Thursday, November 27, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, November 27, 2014

11,945 names…11,945 stories…11,945 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, November 27, 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, Theodore 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! https://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/

• • 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



Relatives with Birthdays on November 27:

Terry A. Beranek

John P. Custis

Margaret E. Drexler LeClere

Lori L. Goodlove Arretchell

Caroline von Linsingen

Thomas W. Wilkinson


November 27, 1754:


http://www.warmemorial.columbia.edu/files/cuwm/imagecache/person-main-image/person/HS_CustisJP177__01.jpg




John Parke Custis


Born

November 27, 1754
White House, New Kent County, Virginia


John Parke Custis (November 27, 1754 – November 5, 1781) was a Virginia planter, the son of Martha Washington and stepson of George Washington.

Childhood

The son of Daniel Parke Custis, a wealthy planter, and Martha Dandridge Custis, he was most likely born at White House, his parents' plantation on the Pamunkey River in New Kent County, Virginia.[1][2]

Following his father's death in 1757, almost 18,000 acres (73 km²) of land and about 285 enslaved Africans were held in trust for him.[1] In January 1759, his mother married George Washington. The Washingtons then raised him and his younger sister Martha (Patsy) Parke Custis (1756–1773) at Mount Vernon.[2] Washington became his legal guardian, and administrator of the Custis Estate. Upon his sister's death in 1773 at the age of seventeen, Custis became the sole heir of the Custis estate.[2] Jacky also was a lazy, difficult and "free-willed" child. He took little to no interest in his studies.

Family

In 1773, at the age of eighteen, "Jacky", as he was known by his family, announced to the Washingtons his engagement to Eleanor Calvert, a daughter of Benedict Swingate Calvert and granddaughter of Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore.[2] George and Martha were greatly surprised by the marriage choice due to the couple's youth.[2][3] During that year, Custis began to attend King's College (later Columbia University) in New York City, but left soon afterwards when his sister died.[2] [1]

November 27, 1768: The father of our heroine was Lieutenant-General Wilhelm von Linsingen, commanding the 12th Hanoverian infantry ; he lived alternately at Luneburg, and Uelzen. Her mother was also a Von Linsingen by birth. Caroline was the second of eight children, her birthday being on the 27th of November,(November 27) 1768. She makes special reference in her letters to the following of her brothers and sisters; Juliane, afterwards

Baroness Jenisen, bom 1767 (the "Julchen" of the letters) ; Martin, and Fredrich Ernst Jacob, grandfather of the Baron von Lin-

singen living in Vienna. Ernst was her favourite brother and the Prince's bosom friend.[2]



November 27, 1755

Joseph Salvador establishes the first Jewish settlement in America, in South Carolina.[3]



November 27, 1770: (GW) Got to Old Town to Co. Cresaps distant from Killams about 25 Miles.



November 27th, 1770: (GW).—We got to Col. Cressap’s at the Old Town, after calling at Fort Cumberland and breakfasting, with one Innis, at the new store opposite -



November 27th, 1813



VERIFICATION OF SERVICE



I do hereby certify that John Vance served in the 13th Virginia regiment as Sargeant major and for three months as adjutant and behaved himself as a good soldier. In Capt. Robert Bells was badly wounded in his ankle and run through his cheek with a bayonet at Germantown and was recommended by the General who gave him his discharge. I seen his wounds and discharge. Given under my hand this November 27, 1813.

In Pittsburgh

David Steel, Capt. 13th Virginia Regiment.[4]



1813: The Siege of Fort Meigs took place during the War of 1812 in northwestern Ohio. A small British army with support from Indians attempted to capture the recently-constructed fort to forestall an American offensive against Detroit, which the British had captured the previous year. An American sortie and relief attempt failed with heavy casualties, but the British failed to capture the fort and were forced to raise the siege.



Major-General William Henry Harrison was placed in command of the Army of the Northwest, replacing Brigadier-General William Hull after his surrender at Detroit. Harrison's objective was the recapture of Detroit, but after the defeat of American forces at the Battle of Frenchtown, Harrison gave orders for the construction of several forts to protect the rivers and trails which his army would use in any renewed advance. Two of the most important were Fort Meigs (named for Return J. Meigs, Jr., the Governor of Ohio) on Maumee or Miami du Lac River, and Fort Stephenson on the Sandusky River.

Harrison advanced to the site of Fort Meigs with an army which ultimately numbered 4,000 men (mainly militia) and began construction of the fort on February 1, 1813. Harrison contemplated a hit-and-run attack across the frozen Lake Erie against the British position at Amherstburg, but found that the ice was breaking up and returned to the half-finished fort.[1] He found the officer he had left in charge, Joel B. Leftwich, had left with all his men because the enlistment period of the militia units assigned to the task had expired. Construction had halted, and the wood that had been cut was being used as firewood.

