Friday, November 14, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, November 14, 2014

11,945 names…11,945 stories…11,945 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, November 14, 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 14

Eli Crawford

Narcissa Geren Goodlove

Louise Godlove

Dennis L. Kruse

Lillie O. Mosolf Lewis

Gae M. Perius French

Mary Ross

Shirley S. Snell Hazelbaker

Sharon Stonack Kruse

Caroline Truax

Emily K. Vance



November 14, 1568: M. de la Mothe Fénélon succeeds M. Bochetel de la Forest in the French embassy at London. [1]



November 14, 1586: Queen Elizabeth applied to her parliament to know whether means could not be devised of preserving her life in safety, without sacrificing that of Mary. The two houses in full assembly declared it w^as impossible."^[2] [3]



November 14, 1569: Beginning of the insurrection of the Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland.^[4] They had occupied Durham, and were to march immediately to Tutbury, to deliver the Clueen of Scotland ; but, on the first report of these disturbances, she had been removed to Coventry, and separated from a portion of her household.



The ministers of Elizabeth immediately sent troops to the different places threatened by the rebels, and succeeded in preventing the rising of a great part of the Catholics. At the same time, wishing to discourage them completely, they solicited the queen to put Mary to death. Elizabeth did not dare to give an order for it ; but she made overtures to Murray to deliver her to him, on condition that he would come and conduct her to Hull, thence to take her by sea to Scotland.



Ridolfi having had time, before his arrest, to deposit his private papers with the Spanish ambassador, they could not bring sufficient proofs against him ; and as, moreover, he enjoyed at London, where he

had resided for many years^ a great reputation, he was set at liberty on the 24th November.



The Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland, after being disappointed in their attempt to set Mary at liberty, had endeavoured to take the city of York ; but the Earl of Sussex having already come to the

defence of this important place, they were compelled to abandon this attempt also. They succeeded only in taking Barnard castle, and the small port of Hartlepool. The two earls attached great importance

to this latter, wishing by means of it to open communications with Flanders, whence they looked for support.



But the Duke of Alva, in spite of all the assurances which he had given them by Don Gueraldo d'Espès,"^[5] made no demonstration in their favour, and even refused to send them a supply of money.



The insurgents, finding their expectations so deceived, and learning that Admiral Clinton and the Earl of Warwick were advancing, with a force of twelve thousand men, began to lose courage, and withdrew to Hexham. [6]



November 14, 1606: During an exploratory voyage to Cape Cod one of the settlers was wounded and after being brought back to Port Royal died on November 14, 1606. “At that time the carpenters of France had their own mystery or trade guilds, worked on lines somewhat akin to operative Masonry and using the square and compasses as their emblem. It would seem that the stone marked the grave of a member of a French trade or craft guild, who die in 1606, and to this extent the stone may be regarded as the earliest known trace of Freemasonry in the New World.”[7]



1607

The Five Nations of New York met in a great council at a centrally located village called Onondaga and after considerable discussion, formally established themselves into a highly democratic and tightly knit confederation in which the good of one was the good of all. Now, an attack against any band of the Five Nations would be taken as an act of war aginst the entire confederation. They named their strong new alliance the Mengwe, or Iroquois League.[8] It did make them all the more powerful in respect to neighboring (and even distant) tribes, butt the Shawnees were neither awed nor overcome by their formally confederated foes. They continued to emerge victorious in virtually all encounters, including an intense war in the valley of the Susquehyanna River in 1607.[9]



1607 – Thomas Smythe Governor of North West Passage Co..[10]



November 14, 1650: Name: King William III and Queen Mary II
Full Name: William Henry Stuart
Born: November 14, 1650 at William: The Hague, Netherlands; Mary: St James Palace, London
Parents: William: William II of Orange and Mary Stuart; Mary: James II and Anne Hyde
Relation to Elizabeth II: 2nd cousin 8 times removed
House of: Orange[11]



November 14, 1744: John (Jack) Armstrong had two servants with him (James Smith and Woodward Arnold). Mushemeelin had two hunting friends with him (John and Jemmey). When finding Armstrong’s servants, Mushemeelin killed them and then hunted down Armstrong and killed him as well. Armstrong was shot in the back and a hatchet penetrated the back of his head. Mushemeelin, who lived in Shamokin on the Susquehanna River, was captured and after long pre-trial arguments was tried and convicted.

