Wednesday, December 3, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, December 3, 2014

11,945 names…11,945 stories…11,945 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, December 3, 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





December 32 A.D.

During Jesus’ last year of ministry (December A.D. 32), he went to Jerusalem for the Feast of Dedication (Hanakkah). John 10:22-11:16.[1]

33 A.D.

In the year 33 A.D. Jerusalem was crowded with pilgrims who had come from every part of the world to celebrate the Feast of Passover. Excitement ran high. A rebellion in the provinces had just been quelled. Rumors of another rebellion were rife. People were talking about a new messiah who had arrived in the city on the colt of an ass, in the manner Jewish legend prophesied. To the Romans this talk about a messiah spelled trouble…The procurator of Judea, Pontius Pilate, left his mistress in Caesarea, the administrative capital, to come to Jerusalem. He brought his legionnaires with him…

The messiah the people were talking about was Jesus. This was the political atmosphere into which he stepped when he made his decision to come to Jerusalem. This was the time he had chosen to reveal publicly that he was the messiah. This destination was the Temple. His aim was the reform of some of its practices. From a political viewpoint, he had chosen the worst possible time to hasten Temple reforms.

…In the days of Jesus there existed, side by side, two Judaisms, on the Judaism of temple and sacrifice, the other the Judaism of synagogue and prayer, just as two Christianities exist side by side today, one Catholic, the other Protestant. Jesus, then, was not the first reformer of the Temple cult. When he appeared on the scene, the reforms intituted by the Prophets were already doing away with the entire Temple cult itself.

In this dying Temple cult, Jesus aimed to do away with two practices, the selling sacrificial animals and the handling of money on Temple grounds.
scan0011

A scale-model reconstruction depicting Jerusalem at the time of the Second Temple.[2]

On the night he was betrayed, Jesus of Nazareth, considered the rightful king of Israel by his growing following, came to gether with his Council of Twelve on the upper floor of a Jerusalem Guesthouse. It was Wednesday, not Thursday, and so the supper they shared was a normal Jewish meal with leavened bread, not a Passover Seder with matzos. Before eating the meal, which he declared would be his last with the disciples untio the coming of the kingdom of God, Jesus blessed it in the usual Jewish fashion, giving thanks for the wine and then the bread. Afterward, Jesus washed the feet of his desciples and then announced that one of them would betray him. Judas Iscariot promptly left, triggering the events that would lead to Jesus’s Crucifixion the following day.

This account, much of which comes from the New Testament, conforms in certain respects with the traditional Christian story of the Last Supper. In important ways, however, it does not. According to tradition, the Lst Supper was a Passover meal, so it would have taken place on Thursday evening, the day before Good Friday. And , significantly, according to tradition, Jesus would havbe initiated the ceremony that came to be known as the Eucharist, asking his disciples to eat the bread as his body and todrink the wine as his blooed in remembrance of his sacrifice. To leave out this crucial innovation, or to have Jesus offer a standard Jewish blessing, is to tell a vastly different story. It is to put aside the “Christ of faith” and to join the centuries old search for the “Jesus of history.”

According to John Tabor, in his book “The Jesus Dynasty: The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity”, Jesus, in partnbership with his cousin, who is known in Tabor’s book as John the Baptizer, saw himself as the founder not of a new religion but of a worldly royal dynasty. Fulfilling ancient prophecies, the dynasty, descended from King David, was destined to restore Israel and guide it through an apocalyptic upheaval culminating in the Kingdom of God on Earth, not in some distant or metaphorical future, but in the very timein which they lived. Although their message was one of peaceful change, Jesus and John aroused the suspicions of the rulers of Palestine and their Roman overlords. To carry out his work, Tabor says, Jesus had established a provisional government with 12 tribal officials and named his brother James, not APeter, as tradiotional Christianity holds, as his successor. And indeed, accoding to Tabor, James later became the leader of the early Christian movement. The alternative story of the birth of Christianity, inbcluding Jesus’s quit worldly dynastic ambitions and the crucial role played by James and other members of Jesus’s family survives in the shadows of the New Testament, Tabor argues, but it was obscured in the version of Christianity that ultimately prevailed. Now, though, partly thanks to important archaeological finds, Tabor believes that this hidden story can be recovered. Properly understood,” he writes, “it changes everything we thought we knew about Jesus, his mission, and his message.”