As the enlistments of Harrison's Ohio and Kentucky militia were also about to expire, Harrison disbanded his force and departed for Cincinnati, Ohio, to raise a fresh army. He left Engineer Major Eleazer D. Wood to complete the construction of the fort. The garrison consisted of several hundred men from the 17th and 19th U.S. Infantry, who were inadequately clothed, plus militia from Pennsylvania and Virginia whose own enlistments were soon to expire.

The fort was on the south bank of the Maumee, near the Miami Rapids. Across the river were the ruins of the old British Fort Miami and the site of the 1794 Battle of Fallen Timbers. Fort Meigs occupied an area of 8 acres (32,000 m2), the largest constructed in North America to that date. The perimeter consisted of a fifteen-foot picket fence, linking eight blockhouses. The north face was protected by the Maumee, and the east and west faces by ravines. The south face was cleared of all timber to create an open glacis.[2]

The poor weather of early spring prevented a British attack while the fort was still vulnerable.[3] The British commander on the Detroit frontier, Major General Henry Procter, had been urged to attack Presque Isle (present day Erie, Pennsylvania), where the Americans were constructing a flotilla intended to seize control of Lake Erie, but Procter refused unless he received substantial reinforcements. Instead, he decided upon an attack on Fort Meigs, to disrupt American preparations for a summer campaign and hopefully capture supplies.[4] Harrison received word of Procter's preparations, and hastened to the fort with 300 reinforcements, increasing the garrison to a total of 1,100 men.[2] Embankments were hastily thrown up inside the fort as a protection against artillery fire. Harrison had persuaded Isaac Shelby, the Governor of Kentucky, to call up a brigade of 1,200 Kentucky militia under Brigadier General Green Clay. Clay's brigade had followed Harrison down the Maumee, but had not reached the fort before it was besieged.

Procter's force disembarked at the mouth of the Maumee on April 26. His force consisted of 423 men of the 41st Regiment of Foot, 63 men of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, 31 men of the Royal Artillery, 16 men from other units, and 462 Canadian militia. He also had roughly 1,250 American Indian warriors led by Shawnee chief Tecumseh. His artillery consisted of two 24-pounder guns (which had been captured at Detroit), nine lighter guns and two gunboats mounting 9-pounder guns.[2]

It took several days for the British force to move up the Maumee and set up batteries. Most of these on the north side of the river, but one was set up on the south side. Most of the Indians also were on the south side of the river, loosely investing the fort. The British batteries opened fire on May 1. Most of the cannon shot fired sank harmlessly into the wet earth of the traverses and embankments.

On May 2, Harrison sent a courier to Clay's force, with orders for part of them to spike the British guns on the north bank and then withdraw into the fort, while a sortie from the fort attacked the battery on the south bank.

The Indians had seemingly not guarded the river properly and the Kentuckians gained complete surprise. Early on the morning of May 5, a regiment under Colonel Dudley Ward landed from boats, stormed the batteries on the north bank, and began to spike the guns. Ward then apparently lost control of his men. They began to pursue the Indians without orders, abandoning the captured batteries. Three companies of the 41st and some Canadian militia had stood firm, and they recaptured the batteries. Procter summoned Tecumseh's Indians to the north bank of the river, and Ward's disorganised regiment was destroyed in confused fighting. One hundred and seventy fought their way back to the boats and escaped into the fort, but roughly two hundred were killed and five hundred taked prisoner. The British lost over fifty men killed or captured, Indian casualties are unknown.

On the south bank, the American sortie against the British battery there was partially successful. Colonel John Miller captured the battery and took thirty prisoners, before two companies of the 41st intervened and drove him back to the fort. Meanwhile the rest of Clay's force reached the fort to reinforce the garrison.

Immediately after the battle, Indians snatched American prisoners from their British guards, and killed thirty or more, with clubs, tomahawks and musket fire. Procter did not intervene to prevent this massacre. The killings were eventually stopped by Tecumseh, who called Procter a woman for failing to act.

Procter's artillery resumed fire on May 7, but most of the Indians had abandoned the army and the Canadian militia were anxious to get back to their farms. The bombardment had little effect, and the garrison of the fort now outnumbered the besiegers. Procter abandoned the siege on May 9. Harrison did not pursue.

