Thursday, November 20, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, November 20, 2014

11,945 names…11,945 stories…11,945 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, November 20, 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 20…

Myrtle I. Andrews Goodlove

Frank B. Armstrong

Clark R. Harrison

Mary Hernandez Snell

Frank Lorence

William H. Mckinnon


November 20, 1559: Lady Frances Brandon (July 16, 1517 – November 20, 1559); she married Henry Grey, Marquess of Dorset and was the mother of Lady Jane Grey.[1]

November 20, 1566: The Queen goes to Craigmillar castle. When there, Murray, Maitland, Huntly, Argyll, and Bothwell, beseech her to divorce Darnley. She will not hear of it.

Being unable to shake her determination, they fÉ resolve, shortly after, on the death of Darnley ; and Balfour draws up a bond to that effect, which he signs with Bothwell, Huntly, and Argyll. [2]


November 20, 1730: Instead of returning to Berlin, Frederick William was forced to remain in Küstrin and began rigorous schooling in statecraft and administration for the War and Estates Departments on November 20. [3]


November 20, 1731: Tensions eased slightly when Frederick William visited Küstrin a year later, and Frederick was allowed to visit Berlin on the occasion of his sister Wilhelmina's marriage to Margrave Frederick of Bayreuth on November 20, 1731. [4]



November 20, 1745: I shall pass at once to the famous march into England which commenced from Carlisle on November 20, 1745. It is a curious fact, that whilst nearly half the highland clans were not represented at all in this expedition, of the rest scarcely one retained the number which the muster roll shows before the army set out from Edinburgh; many from each clan having deserted and gone to their homes, some to secure their plunder, others refusing to march to such a great distance from their native land. There were two honourable exceptions, howver, and two only. These were the Macdonalds of Glencoe and the MacKinnons of Strath. Each of these clans showed and increase of twenty men, when the march from Carlisle to Derby commenced. Of these, there only accompanied him into England, Clan-Ranald, the Macdonalds of Glengarry, Keppoch and Glencoe, MacKinnon, Stuart of Appin, Cameron, Grant of Glenmoriston, Macpherson, and Robertson of Struan, ten in number.[5]

November 20, 1770: (GW) Our Horses arriving about One Oclock at 2 we set out for Fort Pitt & got about 10 Miles.

November 20th, 1770: (GW) About one o’clock our horse arrived, having been prevented from getting to Fort Pitt by the freshets. At two we set our and got about ten miles; the Indians travelling with us.

November 20, 1776, Hugh Stephenson will[6] (Berkeley Co. 1772-1815.)

November 20, 1776: Colonel William Crawford severed relations with the command of the Seventh Regiment of Virginia.[7]

Thursday, November 17, 2005 (5)

The Landing of the British Troops in the Jerseys, a drawing by Captain Thomas Davies (1776). [8]



November 20, 1776: At a Court Cont'd and held for the district of West Augusta

County, November the 20th, 1776 :



Present, Edward Ward, John McColloch, John Cannon,

David Shepherd,



Capt'n Wm. Christy prod a Com of Capt'n of a Comp'y of

Militia, took the Oath required by Ordinance of Convention

O C'd.



Leiut Jacob Bousman, the same



Ensign Hugh Smith.



[Here the minutes of this court end.] [9]



November 20, 1777: We remained at Billingsport. Red Bank, the conquest of which was the purpose for the above troop movement, could be seen very clearly from here, and the enemy’s retreat cannon could easily be heard. [10][11]

November 20, 1777

November 20, 1777. The commissioners appointed were Colonel Samuel Washington, Colonel Joseph Reed and Gabriel Jones. General Washington was also directed to send Colonel William Crawford to Pittsburgh to take command under General Hand of the continental troops and militia in the Western Department.[12] [13]

November 20, 1777: Brigadier-General Adam Stephen was an officer from Virginia who had acquired an excellent reputation as lieutenant-colonel of

Colonel Washington's regiment in the French and Indian war,

that great preparatory school for officers of the Continental army,

and who had been made a brigadier-general by Congress, Septem-

ber 4, 1776. He fought well at Trenton, was made a major-general

of the Continental army, February 19, 1777, and took part in the

battle of Brandywine but it is said that his intemperate habits

brought him under a cloud at the battle of Germantown ; he was

dismissed November 20, 1777, and thereafter his name is not

mentioned in military history.