What Tabor atte4mpts is not particularly NEW. As far back as the 18th century, Enlightenment scholars sought to separate the facts agbout Jesus and his early movement from the theological interpretations that supposedly distorted them. That quest, pursued by a variety of seekers with diverse moteves and methods, has produced strikingly dfferent accounts of Jesus, his mission, and the Christian movement. By joining the search, and by pushing it to far reaching conclusions, Tabor raises valuable questions about the whole enterprise. One key question is whether the Jesus who emerges from even the best investigations is any more real or true than the traditional figure venerated by millions Christians.

From the beginning, some seekers of the historical Jesus have been motivated by the desire to discredit the supernatural claims of the Christian faith in order to discredit religion more generally. Others hoped to shore up Christianity and religion by presenting a more liberal or modern Jesus defined mainly by his ethical teachings. [3]

They came to him at night, to an olive grove just outside Jerusalem. One of Jesus’s followers, Judas of Iscariot led a group of armed men. Judas walked up to Jesus, and kissed him.

“The one I will kiss is the man; arrest him…” Mark 14:44.

The deciple Peter scuffled with the guards. Taking a sword and cutting off a mans ear. Jesus was resigned to his fate. From that night “Judas” became synonomas with “betrayal.”

History’s obsession with Judas has obscured a mystery about the last days of Jesus.

What crime did he commit? Who was really responcible for his death?

By morning Roman soldiers had nailed Jesus to the cross. [4]

December 3, 1555: – Bill passed to return ecclestial land and revenue back to the church. [5]

December 3, 1564: Decree of the parliament of Scotland, by which the Earl of Lennox is rehabilitated in all his effects which had been escheated. [6]



1565: Jews are temporarily banished from Prague.[7]

Elizabeth Taliaferro 1691-1715 married John Catlett 1677-1739 son of John Catlett IV 1658-1724. According to "Some Virginia Families," by Hugh Milton McIlhany (Call Number: R929.2 M15) Stone burner and Prufer Printers, 1903: ...Elizabeth (who married THOMAS STRIBLING). It is this last named Robert Taliaferro of St. Paul's Parish, Stafford County, who, in his will dated December 3, 1725 and recorded in the Essex Court June 21, 1726, mentions his sister Elizabeth, the wife of "Thomas Stripling", and her sons Francis, William and Taliaferro "Stripling."

A. Children of Elizabeth Taliaferro and Thomas Stripling
. i. Francis Stripling
. ii. William Stripling
. iii. Taliaferro Stripling[8]





December 3, 1740

So could "Johannes Gottlich and Henrich Gottlich" who arrived in Philadelphia aboard the ship Robert and Alice on 03-Dec-1740. Were they relatives who arrived nine years prior to George to scout out the land? Remember, the two oldest sons of the George who pioneered Ohio were named John and Henry! "Johnnes Gotliff" was eventually granted 50 acres in Lancaster Co., PA. What happened to Henrich? We are not sure; but the Report on the Commission to Locate the Site of Frontier Forts of Pennsylvania (pages 285-286) contains an eyewitness account by nineteen-year-old Henry Hess of an Indian attack on his father's plantation in Lower Smithfield. The Indians killed his father and several hired hands including "one Gotlieb." Could this be Henry / Henrich? Who was John Cutlip of Hanover Co., PA who served in the AmRevWar? Many interesting questions remain unanswered.[9]



December 3, 1764: Duke Frederick II had two sons and two daughters by his first marriage to the late Princess Augusta ( December 3, 1764 – September 27, 1788), the daughter of Duke Karl II of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and Princess Augusta of Great Britain (the elder sister of George III) and the elder sister of Caroline of Brunswick, the estranged wife of the future George IV (then Prince of Wales). [10]

December

December 3, 1771; (GW) Rid to Muddy Hole and into the Neck. Mr. Valentine Crawford came this afternoon.[11]

No. 14.—William CRAWFORD TO George WASHINGTON.

