Sunday, November 9, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, November 9, 2014

11,929 names…11,929 stories…11,929 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, November 9, 2014

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Jeffery Lee Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com



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

The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), Jefferson, LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, and including ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, 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

Birthdays on November 9…

John Godlove

Morgan V. Leland Gates (1st cousin 2x removed)

Nathan Winch (6th great granduncle)


November 9, 1566: Mary, at length recovered from the severe illness which she had at Jedburgh, hastens to quit that town for Kelso, and thence to Dunbar. Darnley remains at Glasgow, and does not follow her.

In spite of the delicate state of her health. Queen Mary soon returns to the consideration of her political interests. Having heard that a great number of the most influential noblemen at the court of Eliza-

beth thought of declaring her heir to the throne of England^ she writes on this subject, on the 18th of November, to Cecil and the privy council of England. [1]


November 9, 1572: After inducting his successor, Lawson of Aberdeen, as minister of St Giles' on November 9, Knox returned to his home for the last time. With his friends and some of the greatest Scottish nobles around him, he asked for the Bible to be read aloud. [2]


November 9, 1770: (GW) Got to the 3 Islands in the d. long reach about (?) Miles.

November 9, 1778: The prisoners began their march from the Boston area on November 9, and the HesseCassel Jaeger Corps Journal notes the Convention prisoners crossing the North River on November 29. “Upon receipt of news that the prisoners from Burgoyne’s army were to be transported from New England to Virginia, and would cross the North River at King’s Ferry, the British Grenadiers, Light Infantry, and the Mirbach Regiment marched to Tarrytown, but arrived too late; the men being transferred having crossed the North River ten hours previously. The reason these troops are being sent to Virginia is supposedly because the New Englanders reibsed to continue giving them provisions.”[3]

November 9, 1778

9th The army marched by the midle of the day up the Creek

About Two miles and crossed at a Good ford11[4] Passed

over dry Ridges & arrived at Camp N° 6 12[5] called brushy camp

Distant from Camp Beaver Six miles and One Chain. 13 [6]this Camp

is Situate on Abranch of little Beaver that Runs S E and falls into

the Other a little below the ford, which Affords a large Bottom of

Good land but somewhat Cold and Swampy. Arising hill on front

and Rear[7]



November 9, 1778

Head Quarters Novr 9th 1778 Camp N° 6th

Field Officers Col° Gibson 37 [8]and Col° Stinson [Stephenson]

The Cruel Masacree of Lieut Parks 38[9] And A Soldier of the 13th

Virginia Rege* By their Going Out of the Line Ahunting Yesterday

Contrary to Orders the Reports made to the General from every

Quarter Convinses that the Enemy are Continualy watching us

And Doging us On all sides for Straglers who may Imprudently

Expose themselves which must sue [shew] Every Officer the Necessity

of strife] t Desepling [discipline] And Obedience to Orders.

And that each take the Greatest Care hereafter that none Of their

men under his Command shall Strole Or Go out of their lines to

prevent mistakes in Orders that has so Often been Given Verbaly

it is Repeted in this manner that if Aparty of the Enemy Presumes

to Insult us. Or that A single Shot is fired in the front or rear

of Our Army During Our march the Advance or rear Guards Shall

Instantly rush upon them Or where such Shot was heard. And the

light Infantry from the flanks with the same Seelarity [celerity] Are

to Endeavour to saround them & in like Caus[e] upon the flanks

the light Infantry Covering them Are to Act in the same manner

Observing Always to send One party Directly forward as well as

to flank the Army without Intrupting the march of the Army. But

if the Enemy shall appear to be in force And the Attack more Serious

The whole Army Are Imedeatly to halt. And put themselves in

Order of Battle as Quick as possible which is Only for the front

and Rear Divisions To form themselves in One Rank and Fyre

as in the Order of Encampment Given the Seventh Instant, the

Two flanks to face Outwards and march in that manner untill the

Angles Are form.d And they Compleat the Square, the light Infantry

pleasing themselves in One Rank and Fire Pointing Directly from

each of the Angles thus

Thus

Ready to flank the Enemy where ever

they Attack while the Cattle &pack horse

Drivers Are as Quick as possible to

Colect the Stock together in as small a

Compass As possible as Quick As they

Can in the Center, in this position the

whole are to remain And Wait the Order

that may Be Given them As Circumstance Requires to the officer

Commanding Any of the Two Division[s] Each line is divided into.

