Monday, October 6, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, October 6, 2014

11,820 names…11,820 stories…11,820 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, October 6, 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.





George P. Kirby (1st cousin 3x removed of the ex)

Frank A. LeClere (great granduncle)

Zulrema I. Purcell Gatewood (wife of the step 3rd cousin 4x removed)

Timothy J. Rafferty (husband of the 2nd cousin)

Ethel L. Rodgers Pearson

Mary B. Taliaferro (2nd cousin 8x removed)



October 6, 1536

After spending 18 months in the Vilvorde prison,[1] Tyndale’s last word before he was burned were “Lord, open the King of England’s eyes.”[2]



October 6, 1566: Bothwell, warden of the Southern Marshes, departs for Liddesdale ; and, on the October 7th, is wounded there in an encounter with Elliot of Park, and retires to his castle of the Hermitage, in the neighbourhood. [3]



October 6, 1586: Elizabeth, after long hesitation, appoints a commission to try the Queen of Scots. This commission consisted of forty-six members selected from the peers of the realm and the privy-councillors. On the same day Elizabeth wrote to Mary, announcing her determination. [4]



October 6th, 1615: Sir Lauchlan MacKinnon is acquitted to not to "rest" any of the fugitive McDonalds.[5]



October 6, 1644:


Elisabeth, Queen of Spain

November 22, 1602

October 6,1644

Married Philip IV, King of Spain, in 1615.


[6]

October 6, 1683: The first German settlers arrive in America, in Philadelphia.[7]

1684
In 1684 (Old Rappahannock O. B. 1683-86, p. 18) Andrew1 Harrison makes his first appearance in the county as a headright for Cadwallader Jones. [8] Andrew had patents on Golden Vale Creek, St. Mary's Parish, Essex Co. VA as early as 1684. He supposedly was the brother of Judge James Harrison of Old Rappahannock Co.[9]



AD 1684 - Charles Dellon publishes his Account of the Inquisition at Goa.[10]



(b. October 6, 1743) Mary B. Taliaferro.[11]



October 6: 1770. Bated at old Codleys[12]. Dind and lodgd at my Brother Sam’s.[13]



October 6th. 1770:—Fed our horses on the top of the Ridge, and arrived at my brother Samuel’s on Worthington’s Marsh, a utile after they had dined, the distance being about thirty miles; from hence I despatched a messenger to Colonel Stephen, apprising him of my arrival and intended journey.[14]



October 6, 1774: Major Campbell wrote Colonel Preston from Royal Oak and very graphically portrayed the state of alarm that then prevailed on the Holston, and on New River. He said:

"The people in the Wolf-Hill settlement, (the present Abingdon) will have the Indians to come up the Valley & North fork, opposite to them, and then make a Right-Angle to their habitations; the people on ye south fork will have the Enemy, to steal Slyly up the Iron Mountain, and make one Grand attack on the Head of Holston, and Sweep the River down before them; The Head of New River will have it, that the Cherokees will fetch a Compass, round Wattago Settlement, and come down New River, on a particular Search for their Scalps. The Rich-Valley and North fork people will have Sandy the dangerous pass, for proof of which they quote former and recent Instances; to wit Stalnaker & Henrys Family being carried out the same road."

This looks like consternation reigned supreme throughout the settlements west of New River, with one exception. The exception was the settlements on the headwaters of the Clinch, where our pioneer ancestors were not calling for help, but were remaining at their frontier homes and forts, resolved to hold them against the savages, or yield up their lives in their defense. This they were doing, though some of their best and mightiest woodsmen had gone with the Lewis expedition to Ohio, and others were being sent to succor the threatened and alarmed inhabitants lower down the river, where Logan was still operating with his scalping parties.

The next attempt to inflict damage on the settlers was near the fort of Captain Evan Shelby, which was located on the site of Bristol, Tennessee, and which was called in frontier days Sapling Grove. It happened on the 6th of October (October 6), 1774, and when Captain Shelby was nearing the mouth of the Kanawha with his company of Fincastle riflemen, who were an important unit of the Lewis expedition. The Indians, who had been prowling and spying in the neighborhood, surprised and captured a negro girl, the property of Captain Shelby, within 300 yards of his fort. Their purpose in making her a captive was to get information about the fort. They tried to find out how many guns were in the fort, what amount of supplies was there, and the relative strength of the place. Several questions were asked the negro girl by the Indians, but she loyally and bravely refused to give them any information. Thereupon, the red men knocked her down twice, and started away with her. After they had gone about a mile from the fort they heard a boy passing who was on his way home from mill, and they tied the girl to a tree and went in pursuit of the boy. During their absence, the girl managed to get loose, and ran immediately to the fort and gave an alarm. Whether the boy was captured and taken away is not shown by accessible records, and the presumption is that he escaped.

On the 6th of October (October 6), a very daring murder was committed at Fort Blackmore, in the present Scott County, when Dale Carter was killed and scalped within fifty-five steps of the fort. Carter was sitting alone on a log outside the fort. The Indians had crawled along and under the bank of the river with the view of making a surprise attack upon the place and capturing it by a bold push. Carter happened to discover the enemy and immediately gave the alarm by "hallooing, murder." One of the Indians fired at Carter and missed him, but another fired and wounded him through the thigh. One of the boldest of the red men, possibly Logan, ran up and tomahawked and scalped the wounded man. A man by the name of Anderson fired from the bastion of the fort at the daring Indian while he was scalping Carter, but failed to hit him. Dale Carter was the ancestor of the Hon. Henry Carter Stuart, lately governor of Virginia, and of all the Carters of Russell County.

