Sunday, January 23, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, January 23

• This Day in Goodlove History, January 23

• By Jeffery Lee Goodlove

• 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) etc., and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), and Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with -George Rogers Clarke, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson.



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

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



• This project is now a daily blog at:

• http://thisdayingoodlovehistory.blogspot.com/

• Goodlove Family History Project Website:

• http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-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.



• My thanks to Mr. Levin for his outstanding research and website that I use to help us understand the history of our ancestry. Go to http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/ for more information. “For more information about the Weekly Torah Portion or the History of Jewish Civilization go to the Temple Judah Website http://www.templejudah.org/ and open the Adult Education Tab "This Day...In Jewish History " is part of the study program for the Jewish History Study Group in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.



A point of clarification. If anybody wants to get to the Torah site, they do not have to go thru Temple Judah. They can use http://DownhomeDavarTorah.blogspot.com and that will take them right to it.



Birthdays on this date: Ina B. Squires, Douglas Osweiler, Benjamin McKinnon, James F. Martin, Elsie M. Jordan, Lelia E. Jenkins, Bessie Goodlove Russell Godlove, Carl L. Caldwell, Mark A. Arretchel.

I Get Email!



In a message dated 1/16/2011 5:03:09 P.M. Central Standard Time, jfunkhouser2@woh.rr.com writes:

http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024441/1897-02-13/ed-1/seq-4/



Jeff,



See bottom of column 3 of The Evening Times. (Washington, D.C.) February 13, 1897



Jim Funkhouser





“This Was Belated Payment.
Dr. William Goodlove, the United States medical examiner of the Pension Bureau in Boston, twenty-seven years ago kept a drug store in Sioux Falls, S. D. One day there came into his place a man who asked to be given credit for some drugs to the amount $1.27. The doctor granted the request, and that was the last he heard of the matter until last week, when he received a letter inclosing the original bill and a check in payment. “



Jim, Thanks for this. I learn more about Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove every day. Jeff



This Day…

January 23, 393: Roman Emperor Theodosius I proclaims his nine year old son Honorius co-emperor. “Under the rule of Theodosius and his sons… the Christian church consolidated its position as the sole power in the empire,” became less tolerant and the Jews “suffered in inverse proportion to the strength of the emperor’s personality.”[1]

395 A.D.

In 395 A.D. the Roman Empire split into two parts: a Western Empire with its capital in Rome, and an Eastern Empire with its capital in Constantinople (present-day Istanbul).[2]

Abt. 400 AD

The Hopewells and the Adena cultures appear to have coexisted for about 800 years until about 400 AD. Some accounts claim the Adena Culture continued perhaps 100 years or more after the Hopewells mysteriously vanished, but by the end of the sixth century, both cultures had disappeared, leaving behind only tantalizing remnants of their tenure buried in the amazing mounds they had created. [3]

404

Abaye and Rabah-Amoraim of the Babylonian Talmud.[4]

405 A.D.

Jerome (Eusebius Hieronymus) (c.345-419) translates the Latin Vulgate from Hebrew and Greek originals. His guiding practice in general was that in practice that a good translation should express the meaning, not necessarily the actual words, of the original. Jerome’s method of translation has substantially influenced future translators of scripture. He did not strive for literary excellence. What mattered most was the content, not the literary form. Until the seventh centrury, the Roman Church used both the Old-Latin version and Jerome’s. But by gradual process Jerome’s version emerged as the standard text. Jerome called his work Translatio Nova, the New Translation, but by the thirteenth century it became known as the “Vulgate”.[5]

415 Alexandria, Jews expelled.[6]

431: With regard to religion, we may note that, in A.D. 431, Palladius was sent from Rome as Primus Episcopus to the “Scotos in Christum credentes;” in A.D. 432, Patrick went to Ireland; in A. D. the British Bishop Ninian converted the Southern Picts; in A.D. 565, the Irish Presbyter, Columbus, converted the Northern Picts, and theirs was called the Culdee Church. [7]

The Emperors tried to preserve uniformity by summoning Eecumenical Councils, Councils to which all the bishops of Christendom were invited, in the hope that the Holy Ghost would descend on them as it had on the disciples at Pentecost. The Councils would descend on them as it had on the disciples at Pentecost. The Councils achieved unanimity only because dissident bishops either refused to vote or were prevented from voting. After each Council a section of Christendom broke away from the main body. The Arian heretics who seceded in the fourth century faded out in the East. But after the Council of Ephesus in 431 there was a separated Nestorian Church, which soon found its missionaries were to travel into India and into Tartary.[8]

January 23, 1002: Otto III, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire passed away.[9]

1012 Mayence: Jews deported.[10]

1012: Jews move from Germany to Poznan Poland in 1012.[11]

January 23: 1579: The Union of Utrecht forms a Protestant republic in the Netherlands. The development of a Protestant Dutch republic in what had been a part of Catholic Spain helped to provide a home for Jews fleeing the Inquisition and its attendant anti-Semitism.[12]

