance as to defy pursuit, and thus escaped.




[22] THE MONONGAHELA OF OLD.


[23] Wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kings_


[24] When the smoke of wood fires and burning leaves clings to the November mists in the Mohawk Valley, men still talk about Joseph Brant, the great Mohawk war captain who tried all his life to keep a foot in two worlds, the red and the white

He refused to bend his knee to King George but gallantly kissed the hand of his queen. He had his portrait painted by the famous English painter George Romney. He was at ease dringking tea from fragile china cups, but could hurl a tomahawk with deadly accuracy. He was a graduate of the Indian school that later became Dartmouth College, and he translated the Bible into the Mohawk language, yet he could leave the Mohawk a blazing ruin from Fort Stanwix, near Rome, to the very outskirts of Schenectady. He was one of the greatest of American Indians, had he given his support to the struggling Continental army the course of our history would certainly have been changed. But it would have been improbable if no t impossible for Brant to wear a Continental tricorn, he was too vain and too closely allied with the Lords of the Valley to consider casting his lot with the humble Palatine Dutch farmers who talked so much of freedom. For Brant, they had the stik of cow dung about them, he was more familiar with buckled shoes and cologne.

(The McKenney-Hall Portrait Gallery of American Indians by James D. Horan, Crown Publisher, Inc. New York, 1972. page 114)






[25] The McKenney-Hall Portrait Gallery of American Indians by James D. Horan, page 114.


[26] That Dark and Bloody River, Allan W. Eckert


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


[28] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[29] The National Park Service

http://www.nps.gov/archive/foth/linsecur.htm


[30] Page 112.40 Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett


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


[32] Page 112.40 Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett


[33] http://www.lincolnscottage.com/history/lincoln/commute.htm


[34] James Ewell Brown Stuart was a soldier from Virginia and a Confederate Army general during the Civil War. His friends knew him as “Jeb.” Stuart was a cavalry commander known for his dashing image (red-lined gray cape, yellow sash, hat cocked to the side with a peacock feather, red flower in his lapel, often sporting cologne) and his audacious tactics. Through his daring raids and reconnaissance missions, he became Robert E. Lee’s eyes and ears and inspired Southern morale. He was killed late in the war, and was much missed by Lee and the Confederacy. (The 2010 Civil War Calendar.)


[35] Colonel Halpine, aide to Army Chief of Staff Henry Halleck; http://www.lincolnscottate.com/history/lincoln/commute.htm


[36] http://www.lincolnscottage.com/history/lincoln/commute.htm


[37] Francis F. Browne, early Lincoln Biographer.


[38] HarrisonJ


[39] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[40]On this day in America by John Wagman.


[41] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1767.


[42] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944. Pages 251-252.


[43] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944. Page 263.


[44] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France 1942-1944. By Serge Klarsfeld page 259.


[45] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, Page 269.


[46] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1773




[47] http://destroyerhistory.org/fletcherclass/ussmorrison/


[48] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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


[50] http://www.jfk-online.com/cherfile.html


[51] HarrisonJ


[52] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[53] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe




[54] This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.Skipjack-class submarine:


•Skipjack
•Scamp
•Scorpion
•Sculpin
•Shark
•Snook













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