Sunday, March 13, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, March 13

• This Day in Goodlove History, March 13

• 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; William A. Truax, Frank E. Thompson, Patricia L. Stickley, Christopher Sherman, John M. Mentus, Elisabeth Godlove





Weddings on this date; Sarah Denny and McKinnon.





• This Day…



• March 13, 4 B.C.: Josephus gives the following account of the High Priest Joazar. On 13 March 4 B.C. Herod the Great deposed the High Priest Matthias, whom he suspected of complicity in the attack on the golden eagle which he had had erected over the over the Temple gate, and replaced him by Matthias’ brother in law, Joazar. Joazar, son (?) of Boethus, was High Priest for less than a year (brother-in-law of Matthias).[1]



• 4 B.C.:During his last illness Herod devised a scheme to plunge the entire kingdom into mourning when he died, ordering his army to imprison a crowd of leading Judaean citizens in the hippodrome in Jericho, and to massacre them when his death was announced. (Fortunately for his command was not carried out.)[2]





• Elaborate masonry foundations beneath a bathhouse in Herod’s winter palace hint at luxuries savored 2,000 years ago. The great builder died here in 4. B.C., celebrated and despised, a despot and a genius.[3]



• Death of Herod.[1][4] In Jericho, where Herod died in 4.B.C. his body was placed on a golden bier studded with gemstones and draped in royal purple, with a scepter in his right hand and a gold crown on his head. His numerous family ranged themselves around the bier, together with his army dressed in full battle array and 500 servants and freed slaves carrying spices. Together thy escorted Herod 25 long, hot miles southwest, to a cone shaped hill at the edge of the desert that gleamed with white stonework. Here they laid him to rest. {3}[5] The country was divided into four provinces, each under Caesar’s thumb. It was the last time a Jew would rule over a united Palestine until the founding of the modern State of Israel in 1948.[2][6]



March 1312[7]: In an edict issued by Pope Clement V in 1312, the Order of the Knights Templar is dissolved. The Pope decrees that most of the Templar land is given to the Hospitelers[8], not to the King. Phillip the Bell managed to aquire some of the land but only enough to cover the cost of the bill of the imprisonment and torture of the Templars.[9]

After the official suppression of 1312 there were still a number of Knights Templar that were left that never were tried. There were thousands of them. A small percentage were captured in 1312, probably not even a tenth. Most of the Templar arrests are confined to France and England. In other parts of Europe they fair much better.[10]

Now at the beginning of 1378 Gutleben again acquired the right of citizenship in Colmar also, and had a house there near the Augustine monastery. As we shall see, medical practitioners who were solidly employed by a city worked not only in one place, but cared for patients in the farether reaches of the surrounding area. Such double residence is not surprixing, especially as Gutleben, as shall be shown, along with his activity as a physician, was engaged in money lending and probably had a few credit customers in Colmar. Gutleben probably stayed in his upper Alsace residence often in spite of his obligations in Basel. This was probably aloso one of the reasons why the Basel magistrate in March 1379 received a request from Mathis, Eberlin’s son, to allow him to live in Colmar again, bhut the application was not granted. Meanwhile, Mathis was even banished from Basel also, as someone had found him guilty again of ridiculing Christianity in respect to jeering at the Good Friday liturgy of the church. After the city gates of Basel and Colmar remained closed to him, he was known to settle down with his wife Ester in Bern.[11]

1370s

Eberlin from Gebweiler seems at first to have moved to Basel not until the end of the seventies of the 14th century, whereas Nordmann’s dwellings stem from the previous decade. Then if one brings in for comparison Ginsburger’s history of the Basel Jews, where some can be found, although not as extensive an account about the topography of the Jewish settlement in Basel, it becomes clear without a doubt that Nordmann has mixed up the two Alsatian Eberlins.[12]