January 23, 1634: Trial of the men implicated in the 'Complicidad Grande' (Great Complicity). Seventeen arrests were made by the Inquisition after a man turned another man in for being "unwilling to make a sale on Saturday," and for not wanting to eat bacon. The man’s possessions were confiscated, more people were implicated, and eventually a total of 81 persons would be locked up and their possessions sequestered. These men were prominent businessmen of the Lima (Peru) community, and their arrests and led to a "widespread commercial crisis" and failure of the community bank.[13]

By 1634 the Pequot Indians went from an estimated 13,000 to about 4,000 because of European diseases brought over by the Puritans. Even so some tribes had suffered 90 to 100 % losses so the Pequots, Naragansits, and Mohicans were not as bad off. [14]

January 23, 1639 In Lima, Peru, at an Auto Da Fe, more than eighty New Christians were burned, including Francisco Maldonna de Silva (Elia Nazareno), after the Inquisition discovered that they were holding regular Jewish services. De Silva spent 12 years in prison, during which time he managed to write two books using a chicken bone and charcoal. Each book was about 100 pages. He succeeded in putting together a rope out of corn husks but instead of escaping he used it to visit other prisoners urging them to believe in Judaism.[15]



1640

Just how early ancestor Andrew Harrison first appeared in the Rappahannock Valley, has not been discovered. However, he must have been born as early as the year 1640.[16]



1640

Ancestor William Crawford was born about .1640 in Kilbirine, Ayrshire, Scotland. [17]

[18]

Motto; “Audentes fortuna juvat.[19]



1640-1711

There is a more elaborate account of the Clan MacKinnon, in which a list of the Chiefs is given. The first-mentioned is Findanus, the second son of Prince MacGregor MacAlpin. The 14th Chief, Laclan Mhore (Big Lochlan) who held estates between 1640 and 1711, married, first , a daughter of MacLean, of Duart, John, who succeeded to the chieftainship. He had another son, named Donald, who left Skye in consequence of a quarrel, and no trace of him was afterward obtained. It is believed by some that he was the identical Donald (or Daniel) MacKinnon, of Antiqua, who occupied a distinguished position there.[20]

Some believe that this son was the Daniel McKinnon who came to the Maryland Plantations. Again, this Daniel is believed to have been a son of Ianna Mishinish by his second wife.[21]



January 23, 1656: French Philosopher Blaise Pascal published the first of his Lettres provinciales. Pascal did not radiate the anti-Semitism typical of so many European intellectuals. Over 300 years ago, when King Louis XIV of France asked, the great French philosopher, to give him proof of the supernatural. Pascal answered: "Why, the Jews, your Majesty -- the Jews."[22]

1656 Jews expelled from Lithuania.[23]

January 23, 1774

"Upon their arrival in Maryland, the Reverends McKinnon and Jeremiah Berry, with the Rev. Bartholomews Booth, were assigned to the Rev. Allen in his work. At first, the Rev. McKinnon was a curate for the Rev. Allen, who was living in the remote corner of the Parish (Hagerstown), and did not appear to have performed divine service in Frederick Town more than once or twice a year, as stated in the Maryland Gazette for January 23, 1774." [24]



The Reverend McKinnon was called upon to serve in Frederick Touwn until January 1774, when Governor Eden presented him to Westminster Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland. This very old parish is now known as St. Margaret's.[25]



Ernest Helfenstein recites practically the same version as heretofore quoted, and stated to the compiler that his information was from the manuscript "History" by the Rev. Ethan Allen, in 1872. He added, "Mr McKinnon remained here until 1774, when Governor Eden presented him to Westminster Parish; about the beginning of, or during, the Revolution, he sailed for England, and was lost at sea. The Reverend McKinnon has now (1872) five descendants in the ministry, among whom are the Rev. Joseph Rogers Walker, of South Carolina, and his brother E. Tabb Walker, of Virginia." [26]



January 23, 1775: On this day in 1775, London merchants petition Parliament for relief from the financial hardship put upon them by the curtailment of trade with the North American colonies.

In the petition, the merchants provided their own history of the dispute between the colonies and Parliament, beginning with the Stamp Act of 1765. Most critical to the merchants' concerns were the £2 million sterling in outstanding debts owed to them by their North American counterparts.

The merchants claimed that, a total stop is now put to the export trade with the greatest and most important part of North America, the public revenue is threatened with a large and fatal diminution, the petitioners with grievous distress, and thousands of industrious artificers and manufacturers with utter ruin. The petitioners begged Parliament to consider re-implementing the system of mercantile trade between Britain and the American colonies, which had served the interests of all parties in the empire prior to 1764.