December 3, 1772.

SIR:—I wrote you by Valentine Crawford that I was in­debted to Messrs. Jacob Witte & Son a sum of money, which I have not been able to pay, and I am afraid I shall be sued for it. If you can answer the sum in the inelosed order and charge it in my wages for surveying the land of the officers,[12] it would much oblige your most humble servant.[13]

George Washington to John Brisco, December 3, 1772, Account Book 2

Fairfax County, December 3, 1772.



Sir: I have been inform’d, that a Survey which Captain Crawford made for me on the Ohio (being the first bottom on the So. East side of the river) above Capteening, and nearly opposite to Pipe Creek, at my particular request, You have either gone, or intend to go, and take possession of Such a step as this, I cou’d hardly have expected from you. However as it is a piece of Land I viewed in Novr. 1770 before you had ever explored that Country, have had it surveyed by an Officer legally appointed by the Surveyors General of this Colony, and am resolved to take out a Patent for it (notwithstanding any improvement you either have, or may make upon it) so soon as Rights are to be had. I have judged it expedient to serve you with this notice thereof, (which I am told is not the first you have had) and to assure you at the same time, that I am determin’d not to relinquish my right to this Tract, which contains 587 acres, and which I am ready to pay for at any time, till I have at least spent the full value of the Land in support of my claim. I am Sir, etc.[14]

December 3, 1775

The first official American flag is raised for the first time, aboard the flagship, Alfred.[15]

December 3, 1776

The first court of the Yohogania county was held at Fort Dunmore (Pitt) December 23, 1776,[16] and that the courts continued to be held there until August 15, 1777. They were then held at the house of Andrew Heath.” This was on the west side of the Monongahela, a short distance above, and in sight of the present town of Elizabeth. The statement has frequently been made that the Yohogania court was at one time held at Redstone Old Fort, but this is a mistake, doubtless growing our of the fact that a board of Viginia commissioners sat at that place in the winter of 1779-80 for the purpose of deciding on land claims and issuing certificates to settlers.

Finally, when the long controverst between the two States was settled by the assignment of the disputed territory to Pennsylvania, the counties of Monongalia and Ohio, though greatly reduced in area, still retained teir names as counties of Virginia (as they are of West Virginia at the present time); but Yohogania, whose limits were wholly within the territory yielded to Pennsylvania, cesed to exist, and was thenceforward mentioned as Viginia’s “lost county.” [17]



December 3, 1781

Gen. Irvine had previously mentioned the subject of emigration to the Indian country and of a new state, to the governor of Pennsylvania, in a letter dated December 3, 1781; and, in reply, that official suggested a plan to divert the attention of the people from the scheme.[18]



IRVINE TO THE BOARD OF WAR.



FORT PITT, December 3, 1781.



Gentlemen: — I do myself the honor to transmit copies of my orders for the purpose of arranging the troops here, and also respecting provision, which I hope will meet the approba­tion of your honorable board.[19] I have struck off two commis ­saries, one forage master, and one Indian interpeter. There remain yet Mr. [Alexander] Fowler and his clerk, who says he is yearly appointed by congress auditor of accounts, with three rations per day for himself and one for his clerk; and that he has not yet received a dismissal either from congress or the auditor general. I request express directions respecting this man; and if lie is to be struck off, an order to him tode­liver all the stationery on hand; as I am informed he has a pretty good stock. When this is done there will not be a man on the civil staff except Mr. Samuel Sample, who has been do­ing the duty of quartermaster ever since Mr. [David] Duncan was put under arrest. As I think there is an indispensable necessity for some person to act in that department, I have continued him till further orders. I have also struck off or rather changed the title of ten artificers and now call them fatigue men. Any person to look at the place and be told that a number of artificers were employed, I believe they would rather imagine they were pulling down than building up or repairing. Such a complete Leap of ruins to retain the name of a post, I believe cannot be found in any other place. The stores are also nearly exhausted. When you see the returns (which I have directed the commissary of military stores to send), you will be able to determine whether the causes assigned for the issues are proper. But as I consider tlìis does not lie with me to decide on, shall, for the present, say no more on this subject.