November 20, 1777

Congress resolved "that General Washington be requested to

send Col. William Crawford to Pittsburg to take command

under Brigadier General Hand of the Continental troops and

militia of the Western department." In this way Crawford

lost his place and rank in the Continental line, and it was

never restored to him. He seems to have spent part of the

winter of 1777-78 at his own home on the Youghiogheny.[14]

November 20, 1778:

20th The Indians made Apresent to the General of A Quantity

of Venison And Skins, and Expressed their great Grief for the

loss of White Eyes26[15] their Chief but assurd the General there was

Yet many Among them that Would render him as much Service as

White Eyes Could Do was he then Alive. And keep the Chain as

Bright, they likewise Insisted much on the Generals going down to

their Town to Build A fort for their Defence And Safety[16]

November 20, 1778:

Head Quarters Camp N° 12 Novr 20 1778

Field Officer of the Day to morrow Col° Stephenson[17]

November 20, 1780 : Battle of Blackstock's Farm[18]

November 20, 1781

Marshel had become tired of “volunteer plans.” [19]


Sunday, December 17, 2006

Irvine’s portrait is from an oil painting by B. Otis, after one by Robert Edge Pine, an eminent English artist, who came to America in 1784. The original was taken in New York, when Irvine was a member of Congress-age forty eight.[20]



November 1788: It is now conjectured that King George III suffered from the hereditary disease porphyria.[14] In the summer of 1788 his mental health deteriorated, but he was nonetheless able to discharge some of his duties and to declare Parliament prorogued from September 25, to November 20. During the prorogation George III became deranged, posing a threat to his own life, and when Parliament reconvened in November the King could not deliver the customary speech from the throne during the State Opening of Parliament. Parliament found itself in an untenable position; according to long-established law it could not proceed to any business until the delivery of the King's Speech at a State Opening.[11][15]

Although arguably barred from doing so, Parliament began debating a Regency. In the House of Commons, Charles James Fox declared his opinion that the Prince of Wales was automatically entitled to exercise sovereignty during the King's incapacity. A contrasting opinion was held by the Prime Minister, William Pitt the Younger, who argued that, in the absence of a statute to the contrary, the right to choose a Regent belonged to Parliament alone.[16] He even stated that, without parliamentary authority "the Prince of Wales had no more right ... to assume the government, than any other individual subject of the country."[17] Though disagreeing on the principle underlying a Regency, Pitt agreed with Fox that the Prince of Wales would be the most convenient choice for a Regent.[11][15]


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2e/GeorgeIV1792.jpg/170px-GeorgeIV1792.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf8/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

Miniature of George by Richard Cosway (1792).

The Prince of Wales—though offended by Pitt's boldness—did not lend his full support to Fox's approach. The prince's brother, Prince Frederick, Duke of York, declared that the prince would not attempt to exercise any power without previously obtaining the consent of Parliament.[18] Following the passage of preliminary resolutions Pitt outlined a formal plan for the Regency, suggesting that the powers of the Prince of Wales be greatly limited. Among other things, the Prince of Wales would not be able either to sell the King's property or to grant a peerage to anyone other than a child of the King. The Prince of Wales denounced Pitt's scheme, declaring it a "project for producing weakness, disorder, and insecurity in every branch of the administration of affairs."[19] In the interests of the nation, both factions agreed to compromise.[15]

A significant technical impediment to any Regency Bill involved the lack of a Speech from the Throne, which was necessary before Parliament could proceed to any debates or votes. The Speech was normally delivered by the King, but could also be delivered by royal representatives known as Lords Commissioners; but no document could empower the Lords Commissioners to act unless the Great Seal of the Realm was affixed to it. The Seal could not be legally affixed without the prior authorisation of the Sovereign. Pitt and his fellow ministers ignored the last requirement and instructed the Lord Chancellor to affix the Great Seal without the King's consent, as the act of affixing the Great Seal in itself gave legal force to the Bill. This legal fiction was denounced by Edmund Burke as a "glaring falsehood",[20] as a "palpable absurdity",[20] and even as a "forgery, fraud".[21] The Prince of Wales's brother, the Duke of York, described the plan as "unconstitutional and illegal."[19] Nevertheless, others in Parliament felt that such a scheme was necessary to preserve an effective government. Consequently on February 3, 1789, more than two months after it had convened, Parliament was formally opened by an "illegal" group of Lords Commissioners. The Regency Bill was introduced, but before it could be passed the King recovered. The King declared retroactively that the instrument authorising the Lords Commissioners to act was valid.[11][15]

Marriage and mistresses[edit]

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/75/GeorgeIV1798.jpg/170px-GeorgeIV1798.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.22wmf8/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

George in 1798, after a painting by Sir William Beechey.

The Prince of Wales's debts continued to climb, and his father refused to aid him unless he married his cousin Princess Caroline of Brunswick.[22] [21]

November 20, 1802: In early 1776, Benjamin Harrison and Thomas Moore were among a party of explorers and settlers that entered Kentucky and occupied lands in and around what is now Cynthiana, the county seat of Harrison County KY. (The town was named for Cynthia and Anna, daughters of an early settler; the county was named for Benjamin Harrison.)