While the revolting incidents that I have recounted were taking place in The Clinch Valley and other sections of Fincastle County, the army of Virginia mountaineers, led by Andrew Lewis, was assembling and marching to the mouth of the Kanawha to join forces with Lord Dunmore at that place, as had been previously arranged. The knowledge the Indians had received of the object of this joint expedition—that is to discipline the hostile tribes in Ohio—no doubt, made the depredations in the Clinch Valley fewer and less violent than they would otherwise have been. It is probable that the small bands of Indians, with the great Logan leading them, were sent here for the purpose of so alarming the inhabitants as to demand a recall of the companies, eight in number, that had gone from that part of Fincastle County west of New River; and in that way so weaken Lewis' army as to give the red men a chance to defeat the "Long Knives" when they crossed into Ohio. In fact, if the Indians were trying to work such a scheme, at one time their purpose came very near being accomplished.



Colonel Lewis and his army reached the junction of the Great Kanawha with the Ohio on the 6th day of October (October 6), 1774, and went into camp on the point that lies in the fork of those two streams. A letter from Governor Dunmore to Colonel Lewis was found in a hollow tree, having been deposited there by messengers sent by the governor, but who had arrived at the place several days in advance of Lewis' army. Dr. Lyman Draper says the messengers were, Simon Girty, Simon Kenton, and Peter Parchment. But Samuel Murphy, an Englishman who was with Dunmore's division, made the list: Simon Girty, John Turner, and Joseph and Thomas Nicholson. It is certain that Simon Girty, the despised "white renegade," was one of the messengers.

Colonel Lewis sent scouts with a reply to the letter from Dunmore that had been found in the hollow tree. The contents of that letter were never revealed to the public; but it is believed by many that Lewis was ordered to cross the Ohio and join Dunmore, who was then endeavoring to make peace with the Indians; and that Lewis in his reply letter expressed dissatisfaction for himself and unwillingness on the part of his men to comply with the orders of the governor. On the 8th, scouts, led by Simon Girty, came down the Ohio in a canoe, and brought letters from Lord Dunmore to Lewis. The records do not disclose what the orders were, but it is generally agreed by historians that Lewis was directed to take his forces across the Ohio and join Lord Dunmore at the Indian towns near the Pickaway Plains. [15]



The Washington-Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield



October 6, 1774



When Lewis arrived at Point Pleasant (October 6), he found awaiting him in a hollow tree dispatches from Dunmore, brought by Simon Kenton and two companions, directing him to join his lordship at the mouth of the Big Hockhocking, where the governor’s northern wing, under Major Crawford, was building a stockade. But Lewis’s men were spent, and pens had to be built for the cattle, and shelter for the stores, so no move was made.[16]



Saturday, December 10, 2005 (2)

[17]



[Maj. Arthur Campbell to Col. William Preston. 3QQ115]

Royal-Oak October 6, 1774

Sir- The Evening after Mr. Cummins left this, I Received your Letter of ye 1st. Inst. Sent out by Paddy Brown; who tho’t proper, to carry the Letter past, and it was returned me this day open. I wish it was in my power to humour every Inhabitant, consistant with Justice to the Service; but there is many of them so unreasonably selfish I despair of succeeding in every case.

Paddy Brown is an Old Weaver Body, that lives with one of the Doughertys, he came here one day and applied for to get in for a Spy, I very flatly refused him; he then went off in dudgeon.

Upon the alarm of Lammey being taken, Vances &Fowlers Wives with several other Families convened at Mr. Harrisons[18]which lyes upon the Main path to Clinch, in the Rich Valley, opposite to the Town-House, upon the request of several Inhabitant in both sides, I ordered Six Men to be Stationed there for ten Days; two of which was always to be out rangin. Heny. & Joso. Dougherty moved their Families to this side the mountain, disagreeing with ye. Majority of ye. Inhabitants, as to the place to build a Fort. Mr. John Campbells Wife has been in this side the mountain this two months past, and himself has acted as Ensign to Capt. Smith, on Clynch ever since that Gent. Was Ordered on Duty. Archibald & John Buchanans Familys, and Andw. Lnneys came here; who has continued in this side yet; Capt. Wilson went Immedietely with 15 men, and ranged near a Week in the Neighbourhood where Lammey was taken, and he left four of his best Woodsmen with the Neighbours, for several days longer. I also ordered two of the most trusty persons I could get, for to act as Spys along Clynch Mountain for 10 days which they performed I am satisfied faithfully; besides they Six Men, at Harrisons, I ordered Mrs. Vance & Fowlers Wife 3 Men a Week particularly, to assist about saving their fodder, which they got removed with safety. All the Men stationed in this side Clynch, I give particular directions that they should if possible, Young Men; and be ready to march to other places if called upon; Indeed when I first Ordered these men I had a Scheme in it, to send such good hands as could be best Spared out of them over to fill up Capt. Looneys and Smiths Companys on Clynch when the fears of the people in this side was a little abated. It has fell out extremely unlucky, that both them Gentlemens ranging Stations, was very thin when ye. Indians came. Capt. Smith having to wait until he was reinforced from this side before he could pursue. And at Blackmores the other Day the Indians coursed one of the Negroes they took, near a quarter of an hour, several times in view of the Fort.

In short the most of the people in this Country, seem to have a private plan of their own, for thir own particular defence.

The people in the Wolf-Hill Settlement, will have the Indians, to come up the Valley &North fork, opposite to them, and then make a Right-Angle to their habitations, they people on ye. South fork will have the Enemy, to steal Slyly, up the Iron Mountain, and make ine Grand attack, on the Head of Holston, and Sweep the River down before them; The Head of New River will have it, that the Cherokees will fetch a Compass, round Wattago Settlement, and come down New River, on a particular Search for their Scalps. The Rich-Valley and North fork people will have Sandy the dangerous pass. For proof of which the[y] quot[e]former and recent Instances; to wit Stalnaker & Henrys Family being carried out the same road. You may thus see what a task one would have to remove every ones wears; I wish I could be instrumental in defendeing from real ones, imaginary dangers would give me less anxiety.