I have written to congress and the commander-in-chief, in which I have gften my opinion that Fort Pitt is nct tenable and that a redoubt could be built within four miles, at Char-tiers Creek, at a less expense than would repair this place;• that it has many advantages as a position. I have also asked leave of congress to go down the country for two months, and mentioned that I could concert proper measures for the de­fense of this country better by being present with congress, the board of war, or the commander-in-chief; as there are many things which cannot be so well committed to paper.

The contractors have not supplied the troops tolerably with provisions. I have not been able to get half the things exe­cuted that I intend, being frequently three or four days without a mout5hful. You will see by my letter to Mr. Duncan, who does the contractor’s [Michael Huffnagle’s] business here, and his answer to me of this date, what the prospects are; though I fear he over-rates matters, especially if I am to judge from past promises, few which are complied with. I must here take the liberty to report my opinion to the board, which is that if the contract was even complied with in the fullest extent, it is not an extensive plan enough; as the detachment can never amount to one hundred where there are only two hundred men. But suppose even the militia called out and posted by twenties at ten different places, I do not see how they are to be fed.

The service here is very different from most other places. The contract might do at a stationary garrison, but this is not the case here, as more than half the men are always on one command or other. I fear the contract cannot be fulfilled without an ample supply of cash. Not a man in the whole country has credit for one hundred pounds.

As there were no subaltern officers here belonging to the Pennsylvania line except four who, by mistake, were left out of the arrangement last year, I was under the necessity of retaining them here —at least till others from the line can be ordered here in their stead, which cannot be well done now before the spring. It is very hard on these gentlemen, as they thought themselves continued. They are deserving men. If they cannot be again re-admitted into the line, I would pro­pose that congress make some such resolution as this in their favor: “WIIERE~&s, Lieutenants Reid, Peterson, Neily, and Ensign Morri~on, officers in the Pennsylvania line, were by mistake left out of the arrangement in October, 1780,— Re­8olved, If they cannot be admitted again into the line with propriety, that they be entitled to every emolument granted to other retiring officers agreeable to an act of congress of the 21st of October, 1780; and if they cannot be admitted again into the line, that the commanding officer of the Pennsylvania line be directed to relieve them as soon as possible with other officers, and that they be entitled to full pay for the time they have done or shall do duty.” It would I think not only be unjust but cruel not to allow them some such [relief] as the foregoing. I request the honorable, the board, will be pleased

• to have some steps taken respecting them.

I had no other shift for a partial supply of forage than to order the quartermaster to barter a few old cast horses and other useless articles,1 but this is so small it will not last long.

Wood and coal are much more difficult to be had here than is generally imagined. It takes three teams kept very busy to supply these articles.

In 1780, it was ordered by congress that General Washing­ton should employ such a number of express riders arid post them at such places as he thought proper. He directed one to remain here, but I cannot find that there ever was any such a person; if there was, he was kept in the quartermaster’s em­ploy and not under the direction of the commanding officer. However, there is no doing without one. I have been obliged, in this instance, to send a soldier and find him with money to bear his expenses. I hope you will direct Colonel [Samuel] Miles [deputy quartermaster] to refund that, and give the man as much as will bring him back. I beg also you will give orders for establishing one here.

I have also enclosed a return of the troops and of the military stores.[20]



December 3, 1790: Elizabeth STEPHENSON. Born on December 7, 1796. Elizabeth died on April 10, 1852; she was 55. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.



In February 1813 when Elizabeth was 16, she married Traver MOORE. Born on December 3, 1790. Traver died in Kentucky on December 22, 1874; he was 84. Buried in Moore Cemetery, Kentucky.