The 1776 expedition is confirmed by a deposition Thomas Moore made “on the west bank of Stoner’s Creek near James Patton’s house in Clark county, on November 20th 1802 before D. Harrison and H. Chiles, J.P” (recorded in the Circuit Court of Fayette County PA) In this document, Thomas Moore swears,



“Early in the spring of 1776 this deponent in company with Benjamin Harrison, John Morgan, Belles Collier and one [Robert] Keene came down the Ohio to mouth of Licking River and from thence up Licking to Hingston station and from thence we proceeded up this stream now called Stoner’s Fork, being pilated by John Morgan, who had been in this country the year before, till he informed us we were aboyut [Christopher] Gist’

S military survey and sometime, as this deponent thinks, in the month of April we built a cabin covered it over and made it fit for habitation. At this spot we cleared about a half an acre or ¾ of an acre of land and planted corn. This improvement we made for John Morgan and after making several other improvements on the right hand fork, which puts in about 300 yards above this place, Harrison, and this deponent returned up the river, leaving Morgan and Collier at Morgan’s cabin, who were to remain there and to endeavor to prevent others from making improvements to interfere with ours, and we were to return the ensuing fall, and bring to Morgan and Collier such necessaries as they had sent for. The spring near this spot had the appearance of a lasting one was intended by Morgan as his using spring.” [22]



Thomas Moore’s 1802 deposition supported the claims of those who had arrived in and made improvements on lands in territory, which was under the authority of the governor of Virginia Colony. This region became the Commonwealth of Kentucky in 1792.[23]



November 20, 1802

“The spring near this spot had the appearance of a lasting one.”

Early in the spring of 1776 this deponent in company with Benjamin Harrison, John Morgan, Belles Collier and one [Robert] Keene came down the Ohio to the mouth of Licking River and from thence up Licking to Hingston station and from thence we proceeded up this stream now called Sonter’s Fork, being pilated by John Morgan, who had been in this country the year before, till he informed us we were about [Christopher] Gists’s military survey and sometime, as this deponent thinks, in the month of April we built a cabin covered it over and made it fit for habitation. AT this spot we cleared about a half an acre or ¾ of an acre of land and planted corn. This improvement we made for John Morgan and after making several other improvements on the right hand fork, which puts in about 300 yards above this place, Harrison and this deponent returned up the river, leaving Morgan and Collier at Morgan’s cabin, who were to remain there and to endeavor to prevent others from making improvements to interfere with ours, and we were to return the ensuing fall, and bring to Morgan and Collier such necessaries as they had sent for. The spring near this spot had the appearance of a lasting one was intended by Morgan as his useing spring.[24]

November 20, 1811

Construction of the Cumberland Road, to connect Cumberland, Maryland, with Wheeling, West Virginia, begins.[25]



November 20, 1822: Andrew Jackson arrived at Franklin, Tennessee, en route home from Alabama, and remained for burial of Rachel Donelson Eastin, a neice, who had died there a few hours previous. [26]

1822

1822 Richard Crawford, son of Lt. John dies in Lewis Co., KY. November 22, Effy Crawford, wife of Lt. John dies in Adams Co., OH.[27]

November 20, 1845: the Relief Commission first met.[22][23] [28]

November 20, 1862: Burt, John M.(6th cousin 5x removed)- private March 4, 1862. Died of acute diarrhoea in C.S.A. Hospital at Dalton, Ga. November 20, 1862. Company " H "41st. Georgia Infantry Regiment CARROLL COUNTY, GEORGIA , WOOL HAT BOYS. [29] John M. Burt, Jr.12 [Mary Smith11 , Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. abt. 1829 in GA / d. November 16, 1862 in Dalton, GA) married Mary Emily Barrow (b. abt. 1830 / d. October 11, 1914 in Cullman, AL) on August 4, 1850 in Carroll Co. GA.[30]



November 20, 1863: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Moved to Memphis, thence march to Chattanoogo, Tenn., September 27-November 20. [31]

Sun. November 20, 1864

At work all day building a shanty

Cloudy dul day report that the rebs

Have fell back to Staunton[32]

William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[33]



November 20, 1876:
100_2626[34]

Myrtle (Andrews) Goodlove

Myrtie and Willis were divorced in 1921

November 20, 1876 – August 29, 1962



November 20, 1876 –August 29, 1962


Myrtle I. Andrews Goodlove

Birth:

1876
Linn County
Iowa, USA


Death:

1962
Whittier
Linn County
Iowa, USA


http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif


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



Created by: John Wilkinson
Record added: Oct 09, 2009
Find A Grave Memorial# 42891964

Myrtle I. Andrews Goodlove
Added by: John Wilkinson


Myrtle I. Andrews Goodlove
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jackie L. Wolfe

5]

November 20 1891: HARRISON, Clark Rodgers b: November 20, 1891 in Range

Township, near Mt. Sterling, Ohio d: October 27, 1957

in Columbus, Ohio. [36]

HARRISON, Clark Rodgers b: November 20, 1891 in Range

Township, near Mt. Sterling, Ohio d: October 27, 1957

in Columbus, Ohio

.......... +HARDIN, Lulu Belle b: September 09, 1894

in Liberty Township, Highland County, Ohio m: November

22, 1914 in Her parents in McKenzie, Tennessee[37], Carroll

County d: March 08, 1952 in Columbis, Ohio

6 Clark Rodgers Harrison b: November 20, 1891 in Range Township, near Mt. Sterling, Ohio

src: Copy of Birth Certificate; Family Bible of Cuie Harrison

d: October 27, 1957 in Columbus, Ohio

src: Copy of Death Certificate

+Lulu Belle Hardin b: October 09, 1894 in Liberty Township, Highland County, Ohio

src: Copy of Birth Certificate; Family Bible of Cuie Harrison

d: March 08, 1952 in Columbis, Ohio

src: Copy of Death Certificate

m: November 22, 1914 in Her parents in McKenzie, Tennessee, Carroll County

src: Copy of Marriage License; Family Bible of Cuie Harrison

[38]

November 20, 1899: Verner James Nix (b. November 20, 1899 in AL / d. October 8, 1993 in AL).[39]

November 20, 1920: MARTHA ANN CRAWFORD, b. May 11, 1833, Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina; d. November 20, 1920; m. GEoRGE G. ALLMAN, January 18, 1854, Macon County, North carolina.