Except the side that is Attackted. who Are to rush upon the Enemy

without Any Delay And the light Infantry upon its flanks to Saround

them All these and other Maneuvers A Gainst Indians are to be

perform.d with the Out most Dispatch. And Always Runing to be

Able to Cope w* so Active An Enemy and So Dexterous At surprise

in all there salis [sallies]—The General Requests And Expects

Of every Officer that they willConsider And Diges[t] this

Order well As Ignorance Cannot be Admited as A plea for the

Neglect of it an[d] that they Also Charge there men never to fire

at Random nor Untill they See AGood Object A fa[u]lt too Common

And they Are Very Apt to be Guilty of therefore the more

Necessary to be Inculcated frequently And Guarded A Gainst As

it is layable to Numberless inconvenniences.[10]


November 9th, 1780

From the start of this month on, the troops in camp began to enter winter quarters. Today the Hessian Grenadiers Brigade moved into winter quarters, the Linsing and Lengercke Grenadier Battalions at Jamaica and the Loewenstein and Graf Battalions at New Flushing. The officers entered houses, the non-commissioned officers and privates, however, entered huts built at both places, after 8 October a corps of troops at this polace, under the command of General Leslie, embarked. Of the Hessians, only a detachment of Jaegers and the Bose Regiment were included. In addition to these, there were two battalions of English Guards, the 82nd Regiment, and Colonel Fanning’s Corps, and the rest of the 17th regiment, plus the light infantry companies of the provincial corps, under the command of Colonel [John] Watson. The corps landed at Portsmouth in Virginia, and later left that post and went to Charleston… [11]

November 9, 1780: Battle of Fishdam Ford.[12]



1801 - November 9 - Benjamin Harrison, formerly of Harrison County, Ky., now an inhabitant of the Spanish Province of Louisiana, conveyed to James Mullen and Patrick Griffith of Harrison County, Ky., 250 acres in Harrison County, part of tract granted to Thomas Logwood by the State of Virginia and deeded to Harrison in August 1795 by Thomas Veatch and _____Foster. Corner to Scott, etc. Consideration £50. Acknowledged Nov. 9, 1801 in Harrison County by Benjamin Harrison. [13]

Union: November 9th, 1802-The Company of Miss Molly Meason is requested at a Dance on Thrusday evening the 15, inst. At the House of Col. Thomas Collins in Union-Town.

A time yellowed card, printed on the ace of hearts, being an invitation to a young lady of Fayette County to attend a merry-making at Collins’ The Miss Molly Meason mentioned in the card became the wife of Daniel Rogers, of New Haven, Fayette Co. She was a daughter of Col. Isaac Meason, The first proprietor of Mount Braddock, who built the mansikon to be later occupied by William Beeson. She was a sister of Gen. Thomas Meason, the eminent lawyer of Uniontown, She was also the sister in law of Mrs. May Meason, who died in Uniontown.[14]

Saturday, January 28, 2006 (4)[15]

Mt. Braddock, built by Isaac Meason, 1802.


1731-1802

100_5887[16]

John Crawford to George Crawford Know all men by these presents

Recorded November 28, 1809. I John Crawford for myself my

Joseph Darlington heirs assigns for several good

Recorder for Adams County. causes and monies paid to me and other valuable considerations rendered by George Crawford my son I do deliver up in the presence

of these witnesses the following articles viz: one bay mare branded S on the near shoulder two three year old heifers fifteen head of hogs and one bed and bedstead and furniture with other household property and a corner cubboard to the said George Crawford as well as all the right title claim and demand in and to any maintainance coming by a will of my son Moses Crawford deceased which he made in his lifetime and I further relinquish all claim in and to the same and more as apecial for the value of one Dollar in hand paid to me at the signing and delivering of this instrument of writing. Nevertheless quitting all claim or demand in and to the above described property from me and my heirs and assigns to the only proper use and behoof of the said George Given under my hand and seal this 9th day of March 1809~(March 9)

John Crawford (SEAL)



Signed in the presence of us,

Win. Faultner her

Sally Rowland Mary X Hambelton

Mark

State of Ohio, Adams County.

This day personally appeared John Crawford before me James Moore, a Justice of the Peace for said County and acknowledged the within signing and sealing to be his act and deed for the purpose therein mentioned. Given under my hand and seal this 9th day of November (November 9)1809.