They had the following children:

i. Infant Son. Born about 1813.

ii. Infant Daughter. Born in 1815. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky.

iii. Harriett. Born in 1817. Harriett died on June 14, 1819; she was 2. Buried in Concord Cemetery, Kentucky. [21]



December 3, 1799: John Adams Jr. Third State of the Union Address, (December 3, 1799). [22]

December 3, 1818

Johann Gutleben married Anna Maria BRAESCH, daughter of Mathias BRAESCH and Anna Maria LAMEY, on December 3, 1818. Anna was born in 1766 and died on December 19, 1829 at age 63.



The child from this marriage was:

3 M i. John GUTLEBEN was born on July 13, 1801 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace and died on April 18, 1862 at age 60.

John married Barbe HUCK (d. December 20, 1865) on March 24, 1822. [23]



December 3, 1818

Illinois joins the Union as the twenty-first state.[24]





1819



After Col. Meason’s death, in 1819, his son Isaac carried on the business. Upon his retirement the furnace lay idle some time, but was revived by Arthur Palmer and Israel Miller in1832.[25]



1819


[26]100_1727[27]



In 1819 Andrew Jackson and Isaac Shelby, commissioners for Tennessee and Kentucky respectively, succeeded in negotiating the purchase of the northern lands of the Chickasawas. This was known as the Chickasaw Cession or the Jackson Purchase. With the Indians claims on West Tennessee removed, Jackson, John Overton and James Winchester immediately laid out a town in 1819 at the present site of Memphis, then called “The Bluff.” It was incorporated as a city in 1826. The name Memphis derives from the first capital of ancient Egypt.

At first it was not clear that Memphis would become a great city. There were rival river towns like nearby Randolph. And Raleigh which became the seat of Shelby County, was an early rival, although a landlocked one. In time, however, the convenient situation of Memphis above flood level led to a period of dynamic growth. By 1850 it was the largest city in Tennessee, a position it still retains. [28]



1819: There were small-scale riots ( the Hep Hep disturbances of 1819, the origins and the meaning of the anti-semitic Hep-Hep slogan remains unclear to this day).[29]



1819: The year 1819 was not a year of economic crisis in Germany, nor was 1881 in Russia. Had these been years of crisis, can by no means be taken for granted that economic strain had led to fear and aggression and that this aggression, because of the stupidity of the masses (their “false consciousness”), had been directed against the perceived enemy (the Jews), who were not really responsible for the crisis. The Hep Hep riots of 1819 began in Wurzburg in Franconia, but there were no obvious reasons that predestined Wurzburg. They could have equally originated in nearby Bamberg or anywhere else.[30]



Owing to the continued adverse conditions and the restrictions on families a large number of young Bavarian Jews emigrated to the United States. [31]



In 1819 an American Christian, W.D. Robinson, issued a pamphlet in which he invited Europe’s Jews, “an industrious, abstemious, and preserving race of people” to relocate to America. Little did he know that “American fever” was already beginning to burn through central European Jewish towns.[32]



1819: Springfield, Ohio

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Springfield is the county seat of Clark County, Ohio.

James Demint constructed the first cabin in what would become Springfield in 1799. In 1801, James Dougherty officially surveyed and platted the town. Many of the town's earliest settlers came from Kentucky. One of its most famous residents was Simon Kenton. Springfield became the county seat of Clark County. Because Springfield was on the National Road and was well-served by railroads, the community became quite prosperous.

Most of the early settlers were involved in agriculture. During the Panic of 1819, falling land prices caused the people of Springfield financial distress, but the arrival of the National Road helped Springfield to regain its economic strength. Because of the town's close proximity to streams and a fork of the Mad River, more than twenty mills existed within three miles of town by 1846.