The murder investigation involved Sassoonan[12], Shickellamy, Conrad Weiser, Andre Montour, Thomas McKee, and—even Governor George Thomas of PA. Mushemeelin was hanged November 14, 1744. John and Jemmey were found innocent. The killing site on the Juniata River is known today as “Jack’s Narrows” (near Mt. Union in Huntingdon County).[13]



November 14, 1753: Christopher Gist accompanied George Washington to Fort Leboeuf. Gist‘s journal makes it clear that they initially went through the Georges Creek area of Maryland. This proves that they did not use the Turkey Foot Road that is the subject of this book. If the Ohio Company had indeed cut a 30-foot-wide road to the present-day location of Confluence, it would be curious that Gist did not take them that way on this journey.
[14]

This image is from Darlington’s 1893 book “Christopher Gist's journals: with historical, geographical and ethnological notes”. It shows Darlington’s copy of the bottom part of the map that accompanied George Washington’s 1754 “Journal to the Ohio” account of his 1753 trip.[15]

Gist‘s journal reads:

Wednesday, November 14, 1753.—Then Major George Washington came to my house at

Will‘s Creek, and delivered me a letter from the council in Virginia, requesting me to

attend him up to the commandant of the French fort on the Ohio River.[16]



November 14, 1756: According to Hanna‘s 1911 book ―The Wilderness Trail‖, a November 14th, 1756 letter from Colonel Adam Stephen to Colonel John Armstrong, dated at Fort Cumberland, stated ―By a woman who once belonged to John Fraser (his wife or mistress) and has now, after being prisoner with Shingas, &c,thirteen months, made her escape from Muskingum, we learn that Shingas and some Delawares live near the head of that river…‖



November 14, 1774: Major Crawford had destroyed two Mingo villages (within the limits of the present county of Franklin, Ohio), taken fourteen prisoners, rescued several white captives, and the "plunder" carried away had been sold for four hundred pounds sterling, besides what was returned to a Mohawk Indian who was present.29 His services at Wheeling where he built a fort30-and elsewhere, were highly commended. On November 14, 1774, Crawford in a letter to Washington said: "I yesterday returned from our late expedition against the Shawanese, and I think we may with propriety say we have had great success, as we made them sensible of their villainy and weakness, and I hope made peace with them on such a footing as will be lasting."[17]

"Stewart's Crossings, November 14, 1774.

"SIR, I yesterday returned from our late expedition against the Shawanese, and I think we may with propriety say we have had great success, as we made them sensible of their villainy and weakness, and I hope made peace with them on such a footing as will be lasting, if we can make them adhere to the terms of agreement, which are as follows: first, they have to give up all the prisoners taken ever by them in war with white people, also negroes, and all horses stolen or taken by them since the last war. And, further, no Indian for the future is to hunt on the east side of the Ohio, nor any white man on the west side; as that seems to have been the cause of some of the disturbance between our people and them. As a guarantee that they will perform their part of the agreement, they have given up four chiefmen, to be kept as hostages, who are to be relieved yearly, or as they may choose. The Shawanese have complied with the terms, but the Mingoes did not like the conditions, and had a mind to deceive us; but Lord Dunmore discovered their intentions, which were to slip off while we were settling matters with the Shawanese. The Mingoes intended to go to the Lakes, and take their prisoners with them, and their horses which they had stolen.

"Lord Dunmore ordered myself with two hundred and forty men to set out in the night. We were to march to a town about forty miles distant from our camp up the Scioto, where we understood the whole of the Mingoes were to rendezvous upon the following day, in order to pursue their journey. This intelligence came by John Montour, son of Cap. Montour, whom you formerly knew.

"Because of the number of Indians in our camp. we marched out of it under pretense of going to Hockhocking for more provisions. Few knew of our setting off, anyhow, and none knew where we were going to until the next day. Our march was performed with as much speed as possible. we arrived at a town called the Salt Lick Town the ensuing night, and at daybreak we got around it with one-half our force, and the remainder were sent to a small village half a mile distant. Unfortunately one or men was discovered by an Indian who lay out from the town some distance by a log which the man was creeping up to. This obliged the man to kill the Indian. This happened before daylight, which did us much damage, as the chief part of the Indians made their escape in the dark, but we got fourteen prisoners and killed six of the enemy, wounding several more. We got all their baggage and horses, ten of their guns, and two white prisoners. The plunder sold for four hundred pounds sterling, besides what was returned to a Mohawk Indian who was there. The whole of the Mingoes were ready to start, and were to have set out the morning we attacked them." This assault on the Mingo town by Maj. Crawford was the last act of hostility in the Dunmore war.

The "settlers' forts" and block-houses, of which there were many in the territory that is now Washington County, and which by affording shelter and protection to the inhabitants prevented an entire abandonment of this section of the country in Dunmore's war, were nearly all erected during the terror and panic of the spring and summer of the year 1774. These forts were erected by the associated efforts of settlers in particular neighborhoods upon the land of some one, whose name was thereupon given to the fort, as Vance's fort, Beelor's fort, etc. They consisted of a greater or less space of land, inclosed on all sides by high log parapets or stockades, with cabins adapted to the abode of families. The only external openings were a large puncheon gate and small port-holes among the logs, through which the rifle of the settler could be pointed against the assailants. Sometimes, as at Lindley's, and many of the other forts in the adjacent country west of the Monongahela, additional cabins were erected outside of the fort for temporary abode in time of danger, from which the sojourners could in case of attack retreat within the fort.