I am Sir Your most Obedient

Arthur CampbellSaturday, December 10, 2005[19]



October 6, 1774: Dunmore's warplan was simple. Three regiments were to be raised west of the Blue Ridge, one to be commanded by Colonel Andrew Lewis, while two other regiments from the interior were to be commanded by Dunmore himself. The force under Lewis, 1100 strong, proceeded from Camp Union (Lewisburg,WV) to the headwaters of the Kanawha, and then downriver to the appointed rendezvous, reaching the river's mouth on October 6, while Dunmore traveled to Fort Pitt and proceeded with his forces down the Ohio River. Not finding Dunmore there, Lewis sent messengers up the Ohio to meet him and tell him of the arrival.[20]



Battle of Forts Clinton and Montgomery - October 6, 1777[21]



On the 6th of (October 6) October the regiments sent to jersey rejoined the army. [22]

October 6, 1777: Sketch of Forts Clinton & Montgomery,



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· About This Item

· Rights & Access


Format

Map


Contributors

Wangenheim, Friedrich Adam Julius Von


Dates

1777


Location

Fort Clinton
Fort Montgomery
New York
Rockland County
United States


Language

English


Subjects

Fort Clinton, N.Y. (Rockland Co.)
Fort Clinton (Rockland Co.)
Fort Montgomery
Fort Montgomery, N.Y.
History
Manuscript Maps
New York (State)
Revolution
United States






Battle of Chestnut Neck - October 6, 1778 [23]

October 6, 1789: French Revolution (1789–1799)[edit]

On October 6, 1789, the royal family had to leave Versailles and move to the Tuileries Palace in Paris, as a result of the Women's March on Versailles.[5] During the early years of the French Revolution, preservation of the palace was largely in the hands of the citizens of Versailles.

Chambre de la reine – this room was used as the queen's bedroom, and was of exceptional splendor. On the night of October 6/7, 1789, Marie-Antoinette fled from the Paris mob by escaping through a 'hidden door' into a private corridor connecting her apartment with that of the king. [24]



October 6, 1818: Treaty of St. Mary's

Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/25/New_Purchase_Boundary_marker_%28Delphi%2C_Indiana%29.png/220px-New_Purchase_Boundary_marker_%28Delphi%2C_Indiana%29.png

Description: http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png

A marker on the border of the purchase near Delphi, Indiana.

The Treaty of St. Mary's (also known as the Treaty with the Miami, 1818) was signed on October 6, 1818 at Saint Mary's, Ohio between representatives of the United States and the Miami tribe and others living in their territory. The accord contained seven articles. Based on the terms of the accord, the Miami ceded to the United States territories beginning at the Wabash River. In another tenet of the accord, the United States agreed to pay the Miami a perpetual annuity of fifteen thousand dollars. Moreover, the United States agreed to construct one gristmill and one sawmill, as well as provide one blacksmith, one gunsmith, and agricultural implements. The Miami would also be provided one hundred and sixty bushels of salt annually.[1]

Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/ce/Indiana_Indian_treaties.jpg/250px-Indiana_Indian_treaties.jpg

Description: http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Map showing extent of the treaty lands.

Introduction

Articles of a treaty made and concluded, at St. Mary's, in the State of Ohio, between Jonathan Jennings, Lewis Cass, and Benjamin Parke, Commissioners of the United States, and the Miami nation of Indians.

Article 1

The Miami nation of Indians cede to the United States the following tract of country: Beginning at the Wabash river, where the present Indian boundary line crosses the same, near the mouth of Raccoon creek; thence, up the Wabash river, to the reserve at its head, near Fort Wayne; thence, to the reserve at Fort Wayne; thence, with the lines thereof, to the St. Mary's river; thence, up the St. Mary's river, to the reservation at the portage; thence, with the line of the cession made by the Wyandot nation of Indians to the United States, at the foot of the Rapids of the Miami of Lake Erie, on the 29th day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventeen, to the reservation at Loramie's store; thence, with the present Indian boundary line, to Fort Recovery; and, with the line, following the courses thereof, to the place of beginning.

Article 2

From the cession aforesaid the following reservations, for the use of the Miami nation of Indians, shall be made; one reservation, extending along the Wabash river, from the mouth of Salamanie river to the mouth of Eel river, and from those points, running due south, a distance equal to a direct line from the mouth of Salamanie river to the mouth of Eel river. One other reservation, of two miles (3 km) square, on the river Salamanie, at the mouth of Atchepongqwawe creek. One other reservation, of six miles (10 km) square, on the Wabash river, below the forks thereof. One other reservation, of ten miles (16 km) square, opposite the mouth of the river A Bouette. One other reservation, of ten miles (16 km) square, at the village on Sugar Tree Creek. One other reservation, of two miles (3 km) square, at the mouth of a creek, called Flat Rock, where the road to White river crosses the same.

Article 3

Description: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2c/Indian_Land_Grants_218.png/350px-Indian_Land_Grants_218.png

Description: http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.19/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Land grants in Ohio enumerated in Article 3 of this treaty

The United States agree to grant, by patent, in fee simple, to Jean Bapt. Richardville, principal chief of the Miami nation of Indians, the following tracts of land: Three sections of land, beginning about twenty-five rods [125 m] below his house, on the river St. Mary's, near Fort Wayne; thence, at right angles with the course of the river, one mile (1.6 km); and from this line, and the said river, up the stream thereof, for quantity. Two sections, upon the east side of the St. Mary's river, near Fort Wayne, running east one mile (1.6 km) with the line of the military reservation; thence, from that line, and from the river, for quantity. Two sections, on the Twenty-seven mile creek, where the road from St. Mary's to Fort Wayne crosses it, being one section on each side of said creek. Two sections on the left bank of the Wabash, commencing at the forks and running down the river.