1378 to 1417



After the Papal court returned to Rome, the Church was divided by the creation of antipopes. Known as the Great Schism, the period lasted from 1378 to 1417. Two rival popes ruled at the same time, the first two being Urban VI in Rome and Clement VII in Avignon. Urban was violent, drank heavily, and told a cardinal who remonstrated with him that: “I can do anything, absolutely anything I like.” Like two mad bulls, the rival popes bellowed away at each other. All of Christendom was scandalized, and unbelievers scoffed at the sight of two competing “Vicars of Jesus Christ” anathematizing and excommunication each other, raising armies and slaughtering helpless women and children, each for his own enhancement. As the Great Schism unfolded, displaying the ugly state of the papcy, it only confirmed the accuracy of Wycliffe’s uninhibited assessment of Church corruption. [13]

1378

Wycliffe’s tract, De Veritate Sacrae Scripturae (On the Truth of Holy Scripture), which he completed in about 1378, “shook the fourteenth-century English social structure to its roots. In this tract, Wycliffe refutes in the most scholarly opf terms the time-honored doctyrine of ‘mediate dominion.” This is the blief that people can learn Bible truth only through the medium of a priest or some other Church authority. Man’s relationship with God is “immediate,” Wycliffe contended, and as there should be no barriers between God and his children, there should be no barriers between God’s Word and His children. Wycliffe asserted that no priest had more right to the Word of God than an ordinary layperson. [14]

So far, with respect to the 1380’s, no sources regarding Gutleben have become known from any other city or region. We may assume that he remained active in Strassburg until the end of his contract. A correspondence record from from the Strassburg City Archive, undated, unfortuanatelyt, undoubtedly stems from this time and shows the Jewish physician Gutleben resideng in the cathedral city, in correspondence with his co-religionist Ismael, a former member of the Strassburg Jewish community, who was obviously staing in Augsburg and had fallen into trouble. [15]

1380 to1383

Vivelin/Gutleben in Colmar.[16]

1381

Master Gutleben worked only a few years in the position of Basel’s city physician and received at the end of the year 24 fl. at the most. Starting in 1381, he at first is not mentioned any more in the Basel records; he seems to have left the city at that time.[17]

1382

Fragments of the Bible had been translated into English by scholars such as Caedmon int the seventh century, the Venerable Bede in the eighth century and King Alfred in the ninth century, but no complete English Bible appeared until Wycliffe’s in 1382.[18]

To achieve his goal of making the Scriptures widely available in the vernacular, Wycliffe gathered around him a small band of scholars, notably Nicholas of Hereford and John Purvey, who assisted himn in the work of translation. It is generally acknowledged that Wycliff did not do all the translating himself, although he was the inspiration and driving force behind the project. He and his associates wisely translated into the Middle English dialect, the most widely spoken dialect of the time in England, and byu so doing helped standardize and shape the future of our language. Wycliffe has been classed with Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Tyndale as one of the chief makers of the English language.

Wycliff’es Bible was not a translation fromn the original languages for two reasons: first, the manuscripts that later became available had not yet been discovered; furthermore, he was not a Greek and Hebrew scholar, as those languages were not commonly taught in England at the time. But Wycliffe and associates were good Latin scholars, and the source for their translation of the Scriptures was Jerome’s Latin Vulgate.

Almost 75 years would pass before the intyroduction of the printing press in Europe, hence all of Wycliff’s Bibles had to be handwritten. It took about ten months for a scribe to reproduce one copy of the Bible and the cost of a copy was between 30 and 40 English pounds, and enourmous sum of money in those days, considering the average yearly salary was only a fraction of that amount. In spite of the cost and the small number available, the Wycliff Bibles created a sensation among the common people of England. At last many of them dould hyear or read the Word of God for the first time in their own language.[19]

Not only did Wycliffe oversee the first complete translation of the English Bible, he and collegues trained “poor priests” Wycliffe called them, and sent them throughout England, dressed in modest russet cloth, their backpacks stuffed with tracts and portions of the new translation of Scripture[20]

March 1395

At the end of March 1395 the same source mentions that the city paid Guleben a debt owed as much as 30 fl. But at the order of the council, however, evidently he was fired in Colmar. One can only speculate on the reason for this falling out; the city could have required the continuous presence of its doctor.[21]

