Sunday, November 2, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, November 1, 2014

11,902 names…11,902 stories…11,902 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, November 1, 2014

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Jeffery Lee Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com



Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove

The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), Jefferson, LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, and including ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, Teddy Roosevelt, U.S. Grant, Benjamin Harrison “The Signer”, Benjamin Harrison, Jimmy Carter, Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, William Taft, John Tyler (10th President), James Polk (11th President)Zachary Taylor, and Abraham Lincoln.

The Goodlove Family History Website:

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html

The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://wwwfamilytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx

• • Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.

• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004



Birthdays on November 1…

Anna o. Austria Philip (Paternal grandmother of the wife of 21st grandmother)

Mary A. Dawson Johnson (half 1st cousin 5x removed)

Mary J. Frisch Goodlove (wife of the 1st cousin 1x removed)

Cora A. Goodlove Wilkinson (great grandaunt)

Ella G. Jones McKee

Mary E. Lippincott Mckinnon (wife of the 2nd cousin 3x removed)

Grand D. Louis (nephew of the husband of the 8th cousin 10x removed)

Sharyl A. McClain Denny (wife of the 3rd cousin 1x removed)

Nora (Lenore) Morris Miller (3rd cousin 2x removed)

Michael James “Joseph" Murtha (5th cousin)

Darlene R. Perius Hall (4th great grandniece of the wife of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

Georgia F. Reinhart Stiles (husband of the 1st cousin 4x removed)

Benjamin Taliaferro (2nd cousin 8x removed)

November 1, 50 BC: Samhain, November 1, a festival when spirits could pass between the worlds, thought to have carried on in the tradition of Halloween.

As for leisure activities for both the young and old, glass gaming pieces have been found in later Iron Age burials, suggesting the Celts played board games.

Children may have occupied their free time by practicing their skill at the slingshot - a common Iron Age weapon.[1]

50 BC (approximately): Ingvaeones become Frisians, Saxons, Jutes and Angles by about now.[2]

50 BC:
Rome: Rivalry between Caesar and Pompey comes to a head. Buddhism spreads along the Silk Road to China from India.[3]

50 B.C. to 50 A.D.

100_2197[4]

50 B.C to 50 A.D.

100_2198[5]



November 1, 1141:

Empress Matilda


Matilda of England


Empress Mathilda.png


Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Germany


Tenure

January 7, 1114 – May 23, 1125


Lady of the English (disputed)


Reign

April 7, 1141 – November 1, 1141


Predecessor

Stephen (as King of England)


Successor

Stephen (as King of England)



Spouse

Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor
m. 1114; dec. 1125
Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou
m. 1128; dec. 1151


Issue


Henry II of England
Geoffrey, Count of Nantes
William X, Count of Poitou


House

Norman dynasty


Father

Henry I of England


Mother

Matilda of Scotland

•[6]



November 1, 1179: Philip II as junior king (November 1, 1179 – September 18, 1180). [7]

November 1, 1179: Philip II of France


Philip II Augustus


King of the Franks(more...)


Sceau de Philippe Auguste. - Archives Nationales - SC-D157.jpg


Seal of Philip II


Junior king
Senior king

November 1, 1179 – September 18, 1180
September 18, 1180 – July 14, 1223


Coronation

November 1, 1179


Spouse

Isabella of Hainaut
Ingeborg of Denmark
Agnes of Merania


Issue


Louis VIII, King of France
Marie, Duchess of Brabant
Philip I, Count of Boulogne


House

House of Capet


Father

Louis VII, King of France


Mother

Adèle of Champagne


In declining health, Louis VII had his 14 years old son crowned and anointed at Rheims by the Archbishop William Whitehands on November 1, in 1179.[8]

November 1, 1555:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/57/Calvin_Auditory.JPG/220px-Calvin_Auditory.JPG

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The Auditoire de Calvin where Knox preached while in Geneva, 1556–1558

Shortly after Knox sent the letter to the Queen Regent, he suddenly announced that he felt his duty was to return to Geneva. In the previous year on November 1, 1555, the congregation in Geneva had elected Knox as their minister and he decided to take up the post.[48] He wrote a final letter of advice to his supporters and left Scotland with his wife and mother-in-law. [9]



November 1, 1570 - All Saints Flood, tidal wave in the North Sea devastates the coast from Holland to Jutland; killing more than 1,000 people. [10]



November 1, 1583: – The Throckmorton plot against Elizabeth I is uncovered. [11]

Mary Smith9 [Augustine Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1713) married Robert Slaughter (b. in Culpepper Co. VA) about 1723.