Doddridge, in his "notes on the Early Settlements and Indian Wars," says the "settler's fort" of those days was "not only a place of defense but the residence of a small number of families belonging to the same neighborhood. As the Indian mode of warfare was an indiscriminate slaughter of all ages and both sexes, it was as requisite to provide for the safety of the women and children as for that of the men. The fort consisted of cabins, block-houses, and stockades. A range of cabins commonly formed one side at least of the fort. Divisions or partitions of logs separated the cabins from each other. The walls on the outside were ten or twelve feet high, the slope of the roof being turned wholly inward. A very few of these cabins had puncheon floors, the greater part were earthen. The block-houses were built at the angles of the fort. They projected about two feet beyond the outer walls of the cabins and stockades. Their upper stories were about eighteen inches every way larger in dimension than the under one, leaving an opening at the commencement of the second story to prevent the enemy from making a lodgment under the walls. In some forts the angles of the fort wee furnished with bastions instead of block-houses. A large folding gate, made of thick slabs, nearest the spring, closed the fort. The stockades, bastions, cabins, and block-house walls were furnished with port-holes at proper heights and distances. The whole of the outside was made completely bulletproof. It may be truly said that necessity is the mother of invention, for the whole of this work was made without the aid of a single nail or spike of iron, and for the reason that such things were not to be had. In some places less exposed a single block-house, with a cabin or two, constituted the whole fort. Such places of refuge may appear very trifling to those who have been in the habit of seeing the formidable military garrisons of Europe and America, but they answered the purpose, as the Indians had no artillery. They seldom attacked, and scarcely ever took one of them."

Among the number of forts of this kind that were erected in what is now Washington:county County were Vance's fort, on Cross Creek[18]; Lindley's fort, in Morris township; Well's fort, at Wells' Mills, on Cross Creek; Wolfe's fort, in Buffalo township; Froman's fort, on Chartiers Creek; Beelor's fort, on Raccoon Creek, near the site of the village of Candor; Dillow's fort on Dillow's Run, now Hanover township; Cherry's fort, in Mount Pleasant township; Beeman's blockhouse or fort, on the north fork of Wheeling Creek; Doddridge's fort, in what is now Independence township; Rice's fort, on the Dutch Fork of Buffalo, in Donegal; Miller's fort or block-house, also on the waters of Dutch Fork, in the same township; and there were a number of others of the same class in other parts of the county. Nearly all these were built, as has been mentioned, during the panic of 1774; but they continued to be used as places of security for settlers' families through a long series of Indian wars and alarms, that were most frequent and serious from 1778 to 1783, but which continued to some extent until 1794, when a lasting peace with the savages in the Ohio Valley was gained by Wayne's victory on the Maumee.[19]

No. 27.—CRAWFORD TO WASHINGTON.

STEWART’S CROSSING, November 14, 1774.

SIR:—I yesterday returned from our late expedition against the Shawanese, and I think we may with propriety say we have had great success; as we have made them sen­sible of their villainy and weakness, and, I hope, made peace with them on such a footing as will be lasting, if we make them adhere to the terms of the agreement, which are as follows:

First, they have to give up all the prisoners taken ever by them in war with white people; also negroes and all the horses stolen or taken by them since the last war. And further, no Indian for the future is to hunt on the east side of the Ohio, nor any white man on the west side; as that seems to have been the cause of some of the disturbance between our people and them. As a guarantee that they will perform their part of the agreement, they have given up four chiefs men, to be kept as hostages, who are to be relieved yearly, or as they may choose.[20] The Shawanese have complied with the terms, but the Mingoes did not like the conditions, and had a, mind to deceive us [21]; but Lord Dunmore discovered their intentions, which were to slip off while we were settling matters with the Shawanese. The Mingoes intended to go to the Lakes and take their prisoners with them and their horses which they had stolen.[22]

Lord Dunmore ordered myself with two hundred and forty men to set out in the night. We were to march to a town about thirty miles distant from our camp, up the Scioto, where we understood the whole of the Mingoes were to rendezvous upon the following day, in order to pursue their journey. This intelligence came by John Mon­tour,[23] son of Captain Montonr, whom you formerly knew.

Because of the number of Indians in our camp we marched out of it under pretense of going to Hockhocking[24] for more provisions. Few knew of our setting off anyhow, and none knew where we were going to until the next day. Our march was performed with as much speed as possible. We arrived at a town called the Salt-Lick Town[25] the ensuing night, and at daybreak. We got around it with one-half our force, and the remainder were sent to a small village half a mile distant. Unfortunately, one of our men was discovered by an Indian who lay out from the town some distance by a log, which the man was creeping up to. This obliged the man to kill the Indian. This happened before daylight, which did us much damage, as the chief part of the Indians made their escape in the dark but we got fourteen prisoners, and killed six of the enemy, wounding several more. We got all their baggage and horses, ten of their guns, and 200 [two] white prisoners. The plunder sold for four hundred pounds sterling, besides what was returned to a Mohawk Indian that was there. The whole of the Mingoes were ready to start, and were to have set out the morning we attacked them. [26]

Lord Dunmore has eleven prisoners, and has returned the rest to the nation. The residue are to be returned upon compliance with his Lordship’s demand. For other particulars, I refer you to Major Connolly’s letter.