James Moore J. P. (SEAL)[17]

November 9, 1831: According to an online account: Philip Hupp married Mary Buzzard in 1782 in Virginia. They also lived in West Virginia and moved to Ohio around 1800. They had eight children. After living in Bethel Township, Monroe County, Philip died in Duck Creek Valley, near Middleburg, Noble County, on November 9, 1831. Mary died May 20, 1852. They are both buried in the Hesson Cemetery, on the north side of Route 564 just east of Middleburg.[18]

November 9-10, 1845: [18] Peel ordered the secret purchase of £100,000 worth of Indian corn and meal from America for distribution in Ireland.[19][20] [19]

November 9, 1850

In an attempt to ascertain the actual “whereabouts” of Conrad Goodlove after he was released from the War of 1812 “on or about the November 25, A.D. 1812, as will appear from the muster roles of said company,” I have very carefully screened the documents and letters pertaining to the application for Bounty Land Warrants.

In a letter dated November 9, 1850, (Ref#23) he made his first application in response to the Act of Congress “granting bounty land to certain officers and soldiers who have been engaged in the military service of the United States and passed September 28, A.D. 1850.”

November 9th, 1850

Monday, October 03, 2005 (5)

It appears to me that he received a warrant #24784 for 40 acres dated December 4, 1850. [20]





1851: Gottlober came back to Mogilev-Podolski in 1851 when he was offered a teaching position.[21] His poems were published in the collections including Ha-Nitsanim (1851).



100_5749[22]

100_5750[23]



Wed. November 9, 1864

Started to Winchester[24] a hard days march

Got into camp[25] after night cold & windy

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[26]



November 9, 1882: In 1880, his father built him a theatre in Richburg, New York, and Baum set about writing plays and gathering a company to act in them. The Maid of Arran, a melodrama with songs based on William Black's novel A Princess of Thule, proved a modest success. Baum not only wrote the play but composed songs for it (making it a prototypical musical, as its songs relate to the narrative), and acted in the leading role. His aunt, Katharine Gray, played his character's aunt. She was the founder of Syracuse Oratory School, and Baum advertised his services in her catalog to teach theatre, including stage business, playwriting, directing, and translating (French, German, and Italian), revision, and operettas, though he was not employed to do so. On November 9, 1882, Baum married Maud Gage, a daughter of Matilda Joslyn Gage, a famous women's suffrage and radical[citation needed] feminist activist. While Baum was touring with The Maid of Arran, the theatre in Richburg caught fire during a production of Baum's ironically-titled parlor drama, Matches, destroying not only the theatre, but the only known copies of many of Baum's scripts, including Matches, as well as costumes.[citation needed][27]

November 9, 1885: The Chicago City Council established the Carter H. Harrison and Lambert Tree awards on November 9, 1885 upon receipt of a $700 donation from Mayor Carter Henry Harrison and Judge Lambert Tree, specifically to honor annually the gallant and meritorious service of one member from each of the Police and Fire Departments. These medals are civilian awards given annually to an individual member of the Police and Fire Departments who demonstrate outstanding bravery in the line of duty. Currently, the medal presentations are rotated from year to year, so neither award is perceived as better than the other. The awards are given out during Fire Prevention Week in October each year for the preceding twelve months. In 1999, the Fire Department designee received the Lambert Tree Award, thus in October, 2000, the department recipient will receive the Carter H. Harrison Award. The Lambert Tree and Carter H. Harrison Awards have been presented annually (with the exception of the years 1890 to 1896) since March 4, 1887. (bio by K. Kruse) . [28]



November 9, 1884: 57. James D. JONES. Born on February 14, 1808. James D. died on November 9, 1884; he was 76.



James D. married Manervia DYSON. Born on May 22, 1812. Manervia died on August 3, 1889; she was 77.



They had the following children:

i. Louz Ann.

64 ii. John P. (~1845-)[29]





November 9, 1905

(Jordan’s Grove) Mrs. Grey and children of Anamosa, are visiting at the home of Mrs. Grey’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Goodlove.[30]



November 9, 1909

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Goodlove, Thomas Wilkenson and wife, and wife, and Dick Bowdish and wife attended the funeral of Mrs. Hunter near Prairie Chapel, last Sunday afternoon.[31]



1910

On the 1910 United Stats Federal Census, Earl L. Goodlove was listed as being 31, born in Iowa, and head of the household. His father and mother were both listed as being born in Ohio. His wife was Fanny V. His home in 1910 was Maine, Linn county, Iowa. His marital staus was married, Race was white, Gender was male. Household Members were Earl L. Goolove age 31, Fannie V. Goodlove, age 29, Helen C. Goodlove age 7, and Mildred L. Goodlove, age 6.[32]





























1910 CE

http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/PageMill_Images/image318.gif[33]

1910: In Manchuria, 60,000 people die due to pneumonic Plague over the course of a year.[34]

























1910



[35]

[36]



1910: Jerusalem population during late Ottoman rule with Jewish immigration, 75,000.[37]



1910

Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of ..., Volume 100

By Freemasons. Grand Lodge of the District of Columbia , La Fayette Lodge #19. Member: Charles W. Goodlove.[38]



November 9, 1911: President William Howard Taft dedicated the completed building on November 9, 1911. The memorial building and farm, managed by the National Park Service, became a national park in 1916. You can read the fascinating story of the park's history in Merrill Peterson's book, Lincoln in American Memory.