More about Mary Smith
Mentioned in Spots. Co., VA. DB A (1722-1729), dated November 1, 1726, Augustine Smith, Gent. to his daughter Mary Slaughter, "now the wife of Robert Slaughter."

A. Children of Mary Smith and Robert Slaughter:
. i. Thomas Slaughter
. ii. Robert Slaughter
. iii. William Slaughter
. iv. Francis Slaughter
. v. James Slaughter
. vi. Lawrence Slaughter
. vii. George Slaughter
. viii. Elizabeth Slaughter
. ix. Martha Slaughter[12]

B.

November 1, 1728: Benjamin Taliaferro (b. November 1, 1728).[13]

November 1, 1750: Richard Stephenson (Stinson) purchases 400 acres from the Proprietors of Virginia.[14]



November 1, 1755: After a colossal earthquake destroyed Lisbon, Portugal and rocked much of Europe, people took refuge by boat. A tsunamiensued, as did great fires. Altogether, the event killed more than 60,000 people.[15]



November 1, 1765: With its enactment on November 1, 1765, most colonists called for a boycott of British goods and some organized attacks on the customhouses and homes of tax collectors. [16]

November 1, 1771. 1st. (GW) Dined at Mrs. Dawson’s. Went to the Fireworks in the Afternoon and to the Play at Night.
November 1st, 1777 This Day about ten oClock in the morning, one Mucklewain a butcher from Philadelphia, and one Dick Ellis a Negrow man were both hanged here for being trators and Spies. And for guiding the Enemy to red Banks, we Recd. news this afternoon from General Varnum that the Enemy had Sent two thousand men to attack fort Mifflin, which occationed an Allarm among us.[17][18]

November 1, 1777: Henry Laurens only served as vice president of South Carolina until June 1777. He was elected to the Continental Congress in January of that year and became the president of Congress under the Articles of Confederation[19] on November 1, 1777, a position he held until December 9, 1778. Beginning in 1780, Laurens served 15 months of imprisonment in the Tower of London after being taken captive on a Congressional mission to Holland. He spent the last years of his life in retirement on his plantation, where he lived until his death in 1792. [20]

November 1, 1800: Just before the election, Adams arrived in the new Capital City to take up his residence in the White House. On his second evening in its damp, unfinished rooms, he wrote his wife, "Before I end my letter, I pray Heaven to bestow the best of Blessings on this House and all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise Men ever rule under this roof."
Adams retired to his farm in Quincy. Here he penned his elaborate letters to Thomas Jefferson.


The death of Washington, in 1799, weakened the Federalists, as they lost the one man who symbolized and united the party. In the presidential election of 1800, Adams and his fellow Federalist candidate, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, went against the Republican duo of Jefferson and Burr. Hamilton tried his hardest to sabotage Adams's campaign in hopes of boosting Pinckney's chances of winning the presidency. In the end, Adams lost narrowly to Jefferson by 65 to 73 electoral votes. Just before his loss, he became the first President to occupy the new, but unfinished President's Mansion on November 1, 1800.

Among the causes of his defeat were distrust of him by "High Federalists" led by Hamilton, the popular disapproval of the Alien and Sedition Acts, the popularity of his opponent, Thomas Jefferson, and the effective politicking of Aaron Burr in New York State, where the legislature (which selected the electoral college) shifted from Federalist to Democratic-Republican on the basis of a few wards in New York City controlled by Burr's machine.

Midnight Judges

As his term was expiring, Adams appointed a series of judges, called the "Midnight Judges" because most of them were formally appointed days before the presidential term expired. Most of the judges were eventually unseated when the Jeffersonians abolished their offices. But John Marshall remained, and his long tenure as Chief Justice of the United States represents the most lasting influence of the Federalists, as Marshall refashioned the Constitution into a nationalizing force and established the Judicial Branch as the equal of the Executive and Legislative branches.

Major presidential actions

* Built up the U.S. Navy

* Fought the Quasi War with France

* Signed Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798

* Ended war with France through diplomacy[21]

November 1, 1800: (Lodge records lost) Initiated: The record for Brother Jackson has not been located. He seems to have been a Member of St. Tammany Lodge No. 1, Nashville, Tennessee, as early as 1800. It was the first Lodge in Tennessee, organized in 1789, under a Dispensation from the Grand Lodge of North Carolina. The name was later changed to Harmony Lodge No. 1 on November 1, 1800. Brother Jackson is officially listed as a Member in the Lodge Return to the Grand Lodge of North Carolina and Tennessee for 1805. On December 27, 1813, the Grand Lodge of Tennessee was granted its own Constitution. Brother Jackson was the sixth Grand Master of Masons of Tennessee, serving from October 7, 1822 until October 4, 1824. [22]