The town became a center for religious and educational activities in the early nineteenth century. In addition to a coeducational high school run by the Methodist Episcopal Church, local libraries contained approximately four thousand volumes. The Lutheran Church founded Wittenberg College in 1845 as both a seminary and college. By the mid-nineteenth century, a number of religious groups had established churches in Springfield, including the Presbyterians, Methodists, Episcopalians, Baptists, Lutherans, and Universalists. By the 1880s, more than forty churches called Springfield home. The strong religious influence in the town made Springfield a center of a growing temperance movement as well.

By 1880, Springfield's population had grown to more than twenty thousand people, primarily because of industrialization. The next several years saw continued growth. Because of the city's close connection to nearby farmers, many of Springfield's earliest industries were in some way related to agriculture. Factories produced threshers, reapers, mowers, and other agricultural implements. Both woolen and cotton textile mills also employed large numbers of local residents. Among Springfield's largest manufacturing interests in the 1800s were the Standard Manufacturing Company, the Champion Machine Company, and the Lagonda Agricultural Works.

Springfield benefited from the inventions of Obed Hussey and Cyrus McCormick, who both developed versions of the reaper. Springfield, along with other Ohio cities including Akron, Canton, and Dayton, became a major producer of the Buckeye mower and reaper by the time of the Civil War. The community's strong industrial growth led to the creation of a mechanic's association in the 1830s, as well as other labor organizations as the century continued. During the 1800s, Springfield was one of the largest producers of farm machinery in the United States, but by the end of the century, that dominance began to disappear. Cities further west, such as Chicago, began to compete with Springfield. Ultimately, Buckeye Reaper and Mower sold out to the McCormick Company, which was based in Chicago.

An economic depression in the 1890s was particularly hard on industrial cities in Ohio and led to widespread unemployment. Conditions improved during World War I, as factories began to produce goods that were necessary for the war effort, but after the war ended, significant business expansion did not continue.

In the twentieth century, Springfield worked to diversify its industries and create more opportunities for economic growth. Building upon one of its strengths after the Civil War, Springfield was home to one of the largest publishing companies in the United States for a number of years. During the early 1900s, local factories produced ten different types of automobiles. These included the Bramwell, Brenning, Foos, Frayer-Miller, Kelly Steam, Russell-Springfield and Westcott. Remaining true to this automotive tradition, the city's largest employer today is Navistar International, a producer of buses and trucks.

In addition, Springfield benefited from its location near the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. In 2000, Springfield's more than sixty-five thousand residents could find employment in more than 3,500 different businesses. Similar to other Ohio industrial cities, Springfield has experienced a declining population over [33]the past fifty years.[34]


1819


San Antonio is damaged by a flood of San Pedro Creek.


December 3, 1820: Columbia Lafayette Peter (December 2, 1797 – December 3, 1820)[5]. [35]

December 3, 1823: Andrew Jackson arrived in Washington. [36]

December 3, 1860: More about Almedia Nix
Almedia married James T. Craft (b. December 3, 1860 / d. April 19, 1939 in AL).[37]



December 3, 1862: Hindman ordered Colonel Jo Shelby’s regiment to lead the advance

against Blunt using Quantrill’s men as he saw fit. Shelby and his men started

their march in the early morning hours of December 3, 1862, the day after

Herron set out from Springfield. The day started with cold rain that turned to

snow. At four o’clock that afternoon, Shelby called a halt for the day.[38]



December 3, 1864: William McKinnon Goodlove, Union Army, K Co. 57th Inf Reg. in Ohio at the Battle at Statesboro, Georgia on December 3, 1864.[39]



Sat. December 3, 1864

detailed for picket[40] 4 on an outpost with

A corporal cold & windy

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[41]



December 3, 1892: Dovie Cavender (b. December 3, 1892).[42]



December 3, 1901:

Sarah A. VANCE

Birth: August 9, 1837, Strawberry Plains, Jefferson Co., TN.

Marriage: July 12, 1855, Daniel Buryman NELSON (1832- )


Death: December 3, 1901, Hendersonville, NC. [43]



December 3, 1905: On Convoy 6 was Israel Gotlib, born December 3, 1905 and Josef Gotlib, born April 6, 1908 from Varsovie (Warsaw, Poland.)