A few months before Lincoln was born his parents and sister moved from nearby Elizabethtown to the property, known as Sinking Spring Farm. His father paid $200 for 348 acres of stony ground on the south fork of Nolin Creek. The farm's name came from a spring on the property which emerged from a deep cave, still visible today. However, Lincoln did not remember living on the farm because his family moved down the road to Knob Creek Farm when he was only two years old.

If you visit the site, you will find information and exhibits in the reception center near the memorial building. Among the artifacts is the Lincoln family Bible with the signature of his father and mark of his mother. Many visitors stay to see a brief orientation film about Lincoln's early life in Kentucky.

Hours: This historic site is free of charge and open daily between 8 a.m. and 6:45 p.m. Memorial Day through Labor Day and 8 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Labor Day through Memorial Day. For more information call 270/358-3137 or write: Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Site, 2995 Lincoln Farm Road, Hodgenville, Kentucky 42748-9707[39]

November 9, 1918

Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany abdicates his throne.[40]



• November 9, 1923

• Hitlers rise to power began on November 9, 1923 with an attempted overthrow of the Bavarian government in Munich in what has come to be known as the Beer-Hall Putsch. It was a failed coup, and 16 of Hitler’s men were killed. Those who died became martyrs. The became known as the sixteen immortals. [41]

• Hitler goes to Jail in a failed coup de tait. Hitler is joined in Jail by Rudolph Hess.

• Hitler begins Mein Kompf, a blueprint for the third reich.[42]



• Although Hitler was ultimately convicted of treason, the trial provided him with a national political platform.

From there Hitler declared Germany had been betrayed by the Jews and that he and the German Party could restore Germany’s prestige.[43] Hitler emerged a patriot. A leader of a Holy cause.[44]



1924

The National Origins Quota of 1924 and Immigration Act of 1924 largely halted immigration to the U.S. from Eastern Europe and Russia; many later saw these governmental policies as having anti-Semitic undertones, as a great many of these immigrants coming from Russia and Eastern Europe were Jews.[45]



1924: There had been five to six million Klan members in 1924. The peak activity of the Ku Klux Klan in Iowa was in 1924, when many towns and cities experienced cross-burnings, Klan parades and political activism. The Klan influenced many elections across the country, including an Iowa race for the United States Senate. The Klan helped the campaigns of many school board members, succeeding in electing representatives of their point of view, but in 1926 many of them were voted out.

There were many other ways that the Klan upset people. One was to stride silently in uniform into a church, and deposit money at the altar. One black congregation in Centerville, a coal-mining town in southeastern Iowa, received $100 this way. Many of the church’s members thought that the Klan was their friend after that. [46]



In 1924 the order enjoyed even greater success, electing governors in Colorado and Maine, winning almost complete control of the state of Indiana, and joining with its sympathizers to elect governors in Ohio and Louisiana and a United States Senator in Oklahoma. Equally important, the Klan for the first time threw its weight into national politics.[47]



In 1924 the Klan shared credit for blocking Governor Al Smith’s bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Of all the figures in public life in the twenties, none took as much abuse at the hands of the Klan as Governor Smith of the state of New York. Smith, the Son of Irish immigrants, represented everything the KIlan, and perhaps most rural minded Protestant Americans, detested .[48]

Top of Form


Bottom of Form



November 9, 1932: James Milton Nix, Sr. (b. November 10, 1847 in GA / d. November 9, 1932).[49] James Milton “Shug” Nix, Sr.13 [John A. Nix12, Grace Louisa Francis Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. November 10, 1847 in GA / d. November 9, 1932 of Food poisoning) married Rena Cummings (b. May 27, 1848 in AL / d. December 14, 1922 in Wedowee, Randolph Co. AL), the daughter of John Cummings and Eliza unk. He married Willie Bozeman Manley (b. unk) in 1925. [50]