Notes for GEORGE G. ALLMAN:
Killed in Civil War July 26, 1864 [40]

November 20-25, 1940: Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia become members of the Tripartite Pact.[41]

November 20, 1941: : Nomura presents an "absolutely final" Japanese proposal, promising to suspend military activity in China in return for one million gallons of aviation fuel. [42]

November 20, 1941: Twenty thousand Minsk Jews are killed at Tuchinka.[43]



November 20-December 7, 1941: Thirty thousand Jews are killed in the Rubula Forest outside Riga, during the so-called Jeckeln Aktion including Flora and Sidonie Gottlieb.[44]



November 20, 1941: al-Husseini met the German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop[125][45]



November 20, 1942: Nine hundred and eighty Jews from Munich are deported to Riga.[46]

November 20, 1945: The trial of 21 German war criminals begins in Nuremberg, Germany.[47]



Julius Streicher could tell the tribunal at Nurnberg that Martin Luther ought to have been standing in his place as the accused, for he, Streicher, was merely putting into effect Luther’s counsel respecting the Jews.[48]



At the end of 1945, when the terrible conditions facing European displaced persons were widely known, only 5 percent of the respondents thought the United States should “permit more persons from Europe to come to this country each year than we did before the war.” (Thirty-two percent believed the same number should be allowed in as before, 37 percent wanted fewer to enter, and 14 percent called for closing the doors entirely.)[49]

November 20, 1947: Elizabeth and Philip were married on November 20, 1947 at Westminster Abbey. They received 2500 wedding gifts from around the world.[45] Because Britain had not yet completely recovered from the devastation of the war, Elizabeth required ration coupons to buy the material for her gown, which was designed by Norman Hartnell.[46] In post-war Britain, it was not acceptable for the Duke of Edinburgh's German relations, including his three surviving sisters, to be invited to the wedding.[47] The Duke of Windsor, formerly King Edward VIII, was not invited.[48][50]

November 20, 1962 JFK announces the suspension of the naval blockade of Cuba,

but reaffirms that he will maintain political and economic measures against the country. JFK

announces at a press conference, "I have today been informed by Chairman Khrushchev that all of the

IL-28 bombers in Cuba will be withdrawn in thirty days...I have this afternoon instructed the Secretary of

Defense to lift our naval quarantine." Kennedy suggests that because no onsite inspection has

occurred, the preconditions for a U.S. non-invasion guarantee has not been met. Nonetheless, he

states, "If all offensive weapons are removed from Cuba and kept out of the hemisphere in the future...and if

Cuba is not used for the export of aggressive Communist purposes, there will be peace in the Caribbean."

11:21 P.M. : The JCS orders SAC to return to its normal airborne alert status, effective

immediately. During the day, SAC forces lower their alert status from DEFCON 2, and

other U.S. military commands reduced their alert status from DEFCON 3 to DEFCON 4. [51]

November 20, 1963: As Vietnam came to crisis late in his term, Kennedy was the lone voice against escalation of military conflict. On October 11, 1963, Kennedy issued National Security Action Memoranda NSAM 263, authorizing his plans “to withdraw 1000 U.S. military personnel [from Vietnam] by the end of 1963,” with the longer goal of withdrawing “the bulk of U.S. personnel” by the end of 1965. However, Kennedy ordered that, “no formal announcement be made of the implementation,” yet on November 20, at a top-level conference, “the secrecy was lifted,” and it was reported in the New York Times the following day, which was the day before Kennedy was assassinated.[53]

Following Kennedy’s continuing stealth moves to avoid an escalation of the conflict in Vietnam, the majority of his national security bureaucracy “was in flagrant revolt against him. The Pentagon and CIA were taking steps to sabotage his troop withdrawal plan.” Further:

“Frustrated by the growing instability of South Vietnam’s Diem regime, U.S. officials split over whether to back a military coup to replace it, with Kennedy himself vacillating back and forth on the question.”[54]

An open revolt took place between the two camps with Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, “who supported a coup, and Saigon CIA station chief John Richardson, who backed the increasingly autocratic President Ngo Dinh Diem.” Richard Starnes, a newspaper correspondent in Saigon, wrote on this feud, and explained that “a high U.S. official” in Saigon views the CIA as a “malignancy,” guilty of “insubordination,” and that he “was not sure even the White House could control [it] any longer.” The U.S. official added:

“If the United States ever experiences a [coup attempt] it will come from the CIA and not the Pentagon… [The CIA] represents a tremendous power and total unaccountability to anyone.”[55][52]

November 20, 1963 This morning, JFK has breakfast at the White House with the

leaders of Congress. He touches briefly on his upcoming trip to Texas saying: “Things always

look so much better away from Washington.”