Once the British had departed, Harrison left Clay in command of the fort with about 100 militiamen. Tecumseh urged Procter to make a renewed effort to capture the fort in July. Tecumseh's warriors staged a mock battle in the woods to make it appear as if they were attacking a column of American reinforcements to lure Clay out of the fort. However, Clay knew no reinforcements were coming, and the ruse failed. Procter quickly abandoned the second siege.[5]

November 27, 1847: LaCurtis Coleman STEPHENSON. Born on November 2, 1846 in Dewitt, Carroll County, Missouri. LaCurtis Coleman died in Snyder, Chariton County, Missouri on July 14, 1910; he was 63. Buried in Stephenson Cemetery, Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri. Civil War, Co. B., 9th Missouri Infantry.



Mabel Hoover Family Group Sheet for Marcus Stephenson lists LaCurtis Stephenson’s birthdate as “ November 27, 1847” and death date as “February 28. 1910,” at Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri--REF



On September 22, 1881 when LaCurtis Coleman was 34, he married Teresa Lee MADDEN, daughter of William MADDEN & Mary Ann CLARK(E), in Chariton County, Missouri. Born on April 17, 1864 in Washington, Indiana. Teresa Lee died in Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri on July 8, 1949; she was 85. Buried on July 11, 1949 in Stephenson Cemetery, Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri. [6]



November 27, 1856: 2. Near the first stone and still standing:



William Rowland, born December 25, 1775, died November 27, 1856. [7]





November 27, 1863: Battle of Ringgold, GA.[8]



Sun. November 27, 1864

Clear and pleasant had inspection and dress parade. A lonesome day

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[9]




November 27, 1866: Hi Folks,I was looking thru local newspapers today and spotted this." Spirit of Jefferson " newspaperCharlestown, Va. (Jefferson Co, WV now)Tues Dec 4 (December 4), 1866- Married -On the 27th ultimo (November 27, 1866), at the residence of the bride's father, by Rev. F. L. Kregel, Mr. Wm. D. Briscoe, of this county, to Miss Evie Goodlove, only daughter of Geo. P. Goodlove, Esq., of Spottsylvania county, Va.[1]
I don’t know a George P. Goodlove, but I do know a George Phillip Gottlieb born 1809 died 1875 who married Wilhelmina Hendrick Van Schaik. His father was George Phillip Gottlieb born 1758, died 1812 who was married to Machteld Koppelhof.

Summary


During the American War of Independence troops from var-
ious German territories fought on the British side,
including one unit from Waldeck called the Third English-
Waldeck Mercenary Regiment. All these auxiliary troops
are known under the name "Hessians" because the Land-
gravate of Hesse-Kassel provided the largest contingent
of mercenary units.

1875 DOTTLIEB GEORD 0/ 0 GE WLD5 62 June 1782 942,118
1876 GOTTLIEB GEOR~ 0/ 6 GE WLD5 01 June 1783 942/132
3877 GOTTLIEB GEORD 0/ 6 WLD 12 August 1783 978/25

Ge Private (Gemeiner)
WLD 5 Fifth Company (Captain Georg von Haacke,
after August 1778 Major Konrad von Horn)

62?
01 appointed, especially in the unit rolls
12 deserted; deserted to the enemy


• Also, George Gottlieb the elder had a daughter , Margaret (Peggy”) Godlove, born August 13, 1792 in Hampshire Cnty WVA or Pennsylvania?, died August 30, 1873 in Buffalo, Guernsey County, OH Married 1816 to Michael Spaid.

Is this Conrad’s father and is there a descendant out there that would do a DNA test?


More to come.[10]





November 27, 1871:
June 22, 2009 159

Catharine LeClere Belea wife of George Frederick LeClere, born July 26, 1789 died November 27, 1871 and buried at the French Cemetery in Dubuque, Iowa, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, June 14, 2009.



1872

Theopolis McKinnon voted for Grant for President again in 1872.[11]



1872

William M. Goodlove, M.D. graduated at the Ohio Medical College in 1872.[12] .



1872
100_2083

Taken sixty five years ago, the above picture shows what was probably the first reunion of the early settlers of Linn county held at Mt. Vernon. Included in the picture are many of the pioneers whose names stand out baravely in the history of a century of growth in Linn county. This reunion was long before the Linn County Old Settlers association was formed. The picture is the property of Mrs. Mary English, whose father, Richard Thjomas, was one those included in the picture. It won first prize in the Old Pictures Contest conducted the Sentinel this spring.[13]



1872: Cynthiana, Kentucky: The first city public school was in the old Harrison Academy building on South Church Street. The trustees of the Academy gave gave their part of the building to the City. The second floor of the building was owned by the Masonic Lodge, they sold their part of the building to the City for $2,000.00.[14]