November 1, 1832:

Rachel Jackson, granddaughter of Andrew Jackson born .[23]


November 1, 1837: The King issued a patent, declaring the constitution void, but upholding all laws passed under it.[77] The 1819 constitution was restored. The Crown Prince, Prince George, endorsed the action.[78]

In carrying the King's patent into effect, the Cabinet required all officeholders (including professors at Göttingen University) to renew their oaths of allegiance to the King. Seven professors (including the two Brothers Grimm) refused to take the oaths, and agitated for others to protest against the King's decree. Since they did not take the oaths, the seven lost their positions, and the King expelled the three most responsible (including Jacob Grimm) from Hanover.[77] Only one of the seven, orientalist Heinrich Ewald was a citizen of Hanover and he was not expelled.[79] In the final years of the King's reign, the three were invited to return.[80]

The King wrote of the incident to his brother-in-law, Frederick William III of Prussia, "If each of these seven gentlemen had addressed a letter to me expressing his opinion, I would have had no cause to take exception to their conduct. But to call a meeting and publish their opinions even before the Government had received their protest—that is what they have done and that I cannot allow."[81] Ernest received a deputation of Göttingen citizens, who, fearing student unrest, applauded the dismissals. However, he was widely criticised in Europe, especially in Britain.[82] In the House of Commons, MP Colonel Thomas Perronet Thompson proposed to Parliament that if the as-yet-childless Queen Victoria died, making Ernest the British King, Parliament should declare that King Ernest had forfeited all rights to the British Throne by his actions.[83]

A more significant protest against the revocation of the 1833 constitution was the refusal of a number of towns to appoint parliamentary deputies. However, by 1840, a sufficient number of deputies had been appointed for the King to summon Parliament, which met for two weeks in August, approving a modified version of the 1819 constitution, passing a budget, and sending a vote of thanks to the King. The Parliament met again the following year, passed a three-year budget, and adjourned again.[84]

National development and trade; 1848 crisis[edit]

At the time the King took the throne, the city of Hanover was a densely packed residential town, and did not rise to the grand style of many German capitals. Once the political crises of the first years of his reign had subsided, he set out to remedy this state of affairs.[85] Ernest's support led to gas lighting in the city streets of Hanover, up-to-date sanitation and the development of a new residential quarter. He had the plans altered in 1841, after Queen Frederica's death, to leave standing the Altes Palais, where the two had lived since arriving in Hanover.[40] Ernest's interest in and support of the railroads led to Hanover becoming a major rail junction, much to the nation's benefit.[40] However, when court architect Georg Ludwig Friedrich Laves in 1837 proposed the building of an opera house in Hanover, the King initially refused, calling the proposal "this utterly absurd idea of building a court theatre in the middle of this green field".[86] The King finally gave his consent in 1844, and the opera house opened in 1852, a year after the King's death.[86]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a4/Ernest1850.jpg/220px-Ernest1850.jpg

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Ernest Augustus portrait, circa 1850

Every week, the King travelled with his secretary to different parts of his kingdom, and anyone could lay a petition before him—although Ernest had petitions screened by the secretary so he would not have to deal with frivolous complaints.[87] Ernest opened high ministerial positions to those of any class, securing the services of several ministers who would not have been eligible without this reform.[88] Though the King had, while Duke of Cumberland, fought against Catholic emancipation, he made no objection to Catholics in government service in Hanover, and even visited their churches. Ernest explained this by stating that there were no historical reasons to restrict Catholics in Hanover, as there had been in the United Kingdom.[89] He continued to oppose admission of Jews into the British Parliament, but gave Jews in Hanover equal rights.[90]

The King supported a postal union and common currency among the German states, but opposed the Prussian-led customs union, the Zollverein, fearing that it would lead to Prussian dominance and the end of Hanover as an independent state. Instead, the King supported the Steuerverein, which Hanover and other western German states had formed in 1834. When the Steuerverein treaties came up for renewal in 1841, Brunswick pulled out of the union and joined the Zollverein, greatly weakening Hanover's position, especially since Brunswick had enclaves within Hanover. Ernest was able to postpone the enclaves' entry into the Zollverein, and when a trade war began, was able to outlast Brunswick. In 1845, Brunswick, Hanover, and Prussia signed a trade agreement. In 1850, Ernest reluctantly permitted Hanover to join the Zollverein, though the entry was on favourable terms.[91] Ernest's forebodings about Prussia were warranted; in 1866, fifteen years after his death, Hanover chose the Austrian side in the Austro-Prussian War, was defeated, and was annexed by Prussia.[92]