Jackie Kennedy returns to the White House from Virginia.

Frank Ellsworth arrests John Masen. On the way to the police station, Masen identifies

a passing motorcyclist as the “George Perrel” he has told Ellsworth about, and Perrel is followed

to his home address. Perrel turns out to be Fermin de Goicochea Sanchez. The information is

relayed by Ellsworth to the FBI, which has been looking for Perrel since November 1. The FBI

nevertheless continues “looking” for Perrel for ten more months, not interviewing him until

September 1964, when the Warren Report is already out. Oswald Talked

Gilberto Policarpo Lopez obtains tourist card No. 24553 in Tampa, Florida today in

preparation for trips to Mexico and then to Cuba. (In March, 1964, CIA headquarters will receive a

message from a source who states that a U.S. citizen named Gilberto Lopes [sic] “had been involved in the Kennedy

assassination.”)

Two individuals “... believed they saw a person resembling Oswald firing a similar rifle

at another range near Irving.” The real Oswald is at work. AOT

General Edwin Walker is in New Orleans, according to Louisiana State Police files,

involved for the next two days in several hurried and secret meetings, including a conference

with Judge Leander Perez, one of the state’s most powerful men. Walker meets today with

Citizens Council Director George Singelmann and Perez in Perez’s New Orleans office (according

to a Louisiana State Police informant.) Walker will be returning to Dallas aboard a Braniff flight at the time

of the assassination.

A Beckley Street tenant, Jack Cody, recalls that on either this morning or tomorrow

morning, he has an encounter with a man he recognizes as a new tenant - a man who occupies

the room in the center of the first floor, right off the common living room (the known location of

LHO’s room in the boarding house.) “I was living in the basement at 1026 North Beckley. It was

Wednesday or Thursday, the week Kennedy was assassinated. It was about seven o’clock in the morning. I

was waiting on the bus. A man came off the front porch of the place where I stayed. [He] got on the bus

after me and sat down on the other side of the bus. when he got on the bus, I saw he was carrying a

package, a newspaper-wrapped package. It was about six inches thick and a foot wide and about two foot

long.”

Ralph Leon Yates is driving near Beckley Street on this day, when he picks up a young

man hitchhiking into downtown Dallas. During their brief trip, the young man, who is carrying

a long package that he says contains curtain rods, asks Yates questions about the President’s

upcoming motorcade. He wants to know two things: Was the route changed, and did Yates

believe a person could take a rifle and shoot the President from the top of a building or from a

window? Yates replies that he believes it could happen if the man was a good enough shot and

had a scope. Yates drops off his passenger at Elm and Houston Streets, the site of the Texas

School Book Depository. After this encounter, Yates returns to his place of work and relates the

incident to a co-worker, Dempsey Jones.

Also this morning in Dallas, Texas -- two police officers on routine patrol enter Dealey

Plaza and notice several men standing behind a wooden fence on the grassy knoll overlooking

the plaza. The men are engaged in what appears to be mock target practice, aiming rifles over

the fence in the direction of the plaza. The two police officers immediately make for the fence,

but by the time they get there the riflemen are gone, having departed in a car that has been

parked nearby. The two patrol officers do not give much thought to the incident at this time.

(They will report the incident following the assassination and the FBI will issue a report on November 26th. The

substance of the report will never be mentioned in the FBI’s investigation of the assassination, and the report itself will

“disappear” until 1978, when it finally resurfaces as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request.)

Wayne January who runs a plane rental business at Red Bird Airport [near Dallas] is

approached by two men and a woman, who inquire about renting an aircraft on Friday,

November 22, to go to Mexico. January doesn’t like the look of them and does not rent them a

plane. After the assassination, when he sees LHO on television, he thinks he strongly resembled one of the

men who had been at the airport. He gives this information to the FBI. AOT

Richard Nixon arrives in Dallas today, reportedly on business for Pepsico. Company

records will indicate there are no official meetings held. Yet, according to the general counsel of the

company, Nixon and others in the meeting room will kneel in a brief prayer when they hear the news of

Kennedy’s death. Nixon, however, will say he hears the news of JFK’s assassination while in a taxicab in

New York City. Peter Dale Scott notes in Deep Politics and the Death of JFK that Nixon’s quick business

trip to Dallas is “presumably about Pepsi’s impending land deal with the Wynne family’s Great Southwest

Corporation, which would normally have been handled by the latter’s law firm Wynne, Jaffe, and Tinsley.” Nixon

also plans to talk to “several Dallas Republican leaders.”