I have run your land at the Round Bottom[27] again and will send you a new draft of it by Valentine Crawford, who is to be at your house in a few days, at or before Christmas. I would send it now, but the bearer cannot wait as he is on his journey. I have drafts of land on the Little Kanawha. I shall send them to you and leave you at your own choice to do as you like.

One favor I would ask of you, if it suits. When those negroes of Mercer’s are sold (and they are to be sold on a credit of twelve months), I would be glad to purchase a boy and girl about fourteen or fifteen years old each, or older, if such are sold; though I would not have you put yourself to any trouble more for me than suits you.[28]

I spoke to Lord Dunmore about your land at Chartier’s and the Round Bottom ; and it happened that Mr. Cresap was present when we spoke of it. Cresap was urging his claim and I was walking by. He wanted it run for him according to a warrant he had purchased. I then told his Lordship the nature of your claim before Cresap’s face; upon which he said nothing more at that time, but wanted me to survey it for him also, and return it. I told him I could not at any rate do such a thing, as I had surveyed it for you.

We have built you a house on your land opposite the mouth of Hockhocking and cleared about eight acres, cutting off all the small timber. My brother Valentine Crawford says if you go on improving your land next summer, he would still do it for you as usual. He has had the misfortune to lose his son Moses. He died with the bilious fever. I am, etc.[29]

November 14, 1775: Dunmore, who was operating from a Royal Navy ship, landed "109 Rank and file, with 22 Voluntteers from Norfolk" near Great Bridge on November 14, 1775 to investigate rumors that Patriot militia had arrived in the area from North Carolina.[1][10] His landing prompted the militia of Princess Anne County to be called out.[1] About 170 men responded to the militia call issued by Joseph Hutchings, the local militia commander, and Anthony Lawson, a prominent local landowner. They mustered at Kemp's Landing, about 10 miles (16 km) from Great Bridge, and set up an ambush along the road to Great Bridge.[1]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/4thEarlOfDunmore.jpg/170px-4thEarlOfDunmore.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.23wmf7/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore

Dunmore's search of the Great Bridge area the next day confirmed that the rumors were false, but heard of the militia mustering at Kemp's Landing. Leaving a company of troops to defend the causeway to the bridge and begin construction of defenses, he took 100 regulars and 20 Loyalists toward Kemp's Landing.[10][1]

Skirmish

The Patriot ambush was spoiled when Hutchings' inexperienced militiamen opened fire too early.[1] Dunmore's disciplined regulars returned fire, moving through the woods to flush out the rebels.[10] The militia scattered, and in the ensuing chase, Hutchings was captured by one of his former slaves. Lawson was able to escape the battle, but was captured a few days later. In total, 18 Patriots were captured and seven were killed; one British soldier suffered a single minor wound.[1]

Aftermath

After securing the town, Dunmore raised the British standard, and read out the text of his proclamation.[10] The next day more than 100 militiamen that had previously opposed him swore an oath to the Crown, claiming that they had been forced into arms by the Patriots.[13] Dunmore then moved on to Norfolk, where he again raised the standard, and began developing defenses in and around the town.[13] [30]

November 14, 1775: Battle of Kemp's Landing. [31]



November 14, 1778:

A Briggade Order Novr 14th

A Court Martial to sit this morning at 8 OClock At Col0 Beelers

274 EDWARD G. WILLIAMS SEPTEMBER

Tent for the Trial of A prisoner Confind by Capt Ferrel

for Shoting whereof Col° Beeler is president[32]



November 14, 1778:

14 th It continued to Snow which Occasioned the Army to Remain

that day. About 12°Clock two delawar runners came to camp

and Informed the General that the Delawar warriors were on there

way to Join our Army and that they Designed to stay at Tuskarawas

untill they got there And likewise Declared that the Indians who

had Killed Lieu1 Parks and Ross had Came the Sandusky path 19[33] for

they had not Seen or heard of them traveling through their Neighbourhood[34]

November 14, 1778

Head Quarters [Camp] N° 9 Saturday Novr 14th 1778

Parole Monongehala

C.Sign Minden

At a Breggade Court Martial from The Militia line held this day

whereof — Majr Henderson 39 [35]Was President Jacob Orange of

Colonel Morrows Regiment was tried for firing his Gun contrary

to orders to which charge he plead Guilty and the Court Sentenced

him to recive fifteen lashes well laid on his bare back with hickory

switches . Thomas Cantwell of Colonel Evans's Regiment tried by

the same court for firing his Gun when he was on Guard, but being

proved to be an accident by the evidence of John Manby is ordered

only to be repremanded for his carelessness the General highly

approves the Sentences of the Court on those too men & thanks the

Gentlemen for the attention and desire they Have shown to brake

the vile practice of Shooting which besides the waste of amunition

where we cannot get supplied is extremely dangerous in our present

Situation.