November 9-10, 1938

Kristallnacht (Night of the Broken Glass). Following the assassination of Ernst vom Rath, a secretary at the German legation in Paris, by a Jewish youth, Herschel Grynszpan, in one night most German Synagogues and hundreds of Jewish-owned German and Austrian businesses are destroyed. Almost 100 Jews are killed, and 10,000 to 30,000 are sent to concentration camps.[51]

The Jews in Bavaria were among the first victims of the Nazi movement, which spread from Munich and Nuremberg. Virulent and widespread anti-Semitic agitation caused the depopulation of scores of the village communities so characteristic of Bavaria, especially after the Kristallnacht in 1938, which was partivularly destructive in Bavaria, a hotbed of Nazism and home of many Nazis. The first concentration camp was established at Dachau in Bavaria and many Jews from Germany and other countries in Europe perished there.[52]



November 9, 1939: Lodz is annexed to the German Reich.[53]



November 9, 1941

The German army takes Tikhvin in the Soviet Union, cutting the rail route into the city.[54]



November 9, 1942:


5

278

Keller, Helen (T.L.S.), 1880-1968 November 9, 1942; December 23, 1942


[55]

November 9, 1942: German and Italian forces occupy Tunisia.[56]



November 9, 1943: The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency (UNRRA) is founded.[57]



November 9 , 1945: James Roosevelt III (born November 9, 1945).[58]

November 9, 1962: Virginia State Senator john j. Wicker sent a telegram to President John F. Kennedy taking issue with President Kennedy’s 1962 Presidential Thanksgiving Proclamation, where full credit for Thanksgiving was given to the pilgrims in Massachusetts. Senator Wicker claimed he had already proven to the Governor of Massachusetts the validity of Virginia’s claim by simply displaying the records to him.

In response, Senator Wicker received an apologetic reply from famed Historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. writing on behalf of the president. Mr. Schlesinger attributed the “error to unconquerable New England bias on the part of the White House staff.

The White House amended its ways. President Kennedy’s next Thanksgiving Proclamation, on November 5, 1963, stated that “Over three centuries ago, our forefathers in Virginia and Massachusetts, far from home, in a lonely wilderness set aside a time of Thanksgiving. They gave thanks for their safety, the health of their children, the fertility of their fields, for the love that bound them together and for the faith which united them with their God”. Finally, Virginia was given its rightful recognition and place in history! To put this in historical perspective, Kennedy was assassinated, in Dallas, just 18 days later.

In addition, further historical proof is in the November 24, 1969 Congressional Record (Volume 115, Number 194, which tells the story of the Virginia First Thanksgiving. The Congressional Record gives a glowing review of the Virginia Thanksgiving Festival itself. In it, Senator Harry F. Byrd Jr. recognizes the officers of the festival and asks to have a Thanksgiving Prayer read into the Record. There being no objection, this was done.

It is interesting to note that on October 3, 1863 President Abraham Lincoln issued the first Thanksgiving Proclamation. Just five days prior he had received a letter from Sarah Josepha Hale, a 74 year old magazine editor, who had been advocationg a national thanksgiving date for 15 years as editor of Godey’s Lady’s Book. Lincoln listened, where other presidents ignored her. It was at that point, that the last Thursday of November was set as a national “day of Thanksgiving and praise”. This was during the height of the Civil War. It was a very moving and inspirational proclamation and asked to “implore the Interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of a nation and restore it as soon as may be consistent with the Divine purposes”..….According to ”The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln” edited by Roy Basler, a year later the proclamation manuscript, handwritten by William Seward, then Secretary of State, was sold and its proceeds were used to benefit Union troops. It is interesting that a document that was meant to bring reconciliation to a nation was ultimately used to fund the Civil War.

In an article written in October 1986 by Nancy G. Houser, titled “Whose Thanksgiving Is It?”, she refers to other observances of thanks being given, both before and after what we consider to be the “official” first Thanksgiving. All of those observances were spontaneous and were not repeated on a regular basis, as was the Berkeley ritual.

The annual Berkeley religious ceremony was performed as a result of specific instructions given by the London Company to do so, it was almost two years before the Massachusetts celebration which was a one time event based upon the recommendation of Massachusetts Governor Bradford and was not held because of any official proclamation from England. They held several Thanksgiving’s after that, but not on a regular basis. Massachusetts didn’t even publish a proclamation ordaining such a thanksgiving observance until 1633, 12 years after their first celebration. The Massachusetts event was more social than religious, whereas the Berkeley event was strictly religious.[59]

November 9, 1963 A man walks into a car dealership in Dallas, identifies himself as

Lee Oswald, says he is soon expecting a lot of money and wants a new car. He takes a

demonstration ride, driving at high speeds.