1397: Both parties evidently came to an agreement again in regards to Gutleben’s employment, for in 1397 the Colmar magistrate agreed to give to the physician Master Johann each year 2 lib. Strassburg currency and for the current year and four loads of wood, wheras Gutleben was promised 6 lib. per year and four loads of wood besides. These appear to be untypical for our Vivelin/Gutleben; if he had looked for other employment at that time it would not be surprising.[22]

1397: This employment in Basel turned out to be the first time the Jewish physician was the only Israelite in the town except for his household, for in 1397 all other Jews, in fear of their lives, had fled from the city because of renewed accusations against them for poisoning wells.[23]

1398: In the following year the Basel magistrate complained that poor and rich no longer had a municipal physician available, although one was urgently needed. For this reason a contract was made with Master Gutleben the Jew to serve as a physician for ten years. Gutleben promised to serve the city while the magistrate promised to pay him 50 fl. salary per year, the same sum to which Gutleben and the Strassburg authorities had agree! As well as to protect as solid citizens Gutleben’s family and servants, who ate his bread; to practice usury, consequently, giving loans, was definitely not allowed. If other Jews, as in earlier times, would come to reside in the city again, Gutleben should participate in all their freedoms. Furthermore, should a Jewish guest appear in Basel in the future, Gutleben would be allowed to host, but he would not be allowed to give him quarter for the night. Finally, the city granted Gutleben the same legal rights of protection that were enjoyed by the other citizens.[24]

1398: Therefore, the newly appointed city physician Gutleben settled in the year 1398 in a house, well known to him, that belonged previously to Eberlin from Colmar, which again illustrates the close contact that Master Guleben must once have had to this fellow Jew and his family. But as to where the surgeon had lived in his first stay in Basel, apparently nothing more can be found.[25]

1398 to 1406 : Vivelin/Gutleben in Basel.[26]

1398: Some believe that Prince Henry Sinclair whose descendents built the Roselan Chapel in Edinbouro, Scotland, learned about the North American plants that are found within its designs, in 1398 when he transported Templars and Bloodline Descendants to the new world. Prince Henry, of Scandinavian ancestry, is thought to have followed ancient Viking routes across the Atlantic.

A medieval account called Zeno’s Narrative, tells of European ships landing on the the coast of what is now Nova Scotia, a province in Eastern Canada. Zeno’s narrative also reported the curious spectical of tar bublling up from a spring, trickeling to the coast. We now know that the only place on the Atlantic Seaboard fitting this description lies near the modern day city of Stellarton, in Nova Scotia. [27]

In 1398 the land inland from the shores of Nova Scotia was home to the Micmac people who say a man came from the east on the backs of whales. The Sinclairs were Viking descendants, and one of Scotlands most famous families. The gained their prestige as being the direct servants of the King and Queen of Scotland. They were integral to the ruling of the nation. [28]

According to the bloodline theory about 100 religious refugees stayed on in the new world. They gradually worked their way up the coast to what is now known as Quebec. Among the artifacts found were masonry tools in charcoal. The radio carbon date of the charcoal were estimated to be within 1410 to 1670 A.D. The discovery has fueled the theory that the settlement was from Templars and bloodline descendants brought to the new world by Prince Henry Sinclair in 1398. [29] In that environment, some say Prince Henry became privy to the Templars most tightly held secret, that of the Holy Grail. Some say he was looking for a place to hide it when he left on a voyage in 1398. [30]

March 13, 1421 (9th of Nisan): After nearly a year’s imprisonment, the Jews of Austria were ordered to be burned. “In Vienna alone, more than a hundred perished in one field near the Danube.”[31]

March 13, 1615: Birthdate of Antonio Pignatelli who as Pope Innocent XII abolished Jewish loan-banks in Rome 1682. In the following year he extended the ban to Ferrara and other Jewish ghettos under his authority. He also prohibited the Jews under his control from serving as shopkeeper and banned them most trades and crafts, causing the Roman Jewish community to shrink.
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/History/italytime.html