The United States also agree to grant to each of the following persons, being Miami Indians by birth, and their heirs, the tracts of land herein described. To Joseph Richardville and Joseph Richardville, jun. two sections of land, being one on each side of the St. Mary's river, and below the reservation made on that river by the treaty of Greenville, in 1795. To Wemetche or the Crescent, one section, below and adjoining the reservation of Anthony Chesne, on the west side of the St. Mary's river, and one section immediately opposite to Macultamunqua or Black Loon.

To Keenquatakqua or Long Hair, Aronzon or Twilight, Peconbequa or a Woman striking, Aughquamauda or Difficulty, and to Miaghqua or Noon, as joint tenants, five sections of land upon the Wabash river, the centre of which shall be the Wyandot village, below the mouth of Tippecanoe river. To François Godfroy, six sections of land, on the Salamanie river, at a place called La Petite Prairie. To Louis Godfroy, six sections of land, upon the St. Mary's river, above the reservation of Anthony Shane. To Charley, a Miamie chief, one section of land, on the west side of the St. Mary's river, below the section granted to Pemetche or the Crescent. To the two eldest children of Peter Langlois, two sections of land, at a place formerly called Village du Puant, at the mouth of the river called Pauceaupichoux.

To the children of Antoine Bondie, two sections of land, on the border of the Wabash river, opposite a place called l'Esle a l'Aille. To François Lafontaine and his son, two sections of land, adjoining and above the two sections granted to Jean Bapt. Richardville, near Fort Wayne, and on the same side of the St. Mary's river. To the children of Antoine Rivarre, two sections of land, at the mouth of the Twenty-seven mile creek, and below the same. To Peter Langlois' youngest child, one section of land, opposite the Chipaille, at the Shawnese village. To Peter Labadie, one section of land, on the river St. Mary's, below the section granted to Charley. To the son of George Hunt, one section of land, on the west side of the St. Mary's river, adjoining the two sections granted to François Lafontaine and his son.

To Meshenoqua or the Little Turtle, one section of land, on the south side of the Wabash, where the portage path strikes the same. To Josette Beaubien, one section of land on the left bank of the St. Mary's, above and adjoining the three sections granted to Jean Bapt. Richardville. To Ann Turner, a half-blooded Miami, one section of land on the northwest side of the Wabash river, to commence at the mouth of Fork creek, on the west bank of the said creek, and running up said creek one mile (1.6 km) in a direct line, thence at right angles with this line for quantity. To Rebecca Hackley, a half-blooded Miami, one section of land, to be located at the Munsey town, on White river, so that it shall extend on both sides to include three hundred and 20 acres (81,000 m2) of the prairie, in the bend of the river, where the bend assumes the shape of a horse shoe.

To William Wayne Wells, a half-blooded Miami, one section of land, at the mouth of the Fork creek, where the reservation for Ann Turner commences, running down the Wabash river on the northwest bank one mile (1.6 km); thence, back one mile (1.6 km); thence, east one mile (1.6 km), to the boundary line of the grant to Ann Turner. To Mary Wells, a half-blooded Miami, one section of land, at the mouth of Stoney creek, on the southeast side of the Wabash river, the centre of which shall be at the mouth of said creek, running with the meanders thereof, up and down the Wabash river, one half mile, and thence back for quantity. To Jane Turner Wells, a half-blooded Miami, one section of land, on the northwest side of the Wabash river, to commence on the west bank of said river, opposite the old lime kiln; thence, down the said river one mile (1.6 km) and back for quantity.

Article 4

The Miami nation of Indians assent to the cession made by the Kickapoos to the United States, by the treaty concluded at Vincennes, on the ninth day of December, one thousand eight hundred and nine.

Article 5

In consideration of the cession and recognition aforesaid, the United States agree to pay to the Miami nation of Indians, a perpetual annuity of fifteen thousand dollars, which, together with all annuities which, by any former treaty, the United States have engaged to pay to the said Miami nation of Indians, shall be paid in silver. The United States will cause to be built for the Miamis one gristmill and one saw-mill, at such proper sites as the chiefs of the nation may select, and will provide and support one blacksmith and one gunsmith for them, and provide them with such implements of agriculture as the proper agent may think necessary. The United States will also cause to be delivered, annually, to the Miami nation, one hundred and sixty bushels of salt.

Article 6

The several tracts of land which, by the third article of this treaty, the United States have engaged to grant to the persons therein mentioned, except the tracts to be granted to Jean Bapt. Richardville, shall never be transferred by the said persons or their heirs, without the approbation of the President of the United States.

Article 7

This treaty shall be obligatory on the contracting parties after the same shall be ratified by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate thereof. In testimony whereof, the said Jonathan Jennings, Lewis Cass, and Benjamin Parke, commissioners as aforesaid, and the chiefs and warriors of the Miami nation of Indians, have hereunto set their hands, at St. Mary's, the sixth day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighteen.

Signatories
•Jonathan Jennings,
•Lewis Cass,
•B. Parke,
•Peshawa, or Richardville, his x mark,
•Osas, his x mark,
•Ketauga, or Charley, his x mark,
•Metche Keteta, or Big Body, his x mark,
•Notawas, his x mark,
•Wapapeslea, his x mark,
•Tathtenouga, his x mark,
•Papskeecha, or Flat Belly, his x mark,
•Metosma, his x mark,
•Sasakuthka, or Sun, his x mark,
•Keosakunga, his x mark,
•Koehenna, his x mark,
•Sinamahon, or Stone Eater, his x mark,
•Cabma, his x mark,
•Ameghqua, his x mark,
•Nawaushea, his x mark.