Hanover was little affected by the revolutions of 1848; a few small disturbances were put down by the cavalry without bloodshed.[93] When agitators arrived from Berlin at the end of May 1848, and there were demonstrations outside the King's palace, Ernest sent out the Prime Minister. The Prime Minister warned that if the demonstrators made any inappropriate demands on the King, Ernest would pack up his things and leave for Britain, taking the Crown Prince with him. This would leave the country to the mercy of expansionist Prussia, and the threat put an end to the agitation. Afterwards, the King granted a new constitution, somewhat more liberal than the 1819 document.[94]

Relations with Britain[edit]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e6/Tohanovertoken.png/220px-Tohanovertoken.png

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British "To Hanover" token or "Cumberland Jack", marking Ernest's departure from Britain. These pieces were struck through much of the 19th century as whist counters and were sometimes passed as real gold coins to the unwary.[95]

Ernest Augustus is supposed to have asked the advice of the Duke of Wellington as to what course he should take after Victoria's accession, with Wellington supposedly saying "Go before you are pelted out."[96] However, Bird dismisses this story as unlikely, given Wellington's customary respect to royalty and the fact that Ernest had little choice in what to do—he had to repair to his kingdom as quickly as possible.[97] One decision the new King did have to make was whether, in his capacity as Duke of Cumberland, to swear allegiance to Victoria in the House of Lords. Shortly after William's death, Ernest heard from Lord Lyndhurst that Lord Cottenham, the Lord Chancellor, had stated that he would refuse to administer the Oath of Allegiance to the King, as a foreign Sovereign. The King hurriedly appeared in the House of Lords, before his departure for Hanover, and subscribed to the Oath before the Chief Clerk as a matter of routine. [24]

November 1, 1838 – Twelve members of a group of twenty Cherokee in western North Carolina evaded the round-up and forced emigration were captured and held under guard by three enlisted men and a lieutenant. During the night, two of the soldiers were killed and one wounded, while the lieutenant escaped into the night, as do the prisoners.[25]

November 1-6, 1862: Battle of Berwicks Bay, LA.[26]

November 1, 1862: She returned to St. Louis on November 1, when the surgeon in charge of the hositais wrote to Governor Salomon, commending her efforts. During the same month General Curtis gave her permission to visit all the hospitals in his command, and he sent orders to quartermasters and transportation companies to afford her and her sanitary articles free transmission. So she started on a tour of inspection, which embraced all the general hospitals on the Mississippi River as well as the regimental hospitals for Wisconsin soldiers. On this tour she visited those at Helena, St. Louis, Rolla, Ironton, and Memphis. While on a steamer from Cape Girardeau to Helena, Mrs. Harvey heard a young major in the regular army coolly remarked that it was much cheaper for the Government to keep her sick soldiers in hospitals on the river, than to furlough them. Upon which she quietly remarked: "That is true, Major, if all were faithful to the Government, but unfortunately a majority of the surgeons in the army have conscientious scruples, and verily believe it to be their duty to keep these sick men alive as long as possible...... Don't you think, sir, that it would be a trifle more economical to send these poor fellows North for a few weeks, to regain their strength, that they might return at once to active service?"

Mrs. Harvey was prevented from hearing the Major's reply on account of the other officers' laughter. It seems that the Major was the medical director at Helena, where over 2,000 Northern soldiers lay buried. It was Mrs. Harvey's opinion that two-thirds of these men might have been saved if they had been sent North. Upon inquiry she learned from the surgeon in charge of the hospital that he had several times made out certificates of disability in order to secure furloughs for some of the men in his hospital; but when these were sent to the medical director for his signature, they had been invariably disapproved. He had also permitted the men, to submit their papers in person; only to have them severely reproved, and ordered back by the director, "and, " he continued with tears in his eves, "many of them never returned, for broken. hearted, they have lain down by the roadside and died."