Following the Coercive Acts of 1774, the colonies had quickly agreed to reinstate the non-importation agreements first devised in response to the Stamp Act in the autumn of 1765. They threatened to enter non-exportation agreements if Britain failed to meet their demands by August 1775. Because debts the colonies owed British merchants were generally paid in exports, not currency, such an action would indeed have caused tremendous financial loss to the British economy. Non-importation had a comparatively minor impact, because British merchants could and did find other markets. However, no one else would pay the vast debts owed to the merchants by tobacco planters like Thomas Jefferson or New England shipping magnates like John Hancock.[27]





January 23, 1811: According to Allan Eckert in pages 537-543 of the “Frontiersmen,” Tecumseh had predicted two signs that were to be the “signs” of his followers to go to battle against the whites. One was a meteor across the heavens and another was to be an earthquake. (Page 537-543-Ref 9.31) On December 16, 1811, an earthquake shook the entire mid-section of North America exactly as predicted. It continued off and on for two days, the second on January 23, the third on January 27 and the worst, the fourth, on February 13, 1811, according to Allan Eckert’s narrative. It would have been the next August that Conrad Goodlove and William McKinnon would have entered the war; Conrad would have felt the earthquake tremors. [28]





Sat. January 23, 1864

In camp traded watches 40 recruits in today weather fine snow leaving[29]



January 23rd, 1865: We are still at the depot. The rest of our Brigade joined us at the depot. Rained all day again.[30]

January 23, 1941: Charles Lindbergh testified before the U.S. Congress and recommended that the United States negotiate a neutrality pact with Adolf Hitler.[31] On this day, Charles A. Lindbergh, a national hero since his nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic, testifies before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on the Lend-Lease policy-and suggests that the United States negotiate a neutrality pact with Hitler.

Lindbergh was born in 1902 in Detroit. His father was a member of the House of Representatives. Lindbergh's interest in aviation led him to flying school in Lincoln, Nebraska, and later brought him work running stunt-flying tours and as an airmail pilot. While regularly flying a route from St. Louis to Chicago, he decided to try to become the first pilot to fly alone nonstop from New York to Paris. He obtained the necessary financial backing from a group of businessmen, and on May 21, 1927, after a flight that lasted slightly over 33 hours, Lindbergh landed his plane, the Spirit of St. Louis, in Paris. He won worldwide fame along with his $25,000 prize.

In March 1932, Lindbergh made headlines again, but this time because of the kidnapping of his two-year-old son. The baby was later found dead, and the man convicted of the crime, Bruno Hauptmann, was executed. To flee unwanted publicity, Lindbergh and his wife, Anne Morrow, daughter of U.S. ambassador Dwight Morrow, moved to Europe. During the mid-1930s, Lindbergh became familiar with German advances in aviation and warned his U.S. counterparts of Germany's growing air superiority. But Lindbergh also became enamored of much of the German national "revitalization" he encountered, and allowed himself to be decorated by Hitler's government, which drew tremendous criticism back home.

Upon Lindbergh's return to the States, he agitated for neutrality with Germany, and testified before Congress in opposition to the Lend-Lease policy, which offered cash and military aid to countries friendly to the United States in their war effort against the Axis powers. His public denunciation of "the British, the Jewish, and the Roosevelt Administration" as instigators of American intervention in the war, as well as comments that smacked of anti-Semitism, lost him the support of other isolationists. When, in 1941, President Roosevelt denounced Lindbergh publicly, the aviator resigned from the Air Corps Reserve. He eventually contributed to the war effort, though, flying 50 combat missions over the Pacific. His participation in the war, along with his promotion to brigadier general of the Air Force Reserve in 1954 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a popular Pulitzer Prize-winning book, The Spirit of St. Louis,, and a movie based on his exploits all worked to redeem him in the public's eyes.[32]

January 23, 1942: In Libya, British forces liberate Tripoli.[33]

January 23, 1942(5th of Shevat, 5702): In Novi Sad, Hungary, 550 Jews and 292 Serbs were driven onto the ice and then shelled. All drowned.[34]



January 23, 1943: Italian authorities refuse to cooperate with Germans in deportations of French Jews living in zones of France under Italian control.[35]



January 23, 2010

I lost my Emails!

If you sent me an email between the 16th and 20th and I haven’t responded will you please resend it to me. Thanks!



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

[1] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[2] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 59.

[3] That Dark and Bloody River by Allan W. Eckert, xviii

[4] Chain of Tradition-Kohanim through the Ages . DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004, pg 115.

[5] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 28-29.

[6] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm

[7] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888

[8] The First Crusade by Steven Runciman, page 11.

[9] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[10] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm

[11] http://www.friends-partners.org/partners/beyond-the-pale/eng_captions/18-4.html

[12] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[13] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[14] 10 Days that changes America, Massacre at Mystic, 4/09/2006 Histi.

[15] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[16] Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg. 312

[17] http://www.homestead.com/AlanCole/CrawfordRootsII.html

[18] Burke’s General Armory.

[19] Burke’s General Armory.

[20] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett p. 224.2

[21] Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 479.

[22] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[23] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm

[24] (Scharf's History of Western Maryland, vol. 1, p. 505.

[25] (William Stevens Perry, D.D. Historical Collections of American Colonial Churches, p. 345).

[26] (Ernest Helfenstein, The History of All Saints' Parish in Frederick Co., Maryland, 1742-1932, pp. 21-25.) Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, pp. 224.5-224.6

[27] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/london-merchants-petition-for-reconciliation-with-america

[28] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003

[29] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlover

[30] Joseph W. Crowther, Co. H. 128th NY Vols.

[31] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[32] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/lindbergh-to-congress-negotiate-with-hitler

[33] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1775

[34] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

[35] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

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