In presence of—
•James Dill, secretary to the commissioners,
•William Turner, secretary,
•John Johnson, Indian agent,
•B. F. Stickney, S. I. A.
•John Kenzie, sub-agent,
•G. Godfroy, sub-agent,
•John Conner,
•John F. Swan, major Third U. S. Infantry,
•Wm. Brunot, lieutenant Third Infantry,
•Wm. P. Rathbone, army contractor,
•Wm. Oliver,
•Joseph Benson, sworn interpreter,
•Wm. Conner, interpreter,

· Antoine Pride, interpreter.[25]





October 6, 1824: Andrew Jackson presided over last meeting as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of the State of Tennessee Masons; Wilkins Tannehill elected to the position, October 6. [26]

October 6, 1827: LAND:Benjamin Harrison Schooler received a Land Patent Certificate #891 from John Quincy Adams on October 6 1827, of 119 and 72/100ths of an acre. Section 24, township 3 of Range 13, between the Miami Rivers.

October 6, 1828: Princess Charlotte (b. September 29, 1766, d. October 6, 1828).[27]



October 6, 1834: Jacob Tinsman, Jacob Overholt, Solomon Luter, Peter Pool, Gasper Tarr and Henry Fretts as directors. These directors met at the house of Christian Fox, on October 6, 1834. After they had, they appointed Jacob Tinsman as a delegate to meet other delegates in Greensburg on the first Tuesday of November in order that a general system of education might be established in the county.

April 6, 1852: Catharina GUTLEBEN was born on April 21, 1853 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace.



Catharina married Mathias BRAESCH on May 1, 1877 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace. Mathias was born on October 6, 1852 in Metzeral,Munster,Colmar,Haut-Rhin,Alsace.



Children from this marriage were:

F i. Anna May BRAESCH was born after 1877.

F ii. Catherine BRAESCH was born after 1877.[28]









October 6, 1752: Apparently, Callender‘s letter had not reached Lieutenant-Governor Dinwiddie yet on October 6, 1752, because on that date Dinwiddie sent a letter to the Board of Trade[29] that did not mention it.

Goodman‘s book reproduces the October 6 letter, beginning on page 69. Part of that letter states:

I beg leave to observe that the Twightwees, a large nation of Indians to the westward of

the river Ohio, have taken up the hatchet (as they term it) against the French and the

Indians in amity with them; that is, that they have declared war against the French and

their allies, and that they solicited the friendship of the English and the nations of Indians

on the Ohio; as this application was made before His Majesty‘s present was divided, the

commissioners (I think) prudently laid aside part of the present for the Twightwees,

which was much approved of by the other nations of Indians then at Logstown, and they

sent two gentlemen with that present, to be delivered to the chiefs in the name of His

Majesty, the King of Great Britain.[30]









October 6, 1863: Quantrill again called together his troops for the annual march south for the winter. This time, thanks to the Lawrence raid, the raiders were nearly four hundred strong. On October 6, 1863, after traveling several days, they discovered a newly built Yankee fort at Baxter Springs, Kansas directly in their path. Quantrill split his men into two groups with William Gregg and Dave Poole leading one group to attack the fort from one side. Quantrill led the rest of his band around the fort intending to attack it from the opposite side. Gregg and Poole caught the soldiers at the fort by surprise and several Federals were killed but most were able to make it into the fortress and hold off the attackers.

Quantrill found his own surprise. As he led the rest of his band around the fort, he spotted a Federal column of wagons with a cavalry escort of about 100 soldiers. They appeared to be forming a battle line and Quantrill ordered his men to do the same. Actually, the Union troops were assembling into a review formation. The Union soldiers were the escort for General James Blunt. The General was on his way from western Kansas to take command in Fort Smith, which the Union Army had captured a few weeks earlier. Blunt at first thought the guerrillas, dressed in their usual Union blue, were a welcoming committee from the fort at Baxter Springs, and this was the reason Blunt ordered his men to form in ceremonial ranks. He was unable to hear the sound of the fighting going on at that moment because a ridge stood between him and the fort. Blunt soon became suspicious of the guerrillas. They were not acting like well trained and disciplined cavalry troops. He sent a scout towards the guerrillas who returned in short order with the news that the welcoming committee was in fact guerrillas.

When the nearly four hundred guerrillas charged, Blunt’s troops panicked, broke ranks and fled. In one of the wagons were musicians who were part of Blunt’s military band. In another wagon was a woman traveling with Blunt’s troops to rejoin her sick husband in Arkansas. Blunt put the woman astride a horse, told her to hold on for her life. He grabbed her reins and the pair galloped away as hard as they could. Several guerrillas chased them but their horses were not as fast as the good cavalry mounts Blunt and the woman were riding and the guerrillas were unable to catch them. The guerrillas would not shoot at Blunt for fear of hitting the woman and the pair made their escape. The musicians and cavalry escort were not as fortunate. The bandwagon lost a wheel as the band members tried to make their escape. The guerrillas shot them all, even the twelve-year-old drummer boy. They piled the bodies on top of the wagon and set them a fire. The guerrillas ran down most of the cavalry and shot the soldiers when they tried to surrender. Eighty-five of the one hundred died, most by multiple gunshot wounds. Quantrill was beside himself with glee. He had done what Marmaduke and Shelby were unable to do. He had defeated and nearly captured General Blunt, the man responsible for the Union victories at Cane Hill, Prairie Grove and Van Buren – the man who had taken northwestern Arkansas from the Confederates.

After the massacre was finished, Riley Crawford picked up a Union saber. He hit the flat of the blade across the back of one of the dead cavalrymen, shouting, "Get up, you Yankee s.o.b." To everyone’s surprise, the soldier, assuming Riley had discovered his deception, jumped to his feet. Sixteen-year-old Riley shot him point-blank without a word.

Among the spoils, the raiders found Blunt’s ceremonial flag, his new uniform with new cavalry boots and his cavalry sword. Even more rewarding for the guerrillas was the whiskey in the canteens of the dead Union soldiers. The guerrillas quickly proceeded to get drunk. Even Quantrill, who rarely drank and hOad never before been seen intoxicated in front of his men, got drunk.