Also on board Convoy 6 Israel Gotlieb born June 23, 1904 from Sosnowice, (13 miles southwest of Krakow, Poland.)



This convoy left the camp of Pithiviers with 809 and 119 women, a total of 938 deportees. A July 18 telex from the Kommando of the Nazi police of Orleans to the anti-Jewish section of the Paris Gestapo confirms this. It also specifies that among the deportees, 193 Jews (men and women) were sent by the Kommando of the Nazi police from Dijon, and and that the other 52 came from the Orleans Kommando itself. The telex adds that two original lists were given to the head of the convoy, Police Lieut. Schneider.



The list of names is almost completely illegible. It was typed on onionskin with a purple carbon, and the names are almost impossible to decipher. Family name, first name, place and date of birth, profession and city of residence are given. The spelling of names is extremely capricious. A majority of the deportees came from the Parisian area. The nationality is not specified, by the great majority were born in Poland.



The greatest age concentration was between 33 and 42 (550 out of 928 deportees). Adolescents between 16 and 22 were accompanied by their parents; there were 141 of them. There were even some young children, such as 12 year old Marie-Louise Warenbron, born in Paris on April 27, 1930, and Rebecca Nowodworkski, born in Luxemburg on September 13, 1928, who was not yet 14. [44]



Most of the deported had just been arrested in the Occupied Zone and sent to Pithiviers. With this transport, Pithiviers and Beaunela-Rolande, the Loiret camps, were emptied, in preparation for the arrival of the 4,000 children and their parents who had been arrested in the infamous Paris roundups of July 16 and 17 and placed temporarily in the Velodrome d’Hiver, Vel d’Hiv, the large indoor witner sports stadium in Paris.[45]



Two Gestapo documents concern this convoy: XXVb-65 of July 14 and the routine telex, XXVb-75, of July 17, sent from Paris by the anti-Jewish section of the Gestapo to Eichmann in Berlin, the Inspector of the camps at Oranienburg, and Commandant to Eichmann in Berlin, the Inspector of the camps at Oranienburg, and the Commandant of Auschwitz. This telex notes that a convoy left Pithiviers on July 17 at 6:15 AM, carrying 928 Jews, including 119 women.



When they arrived in Auschwitz on July 19, the 809 men received numbers 48880 through 49688; and the 119 women, numbers 9550 through 9668.



There were 45 survivors of this convoy in 1945.[46]



December 3, 1938: Decree authorizing local authorities to bar Jews from the streets on certain days.[47]



1939: The “Voyage of the damned”: S.S. St. Louis, carrying 907 Jewish refugees from Germany, is turned back by Cuba and the United States.[48]



1939 : “If Jewry should plot another world war in order to exterminate the Aryan peoples of Europe, it would not be the Aryan peoples which would be exterminated, but Jewry.” Adolf Hitler[49]



Early 1939: In a survey taken in America in early 1939, 66 percent objected to a one-time exception to allow 10,000 refugee children to enter outside the immigration quota limits. [50]


December 3, 1941

Carrier USS Enterprise began to launch F4F Wildcat fighters of the US Marine Corps for Wake Island.


[51]



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


[1] The One Year Chronology Bible, NIV, page 1396.


[2] Heritage:Civilization and the Jews by Abba Eban, 1984, page 86.


[3] U.S. News and World Report.


[4] Jesus’ Arrest, NTGEO, 11/16/2006.


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


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


[7] www.wikipedia.org


[8] Proposed Descendant of William Smythe


[9] http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cutlip/database/America.html


[10] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlotte,_Princess_Royal


[11] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 119.)


[12] From this it will be seen that Crawford had been down the Ohio, surveying land for the officers and soldiers, during the summer.


[13] The Washington-Crawford Letters, C. W. Butterfield, 1877


[14] The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor.--vol. 03


[15] ON This Day in America by John Wagman.