1615 Jews expelled from Worms.[32]

March 13, 1656: The Jews were denied the right to build a synagogue in New Amsterdam.[33]

March 13, 1741: Birthdate of Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor. On the positive side, Joseph did away with numerous humiliating conditions for his Jewish subjects including the special badges and taxes. He wanted to liberate the Jews from “humiliating and oppressive laws and to assure that all Austrian subjects could contribute to the public welfare without any distinction with regard to nationality and religion.” The thrust of his reforms were intended to make Germans out of his Jewish subjects. This liberalization worried the empire’s anti-Semites. But it also bothered Jewish leaders including Moses Mendelssohn. They feared that the price of being free was a diluted Judaism.[34]

1741

Valentine Crawford Jr. married Catherine about 1741.

Another reference describing the relationship between Washington and Val and William Crawford that my son, Jeffery, has put together is letters to and from George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress 1741-1799. He is compiling these in one binder. I have received a few copies which are attached (Ref#38, 39).[35]



1741

One reference says that his (Daniel McKinnon’s) wife Ruth was born in Anne Arundel County, Maryland before 1741 and that they married in Anne Arundel County. [36]



1741

It has been stated that Zachariah Connell, was the husband of Ann Crawford, but this is a mistake. Zachariah is said to have been born about 1741. He died in August of 1813 and was married twice. The first time to Rebecca Rice and to this union, 9 children were born. He married secondly, to Margaret Wallace, no doubt a younger woman; and to this marriage, two children are mentioned. The family burial place is in Connellsville, northwest section. Some of his children are buried there also. Connellsville was named after this family.[37]



William McGachen[38] to George Washington, March 13, 1774



BALTIMORE March 13th. 1774



DEAR SIR



I received your very agreeable favour by Mr Crawford I have done my self the pleasure to give him every assistance in my power and has purchased for you Four men convicts four Indented servants for three years and a man & his wife for four years the price Is I think rather high but as they are country likely people and you at present wanted them Mr Crawford said he imagined you would be well satisfied with our Bargain I have agreed to pay £110 Sterling for them the first of next may which I hope you will be pleased with should you want any more there is a ship expected this month with country convicts I suppose six months credit may [bel got for a parcel of them on the same terms 1 have bought the parcel now sent you as they are at present scarce and in demand I shall always take pleasure in doing every thing in my power to serve you here I am respectfully



Dear sir Your most Obdt Hum Servt

WILL MCGACHEN[39]



Cambridge, March 13, 1776.



Sir: In my letter of the 7th. and 9th. Instant, which I had the honor of Addressing you, I mentioned the Intelligence I had received respecting the embarkation of the Troops from Boston and fully expected before this, that the Town would have

been entirely evacuated. Altho' I have been deceived and was rather premature in the Opinion I had then formed I have little reason to doubt but the event will take place in a very short time, as other Accounts which have come to hand since,

the sailing of a great number of Transports from the Harbour to Nantasket Road and many circumstances corresponding therewith seem to confirm & render it unquestionable.



Whether the Town will be destroyed is a matter of much uncertainty, but it would seem from the destruction they are making of sundry pieces of furniture, of many of their Waggons, Carts &ca. which they cannot take with 'em, as it is said, that

it will not; For if they intended it, the whole might be involved in one general ruin.



Holding it of the last importance in the present contest, that we should secure New York and prevent the Enemy from possessing it, and conjecturing they have views of that sort and their embarkation to be for that purpose, I judged it necessary

under the situation of things here, to call a Council of General Officers to consult of such measures as are expedient to be taken at this interesting conjuncture of Affairs. A copy of the proceedings I have the honor to inclose you.[40]



Agreeable to the Opinion of the Council, I shall detach the Rifle Regiment tomorrow under the Command of Brigadier General Sullivan with orders to repair to New York, with all possible expedition, which will be succeeded the day after by the other five in one Brigade, they being all that it was thought advisable to send from hence until the Enemy shall have quitted the Town. Immediately upon their departure, I shall send forward Major General Putnam and will follow myself with the remainder of the Army as soon as I have it in my power; leaving here only such a number of men as circumstances may seem to require.