Influence with Officials

Mrs. Harvey had one memorable experience in securing the discharge of a sick boy. His mother had succeeded in getting her son as far as St. Louis, where his papers were to be sent; but here she met with reverses, for the papers sent to the medical director were improperly made out, consequently his approval was not secured. The broken-hearted mother told her story to Mrs. Harvey that same night. She impulsively said, "Give me the papers," and off she went to the offlce of the medical director. "He was a man fully six feet high, over fifty years of age, [with] a beard like Oliver Cromwell's, a face as stern as fate, and of the regular army." She entered his office,seated herself and waited till he spoke to her. After a curt question or two the general went on writing; finally he turned and said: "May as well hear it now as ever, what is it?" Whereupon Mrs. Harvey stated the case as well as she could, interrupted only by the half-rude, half impatient remarks of the inspector. Finally he said, as if in self-defense, "We have army regulations; we cannot go behind them. You know, if I do, they will rap me over the knuckles at Washington." To this the quick-witted, earnest little woman replied, "Oh, that your knuckles were mine. I would be willing to have them skinned; the skin will grow again you know." "Where are these papers?" he said sharply. "I have them here in my pocket." "Let me see them." Mrs. Harvey took them out slowly and handed them over to him, blank side up. He turned them, and his face flushed as he said, "Why I have had these papers and disapproved them. This is my signature." Tremblingly she replied, "I knew it, but forgive me. I thought maybe when you knew about it, General, and the mother was weeping with the skeleton arms of the boy around her neck-I thought maybe you would do something or tell me something to do." "Suppose I do approve these papers, it will do no good. The general in command will stop them and censure me." "But you will have done all you could and have obeyed the higher law." She had won, for the remorseful man crossed out with a firm stroke of his pen "disapproved," and wrote "approved" upon the discharge, after which he said in a quick, husky tone, "Take it, and don't you come here again today." As Mrs. Harvey raised her eyes to thank him, she saw a scowl on his brow, a smile on his lips, but tears in his eyes.

Another story shows how Mrs. Harvey succeeded in securing the assistance she wanted. An erring boy of nineteen had deserted from a Minnesota regiment; later he had joined a Wisconsin regiment, from which he had been honorably discharged after having been wounded in a battle. In one of the lowest dens in St. Louis he had been drugged, robbed, and left lying on a filthy mattress. There he was found tossing from side to side, strcken by disease and in a delirious condition. Mrs. Harvey soothed him as best she could. Recognizing the hand of kindness on his burning brow, he cried "Mother." After a touching scene she left, promising to return in half an hour and take him away. This was easier said than done; the boy was at that time only a citizen and not a soldier, and therefore he could not be admitted to a military hospital. But he was dying, and in order to prevent his mother from knowing that he had died in such a state, Mrs. Harvey determined to make a desperate effort to get him admitted to the hospital.

So she went to her old friend the medical director, and told her story, saying, "General, write an order quick to the surgeon in charge of the Fifth Street hospital, that the boy may be received. I also want an ambulance, mattress, and bedding, and some men to help me to move him. Yes, yes, but listen, I have no right; I can't do" "I know-I know, but please do hurry-I promised to be back in half an hour, and the boy will expect me."

The General imitating her voice, gave the order and continned, "Here is the paper; what else do you want? Henceforth we do what you wish and no questions asked. It is the easiest way and I guess the only way to get along with you.[27]

Tues. November 1, 1864

Started back to the front train gard[28]

Camped at Winchester cold night

Heard of the death of John Carmical[29]

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[30]



November 1, 1876: Cora Alice Goodlove (November 1, 1876-December 14, 1960) mar­riedThomas Wilkinson, April 4, 1907, at the home of the bride’s parents. Thomas died February 1968. Both are buried at Jordan’s Grove. They had three daughters, Nelevene Illini, Kathryn, Dor­othy, and one son, Thomas E. "Wendell", who farmed south of Springville for several years. [31]



November 1, 1883: Fanny Gottlieb, Born November 1, 1883, Frankfurt am Main (place of residence) Osten (Last known whereabouts). Missing.



November 1, 1941: Elias Gottlieb, born Am April 11, 97* in Storozynetz, Bukowina; Prenz-lauer berg, Weisenburger Str. 64; 4; transport vom November 1, 1941, Lodz,

• Schicksal ungeklart.[32]



November 1, 1941: In Poland, the construction of an extermination center at Belzec begins.[33]



October 29-November 1, 1942: The Nazis killed 16,000, nearly all the Jews in Pinsk, Russia.[34]



November 1, 1942: Ruchel Gottlieb, born Pfau, August 12, 1869 in Kuty, Galizien. Prenzlauer Berg, Strasburger Str. 41; 4. . Resided Berlin. Deportation: from Berlin, November 1, to Litzmannstadt, Lodz. Date of death: April 19, 1942, Litzmannstadt, Lodz am. [35]



November 1, 1942: The deportation of Jews from the Bialystok district to Treblinka begins.[36]



November 1, 1943: Meanwhile the engineers, welders, steamfitters, metalworkers and machinists of Bremerton Navy Yard swarmed over the ship, properly repairing her many wounds, and refitting her to reflect the new realities of war. When she departed Bremerton on November 1, 1943, a new torpedo blister extended three quarters the length of her hull. Her flanks bristled with 50 20mm guns, and 40 40mm Bofors barrels: 36 more anti-aircraft guns than she had in July. Her 40mm and 5-inch guns were now coupled to radar-controlled gunfire directors, and her damage control systems were completely overhauled. The flight deck had been lengthened eighteen feet and widened by five. Below decks, more berths had been packed in for her growing crew, and her bridge had been modernized. [37]