For once more the General pardons Jacob Orange the whipping

in hopes he will behave well hereafter only to forfeit one

Months pay agreeable to the Order of the 7th Instant.

The Deleware messengers are come to Camp and inform the

General their Warriors will join our Army at or perhaps this side

Tusquerawes therefore no party are to go any distance ahead of

the Army until further orders or without leave and every person

are to be exceeding cautious to distinguish well whether any Indians

they meet are friends or enemies before they fire upon them

A White flag with fifteen Red stripes 40 [36]is given the Forerunner for

distinction at the same time every precaution is Necessary and to be

used against treachery no man or party of Men must be suffered to

come in or go out of Camp without the Generals approbation

The Picquet to be Relieved this Evening[37]

October 24 - November 14, 1778: Carleton's Raid.[38]

November 14, 1828: Name MCPHERSON, James Birdseye
Born November 14 1828, nr Clyde OH
Died July 22 1864, nr Atlanta GA
Pre-War Profession Graduated West Point 1853 (1st in his class), engineer duty.
War Service August 1861 Lt. in engineers, aide to Halleck, chief engineer to Grant at Fts Henry and Donelson, Shiloh, Corinth, Supt. of railways in East Tennessee, May 1862 appointed Brig. Gen. of Volunteers, October 1862 promoted Maj. Gen. of Volunteers, commanded XVII Corps in Vicksburg campaign, August 1863 promoted Brig. Gen. in Regular Army, commanded Army of the Tennessee in Atlanta campaign, Atlanta (k).
Notes Rated very highly by Sherman and Grant. [39]



November 14, 1833:

Emily K. VANCE


Birth: November 14, 1833, Strawberry Plains, Jefferson Co., TN.



[40]

November 14, 1852: Charles Smith12 [Gabriel D. Smith11 , Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. August 19, 1833 in Franklin co. GA / d. November 12, 1907 in Carroll Co. G A) married Sarah Jane Barrow (b. October 29, 1829 in Upson Co. GA / d. December 19, 1910) on November 14, 1852 in Carroll Co. GA. [41]



November 14 to December 4, 1863: Siege of Knoxville, TN.[42]



Mon. November 14, 1864:

Was on gard at corps headqurters

Drawed rations. All quiet in front.

Dress parade in the evening

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[43]



November 14, 1888:


20

1003

Harrison, Benjamin, 1833-1901 (T.L.S.), July 30, 1888; November 14, 1888


[44]

November 14, 1899: Rebecca Godlove b: Abt. 1807 d: November 14, 1899 in Perry Co., OH. [45]

November 14, 1896: Lizzie Nix (b. November 14, 1896).[46]

November 14, 1914:


19

949

Taft, William H. (William Howard), 1857-1930 (T.L.S.), December 5, 1910; November 14, 1914 [47]

November 14, 1917: Josephine Duncan: Born on September 26, 1898 in Dover, Kingfisher, Oklahoma. Josephine died in Stigler, Oklahoma on September 9, 1966; she was 67. Buried in Shady Point, Oklahoma.

On November 14, 1917 when Josephine was 19, she married William Jesse HOPKINS, in Antlers, Pushmataha, Oklahoma.[48]



November 14, 1921: Edward Franklin Nix (b. November 14, 1921 in AL / d. May 19, 1993 in AL).



November 14, 1941: Secretary of State Cordell Hull rejects a Japanese proposal for limited withdrawal of Japanese forces from China in return for normalized relations with the United States. [49]



November 14, 1943: Jews are arrested in Ferrara, Italy.[50]

November 14, 1948: Elizabeth gave birth to her first child, Prince Charles, on November 14, 1948. One month earlier, the King had issued letters patent allowing her children to use the style and title of a royal prince or princess, to which they otherwise would not have been entitled as their father was no longer a royal prince.[49] A second child, Princess Anne, was born in 1950.[50][51]


Charles, Prince of Wales

November 14, 1948

July 29, 1981
Divorced 28 August 1996

Lady Diana Spencer

Prince William, Duke of Cambridge
Prince Harry of Wales


[52]

November 14, 1961 It is announced that U.S. advisers in Vietnam will be raised to

16,000 over the next two years.

During this month, the rumor of JFK’s 1947 marriage to Florida socialite, Durie Malcolm,

reportedly first reaches J. Edgar Hoover at the FBI. Hoover then brings the matter to RFK’s

attention. Helen Gandy, Hoover’s secretary says, however, that Hoover had known about the

marriage as early as 1960 and discussed it with Richard Nixon in terms of using it for election

dirty tricks.