November 27, 1877: Lenore Dayse Cornell (the Cornell Bible gives the spelling as Leenorah. The family called her "Daise" but when she came to Calif, she changed her name to Dorothy) b November 27, 1877 at Springville, Linn, Ia. d April 21, 1931 at Los Angeles, Calif, md (1) Robert A. Gillespie in Los Angeles but there were no children. Md (2) William Jenning Caskey. They had a dau Hazelle Mildred Caskey b April 21, 1897 at Springville, Ia. md in Los Angeles Carl Bohrman and they had a dau Betty Bohrman b ca 1918-20 at Los Angeles and she md ca 1940 Rolland Eidem. It is


believed that Betty and Rolland had a boy and girl and have grandchildren, that live in Gardena, Calif. Hazelle Mildred Caskey Bohrman d in the early 1960's at Los Angeles and is buried at Roosevelt Memorial Cemetery in Gardena, Calif. [15]



November 27, 1897: 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[16]. 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. [17] 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.[18]



November 27, 1899:


19

937

Davis, Mrs. Jefferson (A.L.S.), November 27, 1899 [19]




November 27, 1916: Nancy Milton Duncan. Born on April 15, 1852 in Clay County, Missouri. Nancy Milton died in Buchanan County, Missouri on November 27, 1916; she was 64.[20]




November 27, 1919: During the previous sping, the DPI and ISTA had been successful in pushing legislation through the General Assembly designed to make consolidation more attractive and easier to accomplish politically. By the time Grant arrived in Buck Creek in fall 1919, the ISTA with political support from the DPI had already begun a massive campaign to complete rural school consolidation in the state. ISTA was ready to supply written material on consolidation, stereopticaon slides of consolidated schools across the state, speakers, forms to be used in organizing consolidation drives, and free legal advice. The campaign was aided immeasurably by the hyperinflation of land values, by high agricultural commodity prices, and by the lure of middle class modernity seemingly assured by continuing prosperity. In its pamphleteering and exhortation, the consolidation campaign was rivaled in rural areas only by the efforts of the U.S. Department of agriculture to sign up farmers as members of the Farm Bureau.[21]



November 27-December 20, 1932:


18

871

Renaissance Society of the University of Chicago, Exhibition, November 27-December 20, 1932 [22]




November 27, 1940: Speer sends a telex from Hitler’s residence in OberSalsburg to ask about the clearance of Jewish apartments in Berlin. Acting on the orders of the general building inspector, 23,000 Jewish apartments are registered and cleared.[23]

November 27, 1941: Magic issues a warning to all American commands: "NEGOTIATIONS WITH JAPAN APPEAR TERMINATED." In Hawaii, Pacific Fleet Commander in Chief, Admiral Husband Kimmel, receives an additional warning: "THIS DISPATCH IS TO BE CONSIDERED A WAR WARNING ... AGGRESSIVE ACTION EXPECTED BY JAPAN IN THE NEXT FEW DAYS." [24]



November 27, 1941: Sidonie Gottlieb, born February 13,1896 in Berlin, Schoneberg, Potsdamer Str. 131; 7. Resided Berlin. Deportation: from Berlin, November 27, 1941, Riga. Date of death: November 30, 1941, Riga.[25] The first transportation to come directly to Riga was also caught up in the clearance of the Riga ghetto on November 30. The passengers, approximately 730 Berlin Jews, who had had to leave their home city on November 27, died in the early morning of November 30, immediately before the arrival of their Latvian fellow sufferers. On November 30, known as Rigaer Blutsonntag or Riga Bloody Sunday, and on December 8/9, 26,500 Latvian Jews were murdered in the woods of Rumbula by members of the SS and the police as well as Latvian volunteers.[26]

November 27, 1961 An unusual meeting on Vietnam takes place in the White House.

Allen Dulles (on his last day as CIA director) is there, but not his replacement, McCone. Also

attending are: Brigadier General Edward Lansdale, now in charge of anti-Castro operations --

code named “Mongoose”; Agency for International Development Administrator Fowler

Hamilton, and Bureau of the Budget Director David Bell. From the NSC staff there is McGeorge

Bundy and Walt Rostow. From State there were Rusk and U. Alexis Johnson. From Defense

there are: McNamara, Lemnitzer and William Bundy. Basically, during this meeting, the

“baton” passes from Maxwell Taylor to Robert McNamara. JFK plans to kill the proposal for

introducing U.S. combat forces into Vietnam. This leaves the bureaucracy that had planned it in

disarray. [27]