As the badness of the roads at this Season will greatly retard the March of our men, I have by advice of the General Officers wrote to Governor Trumbull by this express to use his utmost exertions for throwing a reinforcement of two Thousand

Men into New York from the Western parts of Connecticut, and to the Commanding Officer there, to apply to the Provincial Convention or Committee of Safety of New Jersey, for a thousand more, for the same purpose, to oppose the Enemy and prevent

their getting possession, in case they arrive before our Troops get there, of which there's a probability unless they are impeded by Contrary Winds. This Measure, tho it will be attended with considerable expence, I flatter myself will meet the

Approbation of Congress. The Lines in Boston and on Boston Neck point out the propriety and suggest the necessity of keeping them from gaining possession and making a Lodgement. Should their destination be further southward or for Halifax for

the purpose of going into Canada, the March of our Troops to New York, will place them nearer the scene of Action and more convenient for affording succours.



We have not taken post on Nuke [Nook's] Hill and fortified it, as mentioned we should in my last. On hearing that the Enemy were about to retreat and leave the Town, It was thought imprudent and unadvisable to force them with too much

precipitation, that we might gain a little time and prepare for a March. To morrow Evening we shall take possession of it unless they are gone. As New York is of such importance; prudence and policy require, that every precaution that can be

devised, should be adopted to frustrate the designs which the Enemy may have of obtaining possession of it. To this End I have ordered Vessels to be provided and held ready at Norwich for the embarkation and Transportation of our Troops

thither. This I have done with a view not only of expediting their arrival, as it will save several days marching but also that they may be fresh and fit for intrenching and throwing up Works of defence, as soon as they got there, If they do

meet the Enemy to contend with, for neither of which would they be in a proper condition after a long and fatiguing March in bad roads. If Wallace with his Ships should be apprized of the measure and attempt to prevent it by stopping up the

Harbour at New London, they can but pursue their March by Land.



You will be pleased to observe, that it is the Opinion of the General Officers, If the Enemy abandon the Town, that it will be unnecessary to employ or keep any of this Army for its defence, and that I have mentioned on, that event's happening,

I shall immediately repair to New York with the remainder of the Army not now detached, leaving only such a Number of Men here as circumstances may seem to require. What I partly allude to is, that as it will take a considerable time for the

removal of such a large body of men, as the Divisions must precede each other in such order as to allow intermediate time sufficient for 'era to be covered and provided for on the route, and many things done previous to the march of the whole

for securing and forwarding such necessaries, as can not be carried Immediately, (if proper to be carried at all) That some directions might be received from Congress, as to the number which they may judge necessary to be kept here for these or

any other purposes. I could wish to have their commands upon the Subject and in time, as I may be under some degree of embarrassment as to their views.



Congress having been pleased to appoint Col. Thompson a Brigadier General, there is a Vacancy for a Colonel in the Regiment he commanded, to which I would beg leave to recommend the Lieut. Col. Hand[41] I shall also take the Liberty of

recommending Captain Hugh Stevenson of the Virginia Riflemen to succeed Col. Hand & to be appointed in his place as Lieut. Col. (there being no Major, Magaw[42] the late one being appointed Lt. Col. of one of the Pennsylvania Battalions and gone

from hence) He is in my Opinion the fittest person in this Army for it, as well as the oldest Captain in the service, having distinguished himself at the Head of a Rifle Company



Col. Mifflin Informed me to day, of his having received Tent Cloths from Mr. Barrett of Philadelphia to the amount of 7,500 Ð of Pennsylvania Currency and applied for a Warrant for Payment of it. But our Fund being low & many demands against

it, which must be satisfied and our calls for Money will be exceedingly great, I could not grant it, thinking it might be convenient for payment to be made in Philadelphia by your order, on the Treasury there.[43] I have the Honor &ca.[44]



March 13, 1777

That the Council of the Massachusetts State erect at the Expence of the United States in some convenient place in the County of Worcester in said State, Barracks with a Stockade or enclosure surrounding the same, capable of containing 1,500 Prisoners, to be built of wood, as may appear to them most conducive to the public service and in the end least expensive to the Public.