A week later Quantrill wrote the only official report he ever made and sent it to General Sterling Price at his headquarters at Camp Bragg, Arkansas. He gave a vague description of the fight at Baxter Springs and greatly exaggerated other small skirmishes with Federal militia and Indians during the march south. With his report, he sent along General Blunt’s saber, flag and official papers captured at Baxter Springs. Quantrill claimed that Blunt was among those dead, a fact he knew to be untrue. Later, Price wrote to Quantrill urging him to write a report about all of his fighting during the summer of 1863, particularly Lawrence, Kansas. The General was hoping to put to rest the ugly rumors that were circulating about the massacre there and at Baxter Springs. Quantrill never replied. [31]

Or….

October 6, 1863: Battle of Fort Blair


Battle of Fort Blair


Part of the American Civil War



Date

October 6, 1863(1863-10-06)


Location

Cherokee County, Kansas


Result

Confederate States victory



Belligerents


Confederate States of AmericaConfederate States

United StatesUnited States


Commanders and leaders


Confederate States of AmericaWilliam C. Quantrill

United StatesJames B. Pond


Strength


400 cavalry

70 infantry
195 cavalry
1 12-pounder field guns


Casualties and losses


3

103


The Battle of Fort Blair, sometimes called the Fort Baxter Massacre, or the Battle of Baxter Springs, was a minor battle of the American Civil War, fought on October 6, 1863, near the present-day town of Baxter Springs, Kansas.

In late 1863, Quantrill's Raiders, a large Confederate guerrilla band, was traveling south through Kansas along the Texas Road to winter in Texas. Numbering about 300, this group captured and killed two Union teamsters who had come from a small Federal Army post called Fort Blair (also known as Fort Baxter).[1]

Quantrill decided to attack Fort Baxter and divided his force into two columns, one under him and the other commanded by a subordinate, David Poole. Poole and his men proceeded down the Texas Road, where they encountered Union soldiers, most of whom were African Americans. They chased and attacked the Union troops, killing some before the soldiers reached the earth and log Fort Blair. The garrison there consisted of about 25 cavalry and 65-70 infantry men of the United States Colored Troops.

Poole's column attacked the fort, but the garrison fought them off.[1] Moving out on to the prairie, Quantrill's column happened to encounter a Union detachment escorting Maj. Ge[‘n. James G. Blunt, who was moving his command headquarters from Fort Scott eastward to Fort Smith, Arkansas. They greatly outnumbered the Union forces.

Taking the Federals by surprise, Quantrill's column killed most of the detachment, including the military band, Maj. Henry Z. Curtis (son of Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis), and Johnny Fry (first official westbound rider of the Pony Express), a total of 103 men.[1] When a few men escaped to Fort Baxter, soldiers went out to find Blunt and survivors; there were few. Blunt was removed from command for failing to protect his column, but he was soon restored.

Union supporters called the killings a massacre; the conflict at Baxter Springs was characteristic of the vicious Kansas-Missouri border warfare. Fort Baxter was temporarily reinforced but by the end of 1863, the Union Army pulled its troops back to Fort Scott, which was better fortified. Before abandoning the fort, US forces demolished it and took away everything usable, to avoid its being used by the enemy.[1]

After Riley's father, Jeptha, was murdered by troops of Captain Penick, January 29, 1862, Riley's mother, Elizabeth, took him to William Quantrill and asked him to make a guerrilla of him, so he could avenge his father's death.
He was not only one of the youngest but also one of the hardest fighters on Quantrill's roster. After the Battle of Baxter Springs while eating supper and drinking whiskey from captured rations, Riley stepped up to one of the dead soldiers and said, 'Get up you S.O.B....and to everyone's surprise rise the man, having feigned death and thinking he had been discovered, stood up before him. Riley drew his pistol and shot him dead. [32]

Riley or William Crawford

[33]

Riley Crawford, under Todd Quantrill, Riley’s father Jeptha Crawford, was taken from his home near Blue Springs, and shot by Jayhawkers. Riley’s mother Elizabeth, brought him to Quantrill at age 15 asking to make a guerilla of him. Was with Anderson at the Centralia massacre. Killed at age 17 in Cooper County 1864. Brother to Susan Cooper Vandiver.[34]

Baxter Springs later developed as the first "cow town" in Kansas, a way station for cattle drives to markets and railroads further north. By 1875 it had a population estimated at 5,000.[1]

[35][36]

Thurs. October 6, 1864

Started on the march went 20 miles

Camped 3 miles north of new market on a creek

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diay[37]





October 6, 1881: Re: Godlove progenitor


http://c.mfcreative.com/lib/TGN/shared/assets/images/usericon.gifJAFunkhouser (View posts)

Posted: 20 Feb 2002 10:09PM GMT


Classification: Query

Edited: 28 Feb 2004 2:07AM GMT


Surnames:


Lori:

Henry C. Godlove, b. 1851 in Delaware Co., Ind., married Alverta V. Johnson in Delaware Co., Ind., October 26, 1871. He was the third child of John Godlove and Mary Etta Cochren
John was born November 9, 1823 in Ohio, probably in Guernsey Co. He married in Delaware Co., Ind., on March 25, 1847 and died October 6, 1881. He was the third child of Joseph and Hannah (Bumgardner) Godlove.

This is from the research of Emma Smith Saucier, who has published a book on Joseph and Hannah and their descendants. Emma is very helpful and, if you’re interested, she might even sell you a book (but you’ll get no sales pitch).

Joseph was the son of Francis Godlove (1744-1835) of Hardy and Hampshire Cos. (West) Virginia. I have researched Francis’ family and will send the biography and family group to you directly, if you will accept a Word attachment to an email. It is 9 pages. Let me know at the address below.