Robert Kennedy celebrates his 38th birthday today with a raucous party in his office at

the Justice Department in Washington. Standing on top of his desk, in shirtsleeves and loosened

tie, surrounded by well-wishers, he comments with tongue in cheek on how much the stories of

his war on the Mafia, his “persecution” of labor union bosses, and his use of wiretapping are going

to benefit his brother’s forthcoming campaign for a second term. This evening at 8:30, he will

have another party at his home in Hickory Hill. He informs Ramsey Clark of his misgivings

about JFK’s upcoming trip to Texas. “I don’t want him to go.” RFK has received an anonymous

letter from Texas in which the writer warns RFK not to let JFK go to Dallas because “they” will

kill him there. (Today, the whereabouts of this letter remain unknown.) A Dallas woman has told

Pierre Salinger, JFK’s Press Secretary, “Don’t let the President come down here . . . I think something

terrible will happen to him.”

In Washington, JFK approves an Accelerated Withdrawal Program, designed to carry out

the promise to end American military presence in Viet Nam.

In the last several months preceding JFK’s upcoming trip to Dallas a number of New York

Times stories have been linking LBJ aide Bobby Baker to both I. Irving Davidson and Clint

Murchison. (According to JFK’s secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, Bobby Kennedy is also investigating

Bobby Baker for tax evasion and fraud. After Bobby Kennedy started to put pressure on Jimmy Hoffa

during the MeClellan hearings, I. Irving Davidson, who already knows both Carlos Marcello and Clint

Murchison, has become Hoffa’s protector and go-between with both the Nixon forces in the Republican

party and the LBJ forces in the Democrats.) DPATDJ

In Honolulu, (Camp Smith) a conference reportedly on Viet Nam policy begins at 8:00

AM, involving Rusk, McNamara, Lodge, Taylor, Felt and Harkins. There is no record of what

happens at this meeting. From 8:30 to 10:15, all conference members meet in the command center

to listen to presentations on Agenda Items A -- “Country Team Review of Situation” and B --

“Prospects and War Under the New Government.” For these briefings, we have a record created

at CINPAC. After a short break, the principals, joined this time by McGeorge Bundy, McCone

and David Bell, retire to the executive conference room for another restricted session. There is

no record of what happens at this meeting either, which takes place form 10:35 to 12:00. While

this is going on, the rest of the conferees are broken down into four groups to carry out separate

discussions “of programs to produce recommendations to Principals.” In effect, the topics of

discussion at this conference will be the same topics covered in LBJ’s NSAM #273, dated

November 26 (four days after JFK’s death in Texas) and will begin to totally reverse Kennedy’s own

policy, as stated in the Taylor-McNamara report and in NSAM #263, Dated October 2, 1963. Of

this meeting, Fletcher Prouty writes: “ How did it happen that the subject of discussion in Hawaii,

before JFK was killed, was a strange agenda that would not come up in the White House until after he had

been murdered? Who could have known, beforehand, that this new -- non-Kennedy -- agenda would be

needed in the White House because Kennedy would no longer be President?” “President Kennedy would

not have sent his cabinet to Hawaii to discuss that agenda. He had issued his own agenda for Vietnam on

October 11, 1963, and he had no reason to change it...... If JFK had no reason to send them to Hawaii, who

did, and why?” Whereas JFK had ordered, in NSAM #263 of October 11, 1963, the return of the

bulk of American personnel by the end of 1965, the November 20 agenda and an November 26

briefing will move in direct opposition to Kennedy’s intentions and pave the way for the

enormous #288 of March 1964 which will complete the full turnabout.

Kent Whatley of Garland, Texas today offers Leroy Wheat and “his pilot” William

“Billy” Kemp $25,000 to fly a small aircraft with two passengers to South America on November

22. The men are suspicious of the offer and decline the job.

Irving, Texas postman delivers, along with the Paines’ mail, a package for LHO. There is

no reference to this parcel in the Warren Report. The Commission will allow it to remain a highly

suggestive mystery.

Louisiana State police lieutenant Francis Fruge journeys to Eunice, Louisiana, to pick up

a woman who has received minor abrasions when she was thrown from a car. She appears to be

under the influence of some drug. Her name is Melba Christine Marcades, better known as

Rose Cheramie. While at State Hospital, Cheramie tells doctors that JFK is to be killed in Dallas.

She tells Dr. Victor Weiss that she has worked for Jack Ruby and that her knowledge of the

assassination comes from “ word in the underworld.”

Tonight, at LHO’s boarding house at Beckley Street, some of the boarders are in the

living room watching television. Several of the tenants (Hugh Slough and Jerry Duncan) recall

LHO coming into the living room to watch the news as JFK’s motorcade route is being

announced. According to them, LHO seems totally absorbed in the story. When the news report

is over, LHO returns to his room without discussion.

In Washington, there is a formal Presidential reception at the White House for members

of the Supreme Court. (POTP)

Late in the evening, Frank T. Tortoriello holds an all-night party at his residence in the

Tanglewood Apartments in Dallas. Jack Ruby attends along with Joe F. Frederici and Jada, the

Carousel stripper. (Joe Frederici is a nephew of Vito Genovese, the notorious former Mafia boss from

New Jersey.)