Also on this day, a man who looks like Oswald goes to a rifle range and makes himself

very conspicuous, firing at other people’s targets, firing rapidly, and making a lot of noise. The

real Oswald is at work this day.

A letter is sent to the Russian embassy in Washington on this date from Oswald: “I was

unable to remain in Mexico indefinitely [sic] because of my Mexican [sic] visa restrictions which was [sic]

for 15 days only. I could not take a chance on requesting a new visa unless I used my real name

[emphasis added], so I returned to the United States.” Since Oswald’s passport and visa forms -- as

well as this embassy letter -- were in the name of Lee Harvey Oswald, researchers are left to

wonder about the meaning of having to use “my real name.” LHO is in possession of a fake

selective service card bearing the name “Alek J. Hidell.” There is no record of him ever using it.

[FBI agent James Hosty later feared this letter would become the foundation of an international conspiracy

to murder JFK.]

Ruth Paine will later testify to the Warren Commission that Lee Harvey Oswald spends

this entire weekend (Nov. 9, 10, 11) at her home in Irving, Texas. Mrs. Paine reportedly takes

LHO to the Texas Drivers’ License Examining Station today in order for him to apply for his

driver’s license. The station is closed.

William Augustus Somersett, an informer for the FBI and the Miami Police tape-records,

in his own apartment, a threat against JFK made by his boyhood friend, Joseph Milteer -- now a

ranking member of several hate groups, including the National States Rights Party, the Ku Klux

Klan, the American constitution Party and the White Citizens’ Council of Atlanta. Sommersett

informs his police contact about the conversation.

Somerset: Well, how in the hell do you figure would be the best way to get him [JFK]?

Milteer: From an office building with a high-powered rifle. He knows he’s a marked man.

Somerset: They are really going to try to kill him?

Milteer: Oh, yeah, it is in the working ...They will pick somebody up within hours afterwards....Just

to throw the public off.

Press reports: “Senate investigators plan to call Billie Sol Estes next week for a longawaited

inquiry.” AOT

On this weekend, November 9 - 10, David Ferrie is at Churchill Farms in New Orleans with

Carlos Marcello. [60]



November 9, 1978: In Iran, Shia Muslim religious leaders rejected the military government’s invitation to collaborate and urged the faithful to continue struggling against tyranny and injustice. The prime minister announced a commission had been set up to investigate the financial affairs of the Shah’s family.[61]



November 9, 2011

Captured: 70th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor

68

A World War II Japanese "suicide torpedo" is exhibited at the Pearl Harbor historical site and memorial in Honolulu, Hawaii, on November 9, 2011[62]



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


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




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


[3] Enemy Views, Bruce Burgoyne pgs 254-255


[4] 11 The ford of the West Fork of Little Beaver was about the present bridge on

Route 518, so that it was nearly two miles from the camp site.


[5] 12 Camp No. 6 was on nearly the same ground as Bouquet's No. 9. It lay oa

rising ground in the fork of a stream variously called Big Creek or West

Fork of Willard Run, flowing S.E. Cf. U. S. Topographical Map, Salineville

Quadrant; Bouquet's Orderly Book, WPEM, XLII,195, note 40.


[6] 13 This is concrete evidence that Mclntosh's route was surveyed and measured by

the army engineers.


[7] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal


[8] 37 John Gibson was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, May 23, 1740, the son of

George Gibson, Sr., a well known and respected tavern owner, and brother

286 EDWARD G. WILLIAMS SEPTEMBER

of Colonel George Gibson, also of the Virginia Line. His mother was the

highly educated daughter of a French count (Huguenot). Her sons and

grandsons received much of their classical education from her, especially in

French and Spanish. The two sons later had opportunity to use their linguistic

knowledge. T. P. Roberts, Memoir of John Bannister Gibson, Pittsburgh

(1890), 12-13. About 1770, the Gibsons moved to Silver Spring in the

Cumberland Valley, where the father established a mill.

At the age of 18, John's first military experience was with the army of

General Forbes to the Forks of the Ohio, and he remained to enter the Indian

trade. When Pontiac's Indians struck, John, with two men in his employ,

were captured at the mouth of the Beaver. The two men were tortured and

burned; but Gibson was adopted by a squaw to replace a son who had been

killed, and thus was saved. His linguistic ability aided him in quickly mastering

the Indians' language and learning their customs.