Whereas applications are frequently made to Congress for employment in the continental army by gentlemen from Europe of various nations, who may very probably have great merit, but, not understanding our language, can be of no use in the army of these States; therefore,

Resolved, That the Committee of Secret Correspondence be directed forthwith to write to all their ministers and agents abroad, to discourage all gentlemen from coming to America with expectation of employment in the service, unless they are masters of our language, and have the best recommendations.

Resolved, That the two German Officers mentioned in the Letter of his Excellency Governor Henry, not understanding our Language, cannot be provided for by Congress in the Army of the United States.[45]

On March 13, 1826, William Morgan of Batavia, N.Y. signed a book contract for a publication he said would expose the Freemasons’ secrets. When word got out, a rogue group of men professing to be Freemasons burned the printer’s shop and threatened Morgan. When the New York author was jailed for non-payment of debts, a benefactor bailed him out, but Morgan was kidnapped off of the streets as he left the jail and never seen again. Five men later confessed that they had taken him to the old Fort Niagara, but that he had escaped. As the arrests were made and the men brought to trial, anti Masonic sentiments were enraged when it was discovered that the local judge, sheriff, and some jurors belonged to the fraternity. Seeing a political opportunity to permanently damage Andrew Jackson, who was elected and had served as Grand Master of the Tennessee Masonic Lodge in 1822 and 23, President John Quincy Adams immediately began a campaign of written opinions denouncing the organization and calling on its members to leave the lodges, in spite of the fact that Adams’ former colleagues George Washington and other American colonial leaders were members. Adams was joined in his efforts by fundamentalist evangelists who tried to persuade the people that the Masonic fraternity was a diabolical organization. For two years, the sentiment was pushed across the country by Adams and eventually led to the formation of the Anti-Masonic Political Party.[46]



Sun. March 13[47][48], 1864 (William Harrison Goodlove Iowa 24th Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlove)

Started at 7 am – marched 15 miles

Camped on the byo tash[49] at 3 pm had

Preaching at 5 pm pretty campground



March 13, 1865: William McKinnon Goodlove, and the Union Army, K Co. 57th Battle at Fayetteville, North Carolina on March 13, 1865.[50]

March 13, 1881: Alexander II of Russia was assassinated, which put an end to his half-hearted liberalism. He was succeeded by Alexander III who was devoted to medievalism and urged a return to “Russian civilization.” The most influential person during his reign was Pobestonostov, his financier and procurator of the Holy Synod, who earned the title "the Second Torquemada." The newspapers in Moscow, Kiev and Odessa began a campaign against the Jews which would only lead to greater outbreaks of anti-Semitism as the Czarist regime swirled forward on its downward dance with destruction that ended in 1917.[51]





1881-1884

Pogroms sweep southern Russia, propelling mass Jewish emigration from the Pale of Settlement: about 2 million Russian Jews emigrated in period 1880-1924, many of them to the United States (until the National Origins Quota of 1924 and Immigration Act of 1924 and Immigration Act of 1924 largely halted immigration to the U.S. from Eastern Europe and Russia). The Russian word “pogrom” becomes international.[52]



Things are going fairly well for the Goodlove’s in Iowa, however our ancestors are fighting for their lives and we don’t even know it. A number of Cohen DNA matches indicate their earliest known ancestors were from Russia. Goodlove’s have a common ancestor with these individuals.







March 13, 1896:



Convoy 42, November 6, 1942.



Convoy 42 included 478 men, 504 women, and 16 undetermined. Among them were 221 children under 18, half (113) of whom were under 12. Some were from the Paris region; the others were taken in the provinces during the mid-October roundups (see Convoy 40).[53]



On Convoy 42 was Syra Gotlib was born March 13, 1896 in Dzindow, Poland. .[54]



There were 18 sublists, reflecting the different areas people were taken from.