November 1, 1952, the United States successfully detonated "Mike," the world's first hydrogen bomb, on the Elugelab Atoll in the Pacific Marshall Islands. The 10.4-megaton thermonuclear device, built upon the Teller-Ulam principles of staged radiation implosion, instantly vaporized an entire island and left behind a crater more than a mile wide. The incredible explosive force of Mike was also apparent from the sheer magnitude of its mushroom cloud--within 90 seconds the mushroom cloud climbed to 57,000 feet and entered the stratosphere. One minute later, it reached 108,000 feet, eventually stabilizing at a ceiling of 120,000 feet. Half an hour after the test, the mushroom stretched 60 miles across, with the base of the head joining the stem at 45,000 feet. [38]

November 1, 1963 McGeorge Bundy presides over a staff meeting at the White

House, Bundy opens meeting by stating that he has “spent quite a night watching the cables from

Vietnam.” Forrestal says the coup has been “well executed.” Bundy then comments that Diem is

still holding out in the palace, adding that no one wants to go in for the kill.

10:50 AM -- JFK attends mass at Holy Trinity Church in Georgetown (All Saints Day)

Abraham Bolden, first black Secret Service agent, states that he receives an FBI Teletype

in Chicago detailing a plot by four men to shoot the President in Chicago with high -powered

rifles. No record of it exists. NO ACTION IS TAKEN.

George Senator moves into Jack Ruby’s apartment. They have previously been room

mates in 1962.

This is the date of an FBI airtel that FBI agent James P. Hosty, Jr. receives from

San Antonio, to which he will respond fourteen days from now. (Right-wing subversives are

Hosty’s FBI specialty. The subject of the exchange of airtels is “John Thomas Masen, IS [Internal

Security] - Cuba.” Hosty is also directed to begin searching for George Perrell. He subsequently

goes to Ruth Paine’s home, just outside Dallas, where Marina Oswald is staying. Hosty’s stated

aim is to interview Mrs. Oswald as “a Soviet immigrant in this country who could conceivably be here

with [an] intelligence assignment.” Hosty speaks briefly to Marina Oswald and to Ruth Paine.

There will be eventual testimony from Marina and others that Oswald becomes irritated that the FBI is

contacting his family. Soon after the assassination, Hosty’s name, license plate number, telephone number,

and office address will be found in Oswald’s address book. The FBI will initially conceal this information

from the Warren Commission. Agent Hosty eventually will be officially censured by the FBI for his

handling of the LHO case prior to Nov. 22, 1963.

At about noon today, Lee Harvey Oswald walks over to a post office on his lunch-hour

break from the TSBD and rents another post office box at the terminal annex of the U.S. post

office in Dallas. (P.O. Box # 6225) (NOTE: Jack Ruby will rent P.O. Box # 5475 on Nov. 7th) He lists his

home address as 3610 North Beckley St. He also lists “Fair Play for Cuba Committee” and

“American Civil Liberties Union” (ACLU) as organizations on the form. He then mails three

letters. One is a change-of-address card to Consul Reznichenko at the Soviet embassy in

Washington. Another is a membership application to the ACLU. The third is Oswald’s alerting

Communist Party, USA headquarters that his September plans had changed about moving to the

Philadelphia-Baltimore area. LHO also cashes a Texas Unemployment check today (Friday) for

$33 at a supermarket in Irving.

NOTE: The procedure for opening a box at any U.S. Post Office involves a preliminary

check on the home residence address written on the application. LHO’s home address

listed on the box application is nonexistent; there is no 3600 block of North Beckley. LHO

is also supposedly living under the name O.H. Lee at his actual residence. With neither a

name nor an address that worked, the mail carrier could hardly have confirmed the

validity of the application. Oswald Talked

A young man draws attention to himself while buying rifle ammunition at Morgan’s

Gunshop in Fort Worth. He is rude and impertinent and boasts about having been in the

Marines. Three witnesses will remember the incident and think the man looks like Oswald. The

real Oswald is busily occupied in Dallas where, on this day, he receives his first paycheck from

the Texas Book Depository. AOT

Also on this day, an employee of Parrot Jungle in Miami hears an unidentified male

make some remarks about a friend of his named Lee who is an American Marxist, speaks Russian

and is a crack marksman. The man makes references to Kennedy and “shooting between the eyes”

and adds that his friend is now in either Texas or Mexico. Later, the man will be identified as

Jorge Soto Martinez, who had been a customs inspector in Cuba for most of his life until Castro

fired him.