November 27, 1963: Jack Martin also told bail bondsman Hardy Davis that he had heard on television that Ferrie's New Orleans library card had been found in Oswald's possession when he was arrested in Dallas. Davis reported this to Ferrie's employer, the lawyer G. Wray Gill.[20] (In fact, no such library card was found among Oswald's possessions.)[21] Ferrie subsequently visited both Oswald’s former New Orleans landlady and a former neighbor about this report.[22] Ferrie was able to produce his library card for FBI agents who interviewed him on November 27, 1963.[23]

November 27, 1968: ELIZABETH J. KERSHAW was born September 15, 1927 in Muskogee, OK and died June 21, 2000 in Stephensville, Michigan. She married LEO B. KUNKELon November 27, 1948 in Muskogee, OK. He was born December 1, 1924 in New York, NY and died May 9, 2008 in Grand Rapids, MI. They are both buried at Hicklry Bluff Cemetery, Stevensville, MI. [28]


March 27, 1902-November 27, 1981

Ethel I. Goodlove Boyer


Birth:

March 27, 1902


Death:

November 27, 1981


http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
w/o Gilbert L.

Family links:
Spouse:
Gilbert Lynn Boyer (1908 - 1984)*

*Calculated relationship


Burial:
Jordans Grove Cemetery
Central City
Linn County
Iowa, USA



Created by: Gail Wenhardt
Record added: Apr 04, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 67902332









Ethel I. Goodlove Boyer
Added by: Gail Wenhardt



Ethel I. Goodlove Boyer
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jackie L. Wolfe










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


[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Parke_Custis


[2] http://www.archive.org/stream/carolinevonlins00meingoog/carolinevonlins00meingoog_djvu.txt


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


[4] Ancestors of Forrest Robert Garnett p 910.10


[5] Antal, Sandy (1997). A Wampum Denied: Proctor's War of 1812. Carleton University Press. ISBN 0-87013-443-4.

Berton, Pierre (2001). Flames Across the Border. Anchor Canada. ISBN 978-0385658386.

Elting, John R. (1995). Amateurs to Arms: A military history of the War of 1812. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80653-3.

Hitsman, J. Mackay; Donald E. Graves (1999). The Incredible War of 1812. Toronto: Robin Brass Studio. ISBN 1-896941-13-3.
•Latimer, Jon (2007). 1812: War with America''. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-67402-584-9.




[6] www.frontierfolk.net/ramsha_research/families/Stephenson.rtf


[7] (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett pge. 454.21)




[8] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012


[9] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove







[10] Posted by: Daniel Robinson (ID *****7243)
Date: June 02, 2008 at 16:17:28

http://genforum.genealogy.com/g/goodlove/messages/4.html


[11] Theopolis McKinnon, August 6, 1880, London, Ohio. History of Clark County, page 384


[12] History of Logan County and Ohio, O.L. Baskin & Co., Chicago, 1880 page 260.


[13]The Marion Sentinel, Marion, Iowa, Thursday, August 26, 1937.


[14] Cynthiana Since 1790 By Virgil Peddicord, 1986. Page 11.


[15] http://cwcfamily.org/egy3.htm


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


[17] Wikipedia.org


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


[19]


Series 14: Edith Ogden Harrison, Incoming Correspondence, 1884-1949


This series consists of correspondence sent to Edith Ogden Harrison, Harrison's wife. Most of the letters are personal in nature and fairly short. Some simply seek to arrange a time for a visit, while others are about the health and current activities of the sender and his or her family. The letters that she received from William Preston Harrison, Harrison's brother, are more numerous and of greater length. Most of these letters were written by William Preston Harrison while he was in Europe and tell of his travels.


This series is arranged alphabetically by the sender's name. Multiple items within a folder are then arranged chronologically.





[20] HarrisonJ


[21] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 176-177.


[22]


Series 10: Printed Invitations and Souvenirs, 1883-1952


This series primarily consists of printed invitations, menus, and other souvenirs that Harrison collected as mementos of various dinners, receptions, and other functions that he attended. In addition, this series also includes various political mementos, including a humorous excursion ticket that mentions Carter H. Harrison III, and admission tickets to political conventions. Catalogues from exhibitions where items from Harrison's art collection were shown, or in which he otherwise had a special interest, as well as a set of club by-laws from Les Rosettes et Rubans de France, are also arranged in this series. A few of the items contain handwritten notes by Harrison that provide some background information about the event to which the item in question pertains.


The items in this series are arranged alphabetically by the name of the person, place or event to which they relate.





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


[24] http://www.cv6.org/1941/btlord1/btlord1.htm


[25] [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,.

{2}Der judishchen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus

“Ihre Namen mogen nie vergessen werden!”


[26] The History of the Deportation of Jewish citizens to Riga in 1941/1942. Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Scheffler


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




[28] http://harrisonfamilytree.blogspot.com/

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