1. Drancy 1—90 names.

2. Drancy 2—54 names.

3. Drancy 3—13 names.

4. Poitiers—200 names. They were among the 617 Jews arrested in mid-October by the SiPo-SD commando of Poitiers (XXVc-253). The ones here were transferred to Drancy and deported with this convoy. There were families, children, and old people.

5. Haute-Saone—8 names. Seven of the people were German; all were elderly.

6. Angers –45 names. They were mainly Poles and were among the 296 people arrested in Angers in mid-October.

7. Angouleme—55 names. Among them were several children.

8. Alencon—16 names.

9. Le Creusot—25 names. Children without parents.

10. Dijon—13 names, from amonmg the 122 Jews arrested in Dijon in mid-October.

11. Chalon-sur=-Saone—8 names.

12. Le Mans—62 names. This group contained Poles and French.

13. Melun—52 names.

14. Merignac—69 names.

15. Nancy—142 names. In mid-October, 234 people had been interned in Ecrouves. This group, mainly French and Polish, was transferred to Drancy for deportation.

16. Rouen—28 names, for the most part Romanian. Some were small children.

17. Rivesaltes—94 names, mainly Germans, Austrians, and Poles.

18. Last minute departures; 16 names.



The routine telex reporting the departure of Convoy 42 is numbered XXVc-193. Composed by SS Heinrichsohn and signed by his superior, Rothke, it notified Berlin, Oranienburg, and Auschwitz that convoy 901/36 left the staion at Le Bourget/Drancy on November 6 at 8:55 AM, with 1,000 Jews for Auschwitz, escorted by Feldwebel Ullmeier. Other related docuemtns are XXVc-192 (of October 31 and November 2).



When they arrived in Auschwitz, 145 men were selected and given numbers 74021 through 74165. As with Convoy 40, this number indicates that there was no prior selection at Kosel. Eighty two women were selected and given numbers 23963 through 24044; none returned.



In 1945 there were four survivors, all men.[55]



• March 13, 1898: Karl Gottlieb, born March 13, 1898 in Fulda. Resided Frankfurt am Main. Deportation: from Drancy

• Marz 1943, Majdanek/Lublin. Declared legally dead.[56]





March 13, 1901: Benjamin Harrison, twenty-third President of the United States, dies in Indianapolis, Indiana[57].



March 13, 1933: Jewish lawyers and judges were expelled from court in Breslau.[58]

March 13, 1938: March 13 the Anschluss was proclaimed. Austria existed as a federal state of Germany until the end of World War II, when the Allied powers declared the Anschluss void and reestablished an independent Austria. Schuschnigg, who had been imprisoned soon after resigning, was released in 1945.[59]

• March 13, 1940: Invasion of Finland by the USSR, followed by the Winter War. [60]

• Ostindustrie GmbH is founded by the SS to exploit Jewish labor in the Generalgouvernement.[61]

• March 13, 2010



• I GET EMAIL!



• Jane, Brian, and the boys are coming to visit in July!!



• Jillian doing Environmental engineering project in Mexico City in late March!



• Greetings Jeffery,



• I want to thank you for taking the time out of your busy schedule to write me back with the article reference and for sending along the wonderful pictures! In fact the picture will be submitted along with my application. Finding these pieces to the puzzle concerning my direct lineage to Captain Thomas Moore (note: he retired from the KY militia as a Major) helps my SAR sponsor verify I am who I say I am. So to answer your question, I am always interested in additional information regarding Thomas More even after my membership acceptance and would love to see what else is out there. I would be always glad to reciprocate if you are interested.



• My interest in the SAR was sparked by a television discussion I saw in which the organization was mentioned. I vaguely remembered my Father saying he had applied for membership in 1943 when he was a Navy aviator during WWII. I figured I was a legacy and could also join. I looked on-line and contacted the National Office at the following address http://www.sar.org/ to see if they had any of my Father’s original applications documents and what the qualifications for membership were. In fact they did have old hardcopies they scanned and sent to me. I thought membership would be a given since he completed most of the lineage documentation to a Revolutionary War Patriot Soldier which is the first and foremost qualification needed. I thought I would simply need to add my name and it would happen. As I stated in my last message the SAR is very diligent regarding whom they let into their organization and always need proper documentation. With the advent of the internet it is my understanding they typically are no longer as readily willing to accept documentation from sources such as family bible notations, word of mouth family histories, or other on-line family genealogies without actual evidence, thus my interest in your magazine article.