Also during this month, JFK is reportedly taped in a sexual liaison with Marilyn Monroe

at Peter Lawford’s home in California. One of the men monitoring the bugs at the Lawford

house is private investigator John Danoff. “To my amazement,” he says, “I started to recognize the

voices -- because of the President’s distinct Bostonian accent and Marilyn Monroe’s voice . . . Then you

heard them talking and they were going about disrobing and going into the sex act on the bed . . .” [53]


November 14, 1963 JFK begins to withdraw the first 1000 of 16,000 men stationed in

Vietnam. Says they will be home by Christmas and that all the troops will be out in another year.

This morning, JFK holds the last press conference of his life. He also declares that Frederick

Barghoorn is “not on an intelligence mission of any kind”: especially after the Autobahn incident, the

atmosphere with Moscow has been “badly damaged.”

Secret Service agent Winston Lawson decides upon the Dallas motorcade route. Lawson

and Agent Forrest Sorrels drive the route which Sorrels believes best suited for the proposed

motorcade. The two men meet the next day with Dallas Chief of Police Jesse Curry to discuss

details. Curry originally asks that the presidential limousine be flanked by eight motorcycle

policemen, four on each side of the car. Curry will tell the Warren Commission that SS Agent

Lawson orders the number of cycles reduced to four, two on each side, and that the cycles are

told to stay by the rear fender of the limousine. Curry also plans to have a car containing police

captain Will Fritz and other Dallas detectives immediately following the presidential limousine,

a traditional practice during similar motorcades in the past. Again, Lawson vetoes this plan.

Curry will later say that Fritz tells him: “I believe that had we been there we might possibly have got

that man (Oswald) before he got out of that building or we would have maybe had the opportunity of

firing at him while he was still firing.”

Jerry Bruno writes in his diary concerning the Dallas trip: “The feud has become so bitter

that I went to the White House to ask Bill Moyers, deputy director of the Peace Corps and close to both

Connally and Johnson, to try to settle the dispute for the good of the President and the Party. On this day,

Ken O’Donnell decided that there was no way but to go to the [Trade] Mart.” To Moyers, Bruno says:

“Connally is not concerned one whit for the president or the country. He’s a selfish, greedy, arrogant

bastard.”

A member of the Ku Klux Klan tells FBI of right-wing plan to assassinate the president

and other government officials.

The National Guard armory at Terrell, Texas is “burglarized.” It is obviously an inside

job. The guns taken are “on loan” from U.S. Army ordnance officer George Nonte’s post, Fort

Hood. Nonte is described by Nancy Perrin as the man supplying arms to Jack Ruby’s gun running ring.

Ray & Mary La Fontaine suggest that a tip about this burglary is the subject of the note LHO leaves at the

Dallas FBI office for Agent James Hosty two days earlier. OT

There is a meeting today at the Carousel Club in Dallas, Texas between Jack Ruby,

Bernard Weissman and Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit. (J.D. Tippit also has a brother on the Dallas

police force who is progressing through the ranks.) Eva Grant, Ruby’s sister, will later confirm how

close Ruby and Tippit were. She will insist that Tippit was often in either or both of the Ruby

nightclubs. Jack Ruby later denied knowing Bernard Weissman. (Weissman heads The American Fact-

Finding Committee -- the “committee” that buys a full page advertisement in the Dallas newspaper on the day of JFK’s

motorcade. The paid add will accuse JFK of being soft on communism.)

< NOTE: It may be of more than passing interest to note that this meeting at the Carousel Club takes place on the very day the Secret Service officially decides upon the route of the Dallas motorcade. JFK travels to NYC for an address. In doing so, he drops his regular security and escort. “The President does not wish a motorcade and wishes to go about without fuss of feathers ... We will, however, provide details of police at the Carlyle and whereever else the President goes so that he will have all necessary security.” AOT When LHO makes his usual 5:30 PM call to Irving, Marina asks him not to visit on the coming weekend. AOT[54] Wednesday, November 14, 1973: (The twenty-fifth birthday of her brother, Prince Charles), Princess Anne married Mark Phillips, a lieutenant in the 1st Queen's Dragoon Guards, at Westminster Abbey in a ceremony that was televised around the world, with an estimated audience of 100 million.[10] Following the wedding, Anne and her husband lived at Gatcombe Park. He was made acting captain by the start of 1974 when he was appointed a personal aide-de-camp to Queen Elizabeth II. By 1989, however, the Princess Royal and Mark Phillips announced their intention to separate, as the marriage had been under strain for a number of years. •February 6, 1952 – November 14, 1973: Her Royal Highness The Princess Anne •November 14, 1973 – June 13, 1987: Her Royal Highness The Princess Anne, Mrs Mark Phillips · [55] Anne, Princess Royal August 15, 1950 November 14, 1973 Divorced 28 April 1992 Mark Phillips Peter Phillips Savannah Phillips Isla Phillips Zara Phillips [56] November 14, 1978: In Iran, Troops opened fire on rioters in the bazaar quarter of Tehran. In the oil producing areas some workers returned to work; refinery output was normal.[57] November 14, 2009:
Ending November 15, 2009 555

This photograph was taken during a driving tropical rain in Boston and through an iron fence at the Granary Burying Grounds. The stone marks the tomb of Samuel Adams, the “organizer of the Revolution”. It is often said that it was Hancock’s money and Adams’ brains that fueled the revolt. Adams’ fiery speeches, combined with his deft political maneuvering, kept public passions aroused for years.