Visiting his old political base in Kiev, Khrushchev receives the Danish Foreign Minister,

Per Haekkerup, who gives him a teak and black rocking chair and says he hopes that the

Chairman will rock in the “same rhythm” as President Kennedy.

Rolando Cubela (AM/LASH) receives a telephone call from “Sanson” (Sanchez), who

tells Cubela that the meeting he has requested seeking express JFK approval for his mission to

assassinate Castro will take place on November 22 .[53]

November 20, 1963: Did 'Rambling Rose' sound alarm on JFK killing?

Woman dumped on back road claimed advance knowledge of assassination

Published: 10/06/2013 at 7:37 PM
RoseCheramie

A bizarre chapter in the JFK assassination story centers on a woman claiming to be a drug runner for Jack Ruby who tied the burlesque-club owner to Lee Harvey Oswald and accurately predicted to many credible witnesses that the president would be killed within days, writes WND senior staff reporter Jerome R. Corsi in his new book “Who Really Killed Kennedy? 50 Years Later: Stunning New Revelations about the JFK Assassination.”

Corsi admits it’s one of the stranger stories in the entire JFK assassination investigation.

“The problem is the story is well documented, and the possibility that a woman dumped by the side of a Louisiana back road may have had advance knowledge of the JFK assassination remains intriguing 50 years after the event,” Corsi says.

“Who Really Killed Kennedy,” released this month as the 50th anniversary of the assassination approaches, is bolstered by recently declassified documents that shed new light on the monumental event. Corsi sorted through tens of thousands of documents, all 26 volumes of the Warren Commission’s report, hundreds of books, several films and countless photographs.

Dumped by the side of the road

On Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1963, a woman named Rose Cheramie was brought to a local hospital by one Frank Odum after he hit her on Highway 190 near Eunice, La. She claimed she had been abandoned by the side of the road by two men she had been traveling with and then was hit by another car. While sedated in the hospital, Cheramie predicted that JFK would be assassinated in Dallas that coming Friday.

Rose Cheramie, or Cherami, was one of some 30 aliases used by Melba Christine Marcades, born Melba Christine Youngblood.

She was a 34-year-old drug and substance abuser with a long list of prostitution and other arrests since she turned 18. She had worked as a B-girl for Jack Ruby in his Carousel Club in Dallas and had been mainlining heroin for nine years.

According to a Louisiana State Police report in mid-November 1963, she worked “as a dope runner for Jack Ruby.” The report said she had “worked in the night club for Ruby and that she was forced to go to Florida with another man whom she did not name to pick up a shipment of dope to take back to Dallas and that she didn’t want to do this thing but she had a young child and that they would hurt her child if she didn’t.”

She was thrown out of a brothel after a quarrel ensued with the two men participating in the dope run. A staff report compiled by the House Special Committee on Assassinations said Cheramie had taken her last injection of heroin around 2 p.m. on Nov. 20, 1963.

‘They’re going to kill the president!’

Lt. Francis Fruge of the Louisiana State Police was the first to interview Cheramie at Moosa Memorial Hospital in Eunice, La.

Because the hospital was private and Cheramie had no funds or insurance, Fruge placed her in the Eunice City Jail. Fruge then called Dr. Derouin, a local doctor from the coroner’s office, who administered a sedative to calm her from the effects of drug withdrawal.

Dr. Derouin made the decision to commit her to the state hospital in Jackson, La. On route to the hospital in Jackson, Cheramie talked to Fruge, according to a deposition the officer gave the House Select Committee on Assassinations,

Cheramie told him “she was coming from Florida to Dallas with two men who were Italians or resembled Italians.”

“They stopped at this lounge … and they’d had a few drinks and got into an argument or something. The manager of the lounge threw her out and she got on the road and hitchhiked to catch a ride, and this is when she got hit by a vehicle.”

Fruge said the lounge was a house of prostitution called the “Silver Slipper.”

He told the committee that he asked Cheramie what she was going to do in Dallas: “She said she was going to, number one, pick up some money, pick up her baby, and kill Kennedy.” Fruge claimed Cheramie was lucid making these statements. He had her admitted to the hospital late on Nov. 20, 1963.

‘These are serious guys’

With further investigation, Fruge found Cheramie’s farfetched story had a basis in fact.

Fruge tracked down the owner of the Silver Slipper Lounge, Mac Manual, who told him Cheramie had come into the bar with two men who were pimps engaged in the business of hauling prostitutes in from Florida.

When Cheramie became intoxicated and rowdy, one of the men supposedly “slapped her around” and threw her outside.

Fruge further claimed he showed the owner of the Silver Slipper bar a stack of mug shots from which the bar owner identified a Cuban exile named Sergio Aracha Smith as one of Cheramie’s traveling companions.

Assassination researchers have identified Aracha Smith as an anti-Castro refugee who was active in 1961 as head of the New Orleans Cuban Revolutionary Front.

At that time, Aracha Smith befriended anti-Castro activist and commercial pilot David Ferrie, a shadowy New Orleans figure who became prominent in the investigation of New Orleans prosecutor Jim Garrison.