[16] The following named “gentlemen justices” were sworn in by the court on their commissions: Joseph Beelor, Joseph Becket, John Campbell, John Canon, Isaac Cox, William Crawford, Zachariah Connell, John Decamp, Thomas Freeman, Benjamin Frye, John Givson, William Goe, William Harrison, Benjamin Kirkendall, John McDowell, John McDonald, George McCormick, Oliver Miller, Samuel Newell, Dorsey Pentecost, Maththew Ritchie, James Rogers, Thomas Smallman, Andrew Swearingen, John Stevenson, George Vallandigham, Edward Ward, Joshua Wright, and Richard Yeates. The following named held commissions but were not sworn in: Thomas Brown, James Blackiston, John Carmichael, Benjamin Harrison, Jacob Haymaker, Isaac Leet, Sr., James McLean, Isaac Meason, John Neville, Phillip Rose, and Joseph Vance.

And the following named persons were also sworn in as civil and military officers of the county: Clerk, Dorsey Pentecost; deputy, Ralph Bowker.

Sheriffs, William Harrison (deputy, Ralph Bowker.

Sheriffs, William Harrison (deputy, Isaac Leet, George McCormick (Is George a brother of William, who married Ophelia?JG) (deputies, Hugh Sterling, Joseph Beelor, Benjamin Vanmeter, and John Lemon), Matthew Ritchie (deputy, John Sutherland).

County Lieutenant, Dorsey Pentecost.

Colonels, John Canon, Isaac Cox, John Stephenson.

Lieutenant Colonels, Isaac Cox, Joseph Beelor, George Vallaudigham.

Majors, Gabriel Cox, Henry Taylor, William Harrison.

Attorney, George Brent, William Harrison, Samuel Irvin, Philip Pendleton.

Legislators, John Campbell, William Harrison, Matthew Ritchie.


[17] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania by Franklin Ellis, 1882


[18] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield


[19] The following are the orders referred to: — [I.]



[II.]












[20] Washington-Irvine Correspondence by Butterfield, pages 158-163.


[21] http://www.historyorb.com/events/august/14


[22] http://www.geni.com/people/John-Adams-2nd-President-of-the-USA-Signer-of-the-Declaration-of-Independence/6000000012593135757


[23] Descendants of Elias Gutleben, Alice email, May 2010.


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


[25] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882. pg 510.


[26] Tennessee State Museum, Andrew Jackson, Photo by Jeff Goodlove November 12, 2010.


[27] Tennessee State Museum, Andrew Jackson, Photo by Jeff Goodlove November 12, 2010.




[28] Tennessee State Museum, Andrew Jackson, Photo by Jeff Goodlove November 12, 2010.


[29] The Changing Face of Anti-Semitism From Ancient times to the Present Day by Walter Laqueur, page 76.


[30] The Changing Face of Anti-Semitism From Ancient times to the Present Day by Walter Laqueur, page 78.


[31] Encyclopedia Judaica, Volume 4, page 345.


[32] The Jews of the United States by Hasia R. Diner, page 60.


[33] http://www.drtl.org/Research/Alamo2.asp


[34] http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/w/Springfield,_Ohio


[35] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha_Parke_Custis_Peter


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


[37] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe


[38] http://www.whitsett-wall.com/Documents/James%20Simeon%20Whitsett,%20Civil%20War%20Guerrilla.pdf


[39] (Historical Data Systems, comp,. American Civil War Soldiers [database on-line], Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1999.)




[40]In December the winter quarters were completed, and the regiment was engaged in the performance of picket and escort duty until the close of the month.

Http://www.usgennet.org/usa ia/county/linn/civil war/24th history p2.htm


[41] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[42] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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


[44] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 50.


[45] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial by Serge Klarsfeld, page 380.


[46] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 50.


[47] Your People, My People by A. Roy Eckardt, page 23


[48] www.wikipedia.org


[49] The Abandonment of the Jews, David S. Wyman page 53.


[50] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 8.


[51] http://www.theussenterprise.com/battles.html

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