Appropriately next to Adam’ grave is that of the five victims of the Boston Massacre: Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick, James Caldwell, Crispus Attucks, and Patrick Carr. Buried with them is Christopher Snider, a young boy killed by a Tory in another incident 11 days earlier. He was the first victim of the struggles between the colonists and the mother country. [58]


Ending November 15, 2009 533

Despite a tropical rain our tour guide gave a first class tour of Boston’s Freedom Trail. Photo by Jeff Goodlove November 14, 2009.



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


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


[2] * See Lingard, History of England, vol. viii. ip. 221.


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


[4] * See, on this subject, the curious volume of Sir Cuthbert Sharp,

Memorials of Hie Rebellion of 1569, 8vo. London, 1840.




[5] * The Earl of Northumberland always carried about his person

the letters of the Spanish ambassador, in which he urged him to

take up arms, and promised him, on the part of the Duke of Alva,

one hundred thousand crowns, and important assistance in men and

munitions. See Correspondance de Fénélon^ torn. ii. p. 422, et seq.


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


[7] The Northern Light, Vol. 13, No. 4, September 1982, page 13.


[8] The village of Onondaga, which became the seat of the Five Nations or Iroquois League, was on the site of present Rochester, N.Y.


[9] That Dark and Bloody River, by Allen W. Eckert, xix.


[10] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[11] http://www.britroyals.com/kings.asp?id=william3


[12] Sassoonan. Also Allumapees. "Keeper of the Wampum Records." Head chief of the Unami-Delaware around 1700 who lived near the Schuykill River—and perhaps around Paxtang (Harrisburg). In 1740 he was living up around Shamokin. In 1743, along with Shickellamy, the Iroquois representative to the Penn Proprietary, he assisted in the arrest of Mushemeelin, the Indian accused of killing Jack Armstrong and two assistants. Sassoonan was party to most agreements between the Proprietary and the Delaware Indians in the first half of the 18th century. He died in Shamokin in 1747 and left his nation without a "head chief" until Tanagharison assigned Shingas to replace him in 1752. Shingas, along with Pisquetomen and Tamaqua were all nephews of Sassoonan. http://www.thelittlelist.net/sactosix.htm


[13] http://www.thelittlelist.net/abetoawl.htm#abenaki


[14] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 67.


[15] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 67.


[16] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 67.


[17] Ohio Arch. and His. Society Publications.


[18] Cross Creek. Creek flows west into the Ohio River from PA and WVA where another river from the west enters the Ohio (thus “Cross Creek”).


Cross Creek. WV 2 in Brooke County, WV. Under the bridge at the mouth of the creek in WV. Photo by compiler. Enlarged photo..

View from mouth of Cross Creek in WV looking across the Ohio River. The bridge seen on the Ohio side spans the opposing creek—resulting in the name "cross creek." This physical characteristic is one recognized by native peoples thousands of years ago.

The Meadowcroft rockshelter lies above Cross Creek where a sandstone outcropping formed a natural shelter for native hunters believed to have used the shelter some 16,000 years ago. Also, Cross Creek Church began services in 1775 at Vance’s Fort by Scotch-Irish Presbyterians. First regular pastor chosen in 1779.




Cross Creek Church. Junction of Cross Creek Road, Vance Road, and Parker Road in Cross Creek, Washington County. Photos by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged marker photo and enlarged site photo.

"Cross Creek Church. Founded by Scotch-Irish Presbyterians who began to hold services in 1775 at Vance's Fort, 1 mile north. Original church built here and first pastor called in 1779. The present church building was erected 1864.

"Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission."

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




[19] The following transcription was submitted by Gaylene Kerr of Houtson, TX for inclusion at the Genealogy in Washington in May 1999. Bibliographic Information:

History of Washington County, Pennsylvania With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Boyd Crumrine, L. H. Everts & Co. (Philadelphia, 1882), Chapter VI., pp. 66–74.


[20] Nowhere else, it is believed, are the terms of the agreement between Lord Dunmore and the Shawanese to be found—at least so full as the above. This compact was entered into at what was then called Camp Charlotte, in what is now Pickaway county, Ohio, whither Lord Dunmore had marched his army from Fort Gower. The Shawanese villages were in the immediate vicinity.