Itis mentioned by C. W. Butterfield's Washington-Irvine Correspondence,

vii-xi, that John Gibson was one of those captives released by Bouquet at the

end of 1764. A search of the lists of names in the Gage Papers in the

William L. Clements Library, however, did not yield the name of Gibson.

The author personally has searched the lists inclosed with covering letters in

the Gage Papers. These lists were published by Dr. William S. Ewing in

WPHM, XXXIX,187-203, but John Gibson's name was not included. Dr.

Ewing, however, has since found an additional list of 15 names printed in

New York Mercury, for Monday, January 21, 1765, no. 691; and John Gibson's

name there appears. See Williams, "The Orderly Book of Henry Bouquet,

1764," WPHM, XLII,298 n 63.

For the next few years Gibson continued in the trading business and

built a house opposite Logstown, where he acquired land in the "Indian cornfields."

It was here that the Rev. David McClure visited him and reported

his having a "temporary" Indian wife. Diary of Rev. David McClure, F. B.

Dexter, ed., New York (1899), 15ff; Hanna, Wilderness Trail, I, 380. It is

here stated that this Indian woman was the sister of Chief Logan's wife and

that both were killedby the whites, thus precipitating the outbreak known as

Dunmore's War in 1774. Gibson acted an important role in negotiating peace.

It was he who received the celebrated oration of Logan and so eloquently

translated it, so that it has remained a classic of the English language.

Gibson participated in the treaty at Fort Pitt and undertook a tour of

the Western tribes in the interest of peace, after which he went into the army,

as Lieutenant Colonel of the 6th Virginia Regiment, November 12, 1776.

After being engaged at Trenton, Princeton, Brandywine and Germantown,

and spending the winter at Valley Forge, he was ordered to Fort Pitt to take

command of the 13th Virginia. He marched to the Tuscarawas with Mclntosh

and remained in command of the "Forlorn hope" of 150 men (plus officers)

to garrison Fort Laurens during the terrible winter. Kellogg, Frontier

Advance, 186, 197, 409. He served inBroadhead's campaigns and was left in

command at Fort Pitt, when that officer was recalled. Biographers have

generally overlooked the fact that Col. Gibson was in Virginia with Lafayette

in 1781 for a short while. WPHM, III,31.

After the war Gibson was made a Judge of Common Pleas in Pittsburgh,

was a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1790, and was appointed

Major General of Militia of Pennsylvania. He was on the side of law and

order during the Whisky Insurrection. In 1800, President Jefferson appointed

him Secretary of the Territory of Indiana, which office he held until

Indiana became a State, in 1816. He died at the home of his son-in-law,

George Wallace, at Braddock's Field (now North Braddock, Pa.), and was

buried in Pittsburgh. Biographical sketches may be found in C. W. Butterfield,

Washington-Irvine Correspondence, Madison, Wis. (1882), 349; C. W.

Butterfield, Washington-Crawford Letters, Cincinnati (1877), 69; T. P. Roberts,

Memoir of John Bannister Gibson, Pittsburgh (1890), 219.


[9] 38 Lieutenant James Parks, whose identity and death are described in "Robert

McCrcady's Journal" and note 7, WPHM, XLIII,12.


[10] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal


[11] Enemy Views, by Bruce E. Burgoyne (The Platte Grenadeir Battalion Journal)


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


[13] (Harrison County, Ky. Deed Bk. 1, p. 658) ) BENJAMIN HARRISON 1750 – 1808 A History of His Life And of Some of the Events In American History in Which He was Involved By Jeremy F. Elliot 1978 http://www.shawhan.com/benharrison.html


[14] Ibid.


[15] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, Vol. III Pg. 129


[16] LBJ Presidential Library, Austin TX. February 11, 2012


[17] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, p, 252.


[18] http://www.daily-jeff.com/local%20news/2014/01/06/continental-marine-from-american-revolution-buried-near-middleburg-noble-county-ohio


[19] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_the_Great_Famine


[20] (Ref#24).Conrad and Caty, Gary Goodlove, 2003














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


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


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




[24] Left Martinsburg on the morning of November 9. (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.)


[25] Arrived at Camp Russell, Virginia, where the Army of the Shenandoah was encamped on the evening of December (November) 10. (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.)


[26] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove.


[27] wikipedia


[28] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8704


[29] harrisonj


[30] Winton Goodlove papers.