Jim Funkhouser
j.a.funkhouser


October 6, 1889:

Jacob GODLOVE
Birth: October 15, 1821
Death: October 6, 1889
Spouse: Louisa SMART (1822- )
Marriage: 1843 Virginia [38]



October 6, 1890

The Mormon Church discontinues the practice of polygamy.[39]

April 6, 1908: Bosnia and Herzegovina

Main article: Bosnian crisis

In 1908, the Austria's foreign minister, Alois von Aehrenthal, made a secret deal with the Russian foreign minister, Alexander Izvolsky in which the Russians would not oppose the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in exchange for the opening of the Bosporus Strait and the Dardanelles to Russian warships, an amendment of the 1878 Treaty of Berlin . However, Izvolsky made this agreement with Aehrenthal without the knowledge of Tsar Nicholas II, his government in St. Petersburg, nor any of the other foreign powers including Britain, France and Serbia.

Despite the fact that this agreement was engineered by Aehrenthal, Franz Joseph was aware of it, and when the emperor signed the proclamation announcing the annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina into the empire on October 6, 1908, a diplomatic crisis erupted.[40]



October 6, 1923… Edwin Hubble, using the Hooker telescope, the largest telescope in the world, just outside Los Angeles, photographed what was the most significant photograph ever taken. It was a variable star, which could be used to measure the distance from the earth. Hubble realized that the star and the Nebula in which it sat were almost a million light years away, far further than was thought possible. Hubble realized that for the first time that the Nebula was a galaxy that sat way outside our own galaxy. [41]



October 6, 1937: The Palestine Post reported from Berlin that German Jews might soon be ordered to wear yellow badges. Jews were ordered to report to local police stations where they were forced to stand for hours, facing the wall, until they collapsed and were ready to give up their property for nothing. [42][43]



October 6, 1939: In an address to the Reichstag, Hitler offers peace to England and France, but only if Germany’s former colonies are returned, Germany is allowed to join world, trade, and Britain and France allow Germany to solve the “Jewish Problem.”[44]



October 6, 1941: Over the next 48 hours, the majority of Jews in Dvinsk, Latvia, are murdered.[45]



October 6, 1941: In Kovno, (Lithuania) 1,500 Jews without work passes were taken away to be shot. The Kovno hospital was sealed shut and burned to the ground with everyone still in it.[46]



October 6, 1941-March 16,1945 : A total of 46,067 Prague Jews are deported to the “east” and to Theresienstadt.[47]

October 6, 1942:


16

740

Chicago, October 6, 1942


[48]

October 6, 1943: The Nazis deported 1,260 children from Bialystock and 53 doctors and nurses were transported from Theresienstadt to Birkenau. They were told their destination would be Palestine. They would all perish.[49]



October 6, 1943: Heinrich Himmler, makes a speech on the final solution to the Jewish question. “I am talking about the evacuation of the Jews. The extermination of the Jewish race. This is something that can be stated quite clearly. The Jewish race will be exterminated.”[50]



October 6, 1944: A two day uprising begins at Aushwitz. Sonderkommando Jews from Poland, Hungary, and Greece, who are forced to transport gassed corpses to crematoria at Auschwitz, attack SS guards with hammers, stones, picks, crowbars, and axes. They also blow up one of the four crematoria with explosives smuggled into the camp from a nearby munitions factory. Russian POWs throw ans SS man alive into a crematorium furnace. The SS fights back with machine guns, hand grenades and dogs. 250 Jews are shot outside the camp wire. An additional 12 who escape will later be found and executed.[51]



October 6, 1949: Newton Henry Smith (b. June 18, 1874 in GA / d. October 6, 1949 in AL).[52] 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. [53]





October 6, 1963 The Dallas Morning News informs its readers that “Democratic

leaders are worried over the possibility of ‘incidents’ during President Kennedy’s Texas visit. They fear

segregationists or ultraconservatives pay picket the President or even try to harm him physically.” [54]

October 6, 1978: In Iran in the Opening of the new session of Parliament, the Shah declared progress towards democracy would “certainly continue.” He intended to extend the liberalization process further.[55]

October 6, 2010

LuAnne, Thank you for getting back to me and for the information you have provided. I do think the Mormons have a website and perhaps there is something on there, but as you said, the accuracy is always better from a family member like yourself. Perhaps if you could verify if the son of Benjamin J. Godlove (Civil War) which I think might be Edwin Webster Godlove, father of the previously mentioned Lester Godlove (Dentist). Your brother already confirmed that Benjamin J. Godlove (Civil War) was your ancestor. That only leaves Edwin as the missing link on my end. Please let me know if you hear anything.



By the way, have you seen this picture? Maybe it has some of your relatives in it.



Riverside Methodist 1916

Ed Godlove served of the building committee. It is not known who is in this picture.



I hope to hear from you soon. Jeff Goodlove



In a message dated 10/2/2010 9:32:11 A.M. Central Daylight Time, ecotopian5@yahoo.com writes:



Thanks Jeff,

I'll look into this some more and get back to you. My step-daughter is now Morman, and could look some of this up in the database kept by the mormans, I think. I don't know how accurate they are tho. John and I also have an older brother, Robert Lynn Godlove, Jr. Our dad's siblings were Richard Milan Godlove, Delbert Godlove, Walter S. Godlove, and Martha Lois Godlove. Their mother (Lester's spouse) was Minnie Stotts. I know there was an Ed Godlove in the family line. John probably could confirm details.



LuAnn







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


[1] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page .167


[2] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 109.