[21] Whether Logan, their chief, was satisfied or not, he acquiesced in the conditions imposed by Lord Dunmore. This is evident from his celebrated speech which gives in substance what the proud but disconsolate Mingo desired should be transmitted to Dunmore.


[22] By the phrase “to the Lakes,” is meant Lake Erie; that is, to the Cuyahoga river, which empties into that lake at what is now the city of Cleveland, Ohio.


[23] John Montour, son of Andrew Montour, a half-blood Indian, was a man of information and education, but a great savage. His father, whose Indian name was Sattelihu, was the oldest son of Madame Montour, a French-Canadian woman, and Roland Montour, a Seneca brave. Andrew, who was known to Washington, was a captain of a company of Indians in the English service in the Old French War, and rose to be a major.


[24]This refers to Fort Gower, at the mouth of the Hockhocking, where a supply of provisions had been left under guard.


[25] This village was sometimes called Seekonk, or Seekunk, a corruption of, kseek-he-oong, “a place of salt.” It was within the limits of what is now Franklin county, Ohio.


[26] The destruction of the Salt-Lick Town, by Crawford, was the only actual fighting done by that part of the army, which was under the command of Dunmore in person. The other division, headed by Col­onel Andrew Lewis, had descended the Great Kanawha to the Ohio, where the Virginians fought, on the tenth of October, the sanguinary battle of Point Pheasant, opposed principally by the Shawanese and Mingoes, and were victorious. This fact hastened, on the part of the Indians, their negotiations with Dunmore.


[27] The Round Bottom land is known to be surveyed twice by William Crawford. 1st time in the year of 1771 and 2nd time in 1773. This is located in present County of Marshall, State of West Virginia, on the Ohio River, near the city of Moundsville.

(From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 116.)


[28] Crawford, like Washington, was a slave-owner. At his death, in 1782, he was possessed of several slaves. In that part of the trans-Alleghany country where Crawford lived, which was finally confirmed to Pennsylvania, no slaves were enumerated after the year 1800.


[29] The Washington-Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield


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


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


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


[33] 19 The Sandusky Path joined the Great Trail, which the army was following, as had

Bouquet, at the Crossing of the Tuscarawas. The Sandusky Path went on

to Detroit. The Cuyahoga Path also joined at this great cross roads of the

Indian country. Hanna, Wilderness Trail, II,203-205.


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


[35] 39 James Henderson was a younger brother to Colonel John Henderson, who was in

the Continental Army and had married the sister of General Andrew Lewis's

wife. James did militia duty at frontier forts and rose to the rank of Lieutenant

Colonel of the Greenbriar militia, 1777-1780. He was also Paymaster

of the Greenbriar militia, 1778-1783. Gwathmey, Historical Register of

Virginians in the 'Revolution, 368; Thwaites and Kellogg, Frontier Defense, 80

n48.

James Henderson was the proprietor of large grants of land which his

father left to him on the Greenbriar. For many years he was a respected

and leading citizen and Colonel of the Greenbriar County militia. West

Virginia Historical Magazine, V, 110.


[36] 40 It is interesting to speculate on Mclntosh's reason for having fifteen red stripes.

This would total 29 alternate red and white stripes. We may well be surprised

that, with all the supplies necessary to obtain, pack, and transport,

they should have planned for such an exigency. No precedent for fifteen

stripes can be found in any of the literature relating to the flags of the Revolution.

F. E. Schermerhorn, The American and French Flags of the Revolution,

Philadelphia (1948).


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


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


[39] On the Internet James Birdseye McPherson


[40] http://matsonfamily.net/WelchAncestry/family_vance.htm


[41] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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


[43] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[44]


Series 16: Carter H. Harrison III, Incoming Correspondence, 1842-1893, bulk 1878-1893


This series consists of correspondence sent to Carter H. Harrison III (1825-1893), Harrison's father. The subjects of the letters arranged in this series are varied. A number concern political matters, ranging from an explanation by Horace Boies, Governor of Iowa, of his positions on free coinage and trade, to requests by other Democratic politicians for promotions or jobs for their friends or constituents. Other letters are personal, such as thanks for his hospitality following visits, requests for meetings, letters of introduction, letters from his mother while he was at Yale, and letters from his wife. Also in this series is a letter from James S. Duff, who was in charge of the Chicago mayor's office during the administrations of John Rice and R. B. Mason, presenting Harrison's father with the keys to the old mayor's office that was destroyed during the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.


Certain of the items have handwritten annotations by Harrison explaining the context of the letter or providing some background material about the author, although far fewer of the letters in this series are annotated than in Series 2 (Incoming Correspondence).


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





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


[46] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[47]


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.





[48] Harrisonj


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


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


[51] wikipedia


[52] wikipedia


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




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


[55] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne,_Princess_Royal


[56] wikipedia


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


[58] The Complete Guide to Boston’s Freedom Trail, page 14 by Charles Bahne, photo by Jeff Goodlove , November 14, 2009.

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