[31] Winton Goodlove Papers


[32] Year:1910; Census Place: Maine, Linn, Iowa; Roll: T624_410; Page: 64; Enumeration District: 90; Image: 1308


[33] http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/ice_ages.html


[34] http://www.twoop.com/medicine/archives/2005/10/bubonic_plague.html




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


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


[37] Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr. page 200.


[38] http://books.google.com/books?id=3SAwAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA222&lpg=PA222&dq=charles+s.+Goodlove&source=bl&ots=TEAXCGAVPm&sig=a9AtoZ4dRTyA8-qmbqGfOzVXtZ4&hl=en&sa=X&ei=a8YyU8aQMqmtsQS6sIHwAw&ved=0CHsQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=charles%20s.%20Goodlove&f=false


[39] http://showcase.netins.net/web/creative/lincoln/sites/birth.htm


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


• [41] Nazi’s: The Occult Conspiracy, Military Channel, 1998.

• Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor




[42] Hitler and the Occult, NTGEO 11/5/2007


[43] Hitler and the Occult, HISTI, 10/24/2000


[44] Hitler and the Occult, HISTI, 10/24/2000


[45]www.wikipedia.org


[46] http://www.iptv.org/iowapathways/mypath.cfm?ounid=ob_000303


[47] The Ku Klux Klan in the Southwest by Charles C,. Alexander, 1966, page 159-160.


[48] The Ku Klux Klan in the Southwest by Charles C,. Alexander, 1966, page 235-236.


[49] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.


[50] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[51] Kristallnacht and the World’s Response. [2] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1761.


[52] Encyclopedia Judaica, Volume 4, page 346


[53] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1762.


[54]On This Day in America by John Wagman.-


[55]


Series 2: Incoming Correspondence, 1867-1953


The majority of this series is personal correspondence sent to Harrison, although there are also a significant number of items that were sent to Harrison in his official capacity as Mayor of Chicago or Collector of Internal Revenue. Several letters have handwritten annotations by Harrison explaining the letter's context or giving his thoughts on the sender or the letter's subject.


Much of Harrison's official incoming correspondence involves patronage job appointments. The rest of Harrison's incoming correspondence covers a wide range of topics, including: (a) his three books (Stormy Years, Growing Up With Chicago, and With the American Red Cross in France, 1918-1919); (b) the political activities of the Democratic Party at both the local and national level, including four letters from Tammany Hall boss Richard Croker; (c) early Chicago history; (d) hunting and fishing trips; (e) efforts to locate the whereabouts of various individuals with whom Harrison was acquainted in the past; and (f) responses from well-known people of Harrison's day from whom he requested autographs as a young man.


Among the correspondence in this series are two interesting letters from then Senator Harry Truman in 1936 in which Truman tells Harrison what he thinks of the French and expresses his displeasure at France's failure to repay the United States for debts incurred during World War I in connection with the purchase of war supplies. There is also a letter from Harrison's brother, William Preston Harrison, giving his eyewitness account of the assassination of Harrison's father in 1893, and a letter from Lawton Parker inviting Harrison to attend a meeting to discuss the formation the Arts Club of Chicago. Finally, this series includes letters relating to Harrison's service with the American Red Cross in France at the end of World War I, and his gifts to the Art Institute of Chicago.


There is a fair amount of correspondence (i.e., over five letters) from the following individuals or entities: American Red Cross; Art Institute of Chicago; Bobbs-Merrill Company; William Jennings Bryan; Charles Collins; Charles G. Dawes; Charles S. Deneen; Edward F. Dunne; E. K. Eckert; James Farley; Alexander Hugh Ferguson; Charles Fitzmorris; Sophonisba Preston Harrison; William Preston Harrison; Henry Horner; Cordell Hull; Harold L. Ickes; James Hamilton Lewis; Frank O. Lowden; Edgar Lee Masters; William Gibbs McAdoo; John T. McCutcheon; F. Millet; Henry Morgenthau Jr.; Battling Nelson; Lawton Parker; Henry T. Rainey; Frederick Rex; Franklin Delano Roosevelt; Julius Rosenwald; A. J. Sabath; Adlai E. Stevenson; William Hale Thompson; Henry Emerson Tuttle; and Walter Ufer.


Letters to Harrison specifically about his family's genealogy and history are arranged separately in Series 11 (Harrison Family History). Letters to Harrison about the Chicago Commission for the Encouragement of Local Art are arranged separately in Series 12 (Chicago Commission for the Encouragement of Local Art).


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





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


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


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


[59] H Graham Woodlief, www.berkeleyplantiation.com


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


[61] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 503


[62] (EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images) #

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