After the assassination, Leonard Hutchinson will come forward to say that he had been

asked to cash a check for Oswald earlier in November. Hutchinson, who owns Hutch's Market in

Irving, Texas, says the man asked him to cash a two-party check made out to "Harvey Oswald"

for $189. He refuses to accept the check, but says he sees the man in his store several more times.

He says on one occasion the man and a young woman speak in some foreign language.

Hutchinson says he recognized both Oswald and Marina when their photographs are broadcast

over television after the assassination. Near Hutchinson's store is a barber shop where a man

identified as Oswald comes for haircuts. The barber also says he sees the same man entering

Hutchinson's store. Despite all this, the Warren Commission will conclude: “Oswald is not

known to have received a check for this amount from any source .... Examination of Hutchinson's

testimony indicates a more likely explanation is that Oswald was not in his store at all.” Crossfire

Hearings begin today in a federal courtroom in New Orleans regarding Carlos Marcello

and his ten year battle to avoid deportation. The courtroom is packed.[39]

November 1, 1963: On November 1, South Vietnamese military plotters killed Diem and his brother in a coup which “was facilitated when the CIA withdrew Richardson from Saigon, allowing the agency to cooperate with the South Vietnamese generals behind the plot.”[56] [40]

November 1, 1969: Scamp continued stateside duty throughout 1969. She alternated in-port periods with training cruises until early March when she began pre-overhaul tests in the San Diego operating area. She continued preparing for overhaul and participating in exercises until November 1 when she entered Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for regular overhaul. While at Bremerton, Scamp was assigned that port as her new home port. [41]

November 1, 1973: when she resumed operations in the vicinity of San Diego. [42]

November 1, 2000: 1Dorothy C. Wertz. "Jewish ancestry for an African tribe: From Yemen to Zimbabwe." GeneLetter 1(10) (November 1, 2000).



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


[1] Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2164897/Iron-Age-coins-worth-10m-discovered-Jersey-metal-detector-friends.html#ixzz1z1ORUxqL


[2] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/germany.htm


[3] http://www.bible-history.com/herod_the_great/HERODTimeline.htm


[4] The Oriental Institute Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, January 2, 2011


[5] The Oriental Institute Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, January 2, 2011.


[6] Notes^ Historical debate exists as to whether William Adelin was Matilda's younger brother or her twin. Marjorie Chibnall has said that "the evidence is against" the theory of the siblings being twins, citing various reasons, such as William of Malmesbury stating they were born on different dates.[1]

1. ^ It is argued that Hermann of Tournai was using the story of a child who died as a guise to prove his point that because Matilda's mother had once worn the veil of a nun, her marriage was cursed. Chibnall described it as an "uncorroborated" story and Hermann as an "unreliable" source.[14]

References[edit]

1. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 9

2. ^ Pain 1978, p. 5

3. ^ Pain 1978, p. 7

4. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 16

5. ^ Pain 1978, p. 8

6. ^ Sidney Lee, ed. (1894). "Matilda (1102-1167)". Dictionary of National Biography 37. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

7. ^ Chibnall (1991), p. 24

8. ^ Pain 1978, p. 12

9. ^ Pain 1978, p. 14

10. ^ a b c d Chibnall 1991, p. 32

11. ^ a b Chibnall 1991, p. 33

12. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 34

13. ^ a b Chibnall 1991, p. 38

14. ^ a b c Chibnall 1991, p. 40

15. ^ a b Pain 1978, p. 16

16. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 41

17. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 42

18. ^ a b Chibnall 1991, p. 43

19. ^ Pain 1978, p. 17

20. ^ Pain 1978, p. 18

21. ^ a b Chibnall 1991, p. 51

22. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 52

23. ^ a b c d e Pain 1978, p. 25

24. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 54

25. ^ Pain 1978, p. 26

26. ^ a b c Pain 1978, p. 27

27. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 55

28. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 57

29. ^ a b Chibnall 1991, p. 59

30. ^ Chibnall 1991, p. 60

31. ^ a b Chibnall 1991, p. 61

32. ^ a b Lyon, Ann (2003). Constitutional history of the UK. Routledge Cavendish. ISBN 1-85941-746-9.

33. ^ Harvey, John. The Plantagenets. p. 50.