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




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


[5] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888


[6] Wikipedia


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


[8] [Genealogies of Virginia Families From Tyler's Quarterly Historical and Genealogical Magazine, 4 volumes (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1981), 2: 527.] A Chronological Listing of Events In the Lives of Andrew Harrison, Sr. of Essex County, Virginia, Andrew Harrison, Jr. of Essex and Orange Counties, Virginia, Lawrence Harrison, Sr. of Virginia and Pennsylvania Compiled from Secondary Sources Covering the time period of 1640 through 1772 by Daniel Robert Harrison, Milford, Ohio, November, 1998.


[9] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/Harrison/d0055/g0000087.html#I1018


[10] http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/


[11] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[12] GW’s expenses at Codley’s (Caudley’s) were £6 (Ledger A, 329). Codley’s was located at Williams’ (later Snickers’) Gap in the Blue Ridge.


[13] George Washington Journal


[14] George Washington Journal


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


[16] Chronicles of Border Warfare by Alexander Scott Withers, (Reuben Gold Thwaites notation) 1920 edition; pgs. 167-168.


[17] Dunmores War by Thwaites and Kellogg (Map by Daniel Smith from the Draper Collection). P. 30.


[18] The Harrisons were a prominent family of western Virginia but whether connected with the Frederick County Harrisons, from whom the presidents descended, is uncertain although it is probable, for a Benjamin Harrison was killed on Holston in 1754. See Preston register, in Draper MSS., IQQ83. Dunmores War 1774, by Reuben Gold Thwaites, and Louise Phelps Kellogg, 1905 pg 230.


[19] Dunmores War, by Thwaites and Kellogg p. 254.


[20] http://haygenealogy.com/hay/patriots/dunmore.html


[21] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kemp%27s_Landing


[22] Revolution in America, Confidential letters and Journals 1776-1784 of Adjutant General Major Baurmeister of the Hessian Forces. Pg 122


[23] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kemp%27s_Landing


[24] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Versailles


[25] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_St._Mary%27s


[26] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824


[27] http://www.nndb.com/people/948/000068744/


[28] Descendants of Elias Gutleben, Email from Alice, May 2010.


[29] Board of Trade. Lord Commissioners of Trade and Plantations—London. A panel of maybe sixteen appointed by the King and charged with the encouragement and regulation of British trade with its overseas colonies. Although economic in principal, its interests became heavily enmeshed in political affairs. For example, they openly supported the Albany Conference—which was favored by Franklin but disputed by several colonies. Their favor or disfavor on import duties, quotas, economic blockades, and so forth became critical matters leading to the American Revolution.

http://www.thelittlelist.net/boatobye.htm


[30] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 36.


[31] http://whitsett-wall.com/Whitsett/whitsett_simeon.htm


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


[33] http://canteymyerscollection.com/index.php?action=gallery;sa=view&id=382


[34] http://penningtons.tripod.com/roster.htm


[35] http://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-jessejamestimeline.html


[36] References

1. ^ a b c d e "Chapter XIII: The History of Baxter Springs", History of Cherokee County, Kansas and representative citizens, Ed. and comp. by Nathaniel Thompson Allison, 1904
•Battle of Baxter Springs: Summary, Civil War Sites Advisory Commission
•"Battle of Baxter Springs", CWSAC Report Update and Resurvey: Individual Battlefield Profiles

[edit] External links
•Edmund V. Ness, Battle of Baxter Springs mural, Baxter Springs Heritage Center
•William C. Pollard, Jr., "Kansas Forts During the Civil War", 1992
•"Fort Blair and the Baxter Springs Massacre", Legends of America



Late, 1863

A party of Union soldiers invaded the Samuel farm looking for information about the location of Quantrill's camp. Jesse, who was just fifteen at the time, was questioned, then horse-whipped when he refused to answer the soldiers’ questions. Dr. Samuel, who also denied knowing where the raider’s camp was located, was dragged from his house and was repeatedly hanged from a tree in the yard. Somehow, the doctor managed to survive the interrogation and torture.





[37] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove)


[38] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/i/d/Jan-C-Didawick-Berkeley-Springs/PDFGENE3.pdf


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


[40] wikipedia


[41] History of Sciencce 1/1/2012


[42] This Day in Jewish History


• [43] This Day in Jewish History


[44] This Day in Jewish History


• [45] This Day in Jewish History


• [46] This Day in Jewish History.


• [47] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1768.




[48]


Series 8: Clippings, 1858-1952, bulk 1907-1948


This series consists of clippings of newspaper and magazine articles that either mention Harrison or were about subjects of particular interest to him. Clippings of articles primarily about Harrison's life rather than Harrison's connection to another person or matter are arranged in Series 1 (Biographical Materials). In some cases, Harrison clipped only a portion of the article, cutting it off part way through.


Several of the articles in this series are stories of graft, corruption, prostitution, gambling, and other illegal activities in Chicago, which Harrison apparently saved to favorably compare his record as mayor to that of some of his successors, such as William Hale Thompson and Edward J. Kelly. Others relate to Harrison's books, or to historic Chicago people, places, or events to which Harrison had some connection. A number of the clippings are about people whom Harrison or his father knew. This series also includes two copies of the Chicago Times from 1858 and 1861 which may have been saved by Harrison's father.


Some of the clippings are accompanied by Harrison's handwritten or typed notes providing his thoughts on the subject of the article, or explaining how the subject of the article related to him. These annotations generally range from one sentence to a couple of paragraphs in length.


See also clippings in five bound volumes, cataloged separately as Case + E5 H24608.


This series is arranged alphabetically by the primary subject of the clippings. Multiple items within a folder are then arranged chronologically.





[49] This Day in Jewish History


[50] Hitler’s Managers, Albert Speer, The Architect. 10/15/2005 HISTI


[51] This Day in Jewish History


[52] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[53] Proposed Descendants of Willam SMythe


[54] http://www.dallasnews.com/news/jfk50/reflect/20131012-extremists-in-dallas-created-volatile-atmosphere-before-jfks-1963-visit.ece


[55] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 502

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