In the investigation of the Cheramie case, Corsi notes, there is a suggestion Louisiana state police found diagrams of the sewer system in Dealey Plaza among the contents of Aracha Smith’s apartment in Dallas.

Increasingly, assassination researchers have concluded Aracha Smith must be listed among the Cuban exiles that are strongly suspected of having played an operational role in the JFK assassination.

After the assassination, Corsi points out, Fruge immediately called the hospital and told them not to release Cheramie until he had a chance to speak with her.[54]

November 20, 1963: William Cephous Nix (b. May 20, 1885 in AL / d. November 20, 1963 in AL).[55]

November 2000: In 1995, The Queen attended events commemorating the end of the war fifty years before, and had two operations: one to remove a cataract in her left eye, and one to replace her right hip.[111] In 1998, her left hip was replaced after it was broken when she slipped and fell during a visit to Sandringham stables.[112] Her 100th birthday was celebrated in a number of ways: a parade that celebrated the highlights of her life included contributions from Norman Wisdom and John Mills;[113] her image appeared on a special commemorative £20 note issued by the Royal Bank of Scotland;[114] and she attended a lunch at the Guildhall, London, at which George Carey, the Archbishop of Canterbury, accidentally attempted to drink her glass of wine. Her quick admonition of "That's mine!" caused widespread amusement.[115] In November 2000, she broke her collarbone in a fall that kept her recuperating at home over Christmas and the New Year.[56]





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


[1] wikipedia


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




[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_the_Great


[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_the_Great


[5] Clan Mackinnon, compiled by Alan McKie, page 24, 1986.


[6] W. VA. Estate Settlements, Library of Congress #76-53168, International Std. Book #8063-0755-2 (Rosella Ward Wegner)


[7] The Brothers Crawford


[8] This scene shows the second division of Cornwallis’s force landing with artillery on the morning of November 20, 1776. Emmet Collection, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations. Washington’s Crossing by David Hackett Fischer.


[9] http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924017918735/cu31924017918735_djvu.txt


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


[11] The Battle for Fort Mercer: The Americans Abandon the Fort and the Crown’s Forces March In
Text below extracted from A Hessian Diary of the American Revolution, Döhla, 1990:56, 59-61.


[12] Journals Cont. cong., Ix., 942, 944.


[13] George Rogers Clark Papers, Vol. III 1771-1781, James Alton James, Editor. Pg. xiv


[14] FRONTIER DEFENSE ON UPPER OHIO


[15] 26 White Eyes, Delaware chief, was one of the great Indian statesmen. He envisioned

the time when his tribe should become civilized, live in peaceable

trade relations with their white neighbors. The Treaty of Fort Pitt, 1778,

was largely his work. While attempting to carry out the provisions of this

treaty, White Eyes was perfidiously murdered by renegade whites. His body

was quickly buried, and the story was told that he had died from smallpox.

Allfeared the consequences. The officers entered into a solemn pact to keep

the secret, and it was many years tillthe truth was known. Thwaites calls

the assassins "more barberous than the savages they abhorred." Frontier

Advance, 20-21.


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


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


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


[19] (See Appendix J,— Marshel to Irvine, November 20, 1781.) Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield.


[20] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by C.W. Butterfield, 1882.


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


[22] John Moreland’s book, page, 262.


[23] John Moreland’s book, page, 262.


[24] John Moreland’s book, page 261-262.


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


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


[27] The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Scholl, 1995


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


[29] http://www.oocities.org/athens/Agora/9743/41stcoh.htm


[30] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[31] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[32] Staunton played a pivotal role during the Civil War years when the Shenandoah Valley served as the "Breadbasket of the Confederacy". While most of the battles were being fought north or west of the town, it was the presence of the Virginia Central Railroad that provided a vital link between the Valley and eastern Virginia, making Staunton an important supply depot for the Confederacy.

http://www.staunton.va.us/default.asp?pageID=90F8F592-A0AB-43EF-8DB5-1E7199264360


[33] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[34] Linda Peterson Archives, June 12, 2011


[35] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=42891964&


[36] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/harrbios/battealHarr3466VA.htm


[37] ------------------------------------------------------------------------



Source:

Original article by Jeremy F Elliot printed here with permission.

Submitted by Dan Harrison.


The Harrison Genealogy Repository http://www.ouhsc.edu/~rbonner



[Image]



Last Updated: 14 June 1998

© 1998 Josephine Bass and Becky Bonner. All rights reserved.



Becky Bonner E-Mail Address: rbonner@imail.ouhsc.edu

Josephine Lindsay Bass E-Mail Address: jbass@digital.net




[38] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/HarrList/msg00581.html


[39] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[40] Crawford Coat of Arms


[41] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1764.


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


[43] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1769


[44] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1769


[45] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini#World_War_I


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


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


[48] Your People, My People by A. Roy Eckardt, page 24.


[49] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 9.


[50] wikipedia


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


[52] http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-national-security-state-and-the-assassination-of-jfk/22071


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


[54] http://www.wnd.com/2013/10/the-bizarre-case-of-rose-cheramie-and-jfk/


[55] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[56] wikipedia

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