Bibliography
•Chibnall, Marjorie (1991), The Empress Matilda: Queen Consort, Queen Mother and Lady of the English, Basil Blackwell, ISBN 0-631-15737-9
•Pain, Nesta (1978), Empress Matilda: Uncrowned Queen of England, Butler & Tanner

Further reading[edit]




Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Empress Mathilda

•Bradbury, J. (1996) Stephen and Matilda: the Civil War of 1139–1153, Sutton Publishing, ISBN 0-7509-0612-X
•Fletcher, John (1990) Sutton Courtenay: The History of a Thameside Village
•Gardener, J and Wenborn, W the History Today Companion to British History

Parsons, John Carmi. Medieval Mothering (New Middle Ages), sub. Marjorie Chibnall, "Empress Matilda and Her Sons"


[7] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_VII_of_France


[8] wikipedia


[9] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Knox


[10] beginshttp://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1570


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


[12] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.


[13] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.


[14] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 p. 12.




[15] http://www.nbcnews.com/id/35619317/ns/world_news-chile_earthquake/t/tsunamis-history/


[16] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/patrick-henry-voices-american-opposition-to-british-policy


[17] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html


[18] The Battle for Fort Mercer: The American Defenders Text below extracted from the Diary of Colonel Israel Angell, Commanding Officer, 2nd Rhode Island Regiment, Continental Army. Battle for Fort Mercer: The American Defenders


[19] Articles of Confederation. (1781-1788). The United States Constitution was first drafted in 1775 by Benjamin Franklin and then a series of drafts by Silas Deane of CT and others until John Dickinson of PA in June 1776 drafted one that with alterations was presented to the colonies for approval. The Articles were not approved until March 1, 1781. The major hang-up was ownership of the land west of the Alleghenies. Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia, Connecticut, and Massachusetts all claimed their territory extended to the Mississippi River and beyond. Charters of PA, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, and Rhode Island limited their western borders to a few hundred miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean. The logjam was broken when Thomas Jefferson persuaded his fellow Virginians to forfeit their demands and to accept the west to be divided into states and brought into the United States on an equal basis as the original thirteen. The land speculators would be cut out of the deal—and the sale of the western land could be used to pay the war debts owed to other countries, war veterans, local suppliers, etc. Representatives to the Congress elected a new president each year with three Pennsylvanians serving—Thomas Mifflin, Arthur St. Clair, and Thomas McKean.

As might be expected, taxes were a central problem. Some representatives wanted taxes to be apportioned on a "per capita" basis. The southern states rejected a count that would include Blacks. With a war going on, the question of the slave trade and fugitive runaways was placed on the back-burner. The rebels needed money and fell to gathering it on the value of land and improvements. The slave problem would have to wait.

The Confederation had a unicameral congress with each state having one vote. Delegates were elected by the state legislatures. People and trade could move across state lines without interference. All states needed to agree to important actions; such as, declaring war, making treaties, introduction of amendments—with simple majorities required of lesser items. Wartime problems of gaining acceptance of foreign countries and borrowing money persuaded many that a loose confederation could not satisfy the needs of a people determined to be an equal among the nations of the world.

The Articles were in effect from 1781 to 1787 when they were rejected in favor of a new Constitution for the United States.

http://www.thelittlelist.net/abetoawl.htm#abenaki


[20] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/south-carolina-approves-new-constitution


[21] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Adams

http://www.stirnet.com/genie/data/british/aa/azmisc02.php#prez

http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/ja2.html

http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/signers/adams_j.htm

http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/declaration/bio1.htm




[22] http://www.ebay.com/itm/ANDREW-JACKSON-DOLLAR-COIN-WITH-MASONIC-STAMP-/151064439025?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item232c2468f1


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


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


[25] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


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


[27] Wisconsin Women in the War, 1911




[28]November 1. Left Martinsburg, West Virginia as escort for supply train on the morning of November 1. (Supplement to the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Part II Record of Events Volume 20 Serial no. 32. Broadfoot Publishing Company Wilmington, NC 1995.)




[29] Carmichael, John W. Age 19. Residence Springville, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Aug. 7, 1862. Mustered Sept. 3. 1862. Wounded severely Sept. 19, 1864, Winchester, Va. Died Oct. 29, 1864, Winchester, Va. Buried in National Cemetery, Winchester, Va. Lot 76.

http:iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logn/mil508.htm




[30] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[31] Winton Goodlove:A History of Central City Ia and the Surrounding Area Book ll 1999




[32] Gedenkbuch Berlins der judishen Opfer des Nationalsozialismus

“Ihre Namen mog3en nie vergessen werden!”


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


[34] This Day in Jewish History[34]


[35] [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!”

[2]Memorial Book: Victims of the Persecution of Jews under the National Socialist Oppression in Germany, 1933-1945


[36] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774


[37] http://www.cv6.org/1943/1943.htm


[38] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history


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




[40] 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














[41] 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














[42] 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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