• The web site has a plethora of information on how to get started. Is or was your Father or a blood relative ever a SAR member? That would help to expedite things. If not, the site provides adequate instruction in the way to get stated. I would be more than willing to help you however I can. My SAR sponsor who is the Registrar of the Indiana Chapter is helping me immensely with proving a lot of what my Father had previously documented on his application. In fact we have found a few discrepancies that have been corrected. I don’t know if all States provide this level of help. There is an initial outlay of about $150.00 split proportionately National, State and Local Chapters. After that there is just a yearly membership fee required.



• After sending the headstone pictures to my sponsor he agreed that indeed a restoration was needed and that the KY SAR would most likely be willing assist with a restoration project and that the US Veterans Administration will send you a brand new headstone for free, including freight. All I would have to do is install it.



• Through my research, I understand the Lindsey-Moore Cemetery is on a private farm near Cynthiana KY. Both my Mother and Father were born there and my father is buried in Cynthiana. I visit his grave site whenever possible and will try to make arrangements next time to visit Captain Moore’s, if allowed. May I ask what, if any, permission your Father needed to get access to the gravesite? If so, whom did he contact and does he remember specific directions to get there. I believe the Harrison Co. Historical Society may know more.





• As you may know Thomas Moore married Mary Harrison, sister to Benjamin Harrison original signer of the Declaration of Independence and grandfather to William Henry Harrison, 9th President of the United States. In closing, is seems we are related to an original signer, a president and each other!





• Please keep in touch and I’ll let you know about the gravesite restoration when I get up and running.



• John,





• I am glad that you will find some use of these photos and information that my mother, father and I have collected. I spoke to my father, Gary Goodlove a few days ago, and he reiterated the importance of preserving this graveyard. I am confident that with your perseverance that this can be accomplished. You have my blessing and if needed I will help in any way I can to push this forward. I do have more information, particularly a copy of a of the previously discussed Woods letter. It might be a retyped version but it has more information on it then what I published and sent you earlier. It has more detail about the cemetery etc.





• I am interested in any information you have about Thomas Moore, and I will send you what I have.





• I sent an email to the Illinois SAR new member contact person indicating my interest in applying for membership to the SAR. Thank you for your assistance with this.





• I will speak with my father, Gary Goodlove and mother Mary "Winch" Goodlove today about their adventure to Cynthiana. I can tell you my father likes this story very much. I will find out what channels he went through. A couple things first...



• you said



• "As you may know Thomas Moore married Mary Harrison, sister to Benjamin Harrison original signer of the Declaration of Independence and grandfather to William Henry Harrison, 9th President of the United States. In closing, is seems we are related to an original signer, a president and each other!"



• Mary Harrison was the Sister to Benjamin Harrison, but not Benjamin Harrison, the signer. She is the sister of Benjamin Harrison, son of Lawrence Harrison and Catherine Marmaduke. Harrison County of which you also referred is named after him. Enclosed is a photograph Gary Goodlove with a sign to that effect. Photo by Mary Goodlove



• [1]



• Also, this Benjamin Harrison is not the Grandfather to William Henry Harrison. There is a connection however, but it is more distant. I have the records for the Harrison line if that helps.



• Looking forward to hearing from you.



• Jeff Goodlove



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

[1] High Priests and Politics in Roman Palestine by E. Mary Smallwood, 1962, page 14, 17

[2] National Geographic, December 2008, page 46.

[3] National Geographic, December, 2008, page 59.

[4] [1]The world Before and After Jesus, Desire of the Everlasting Hills by Thomas Cahill, page 337.



[5] [3] National Geographic, December 2008, page 46.

[6] [2] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, page 117-118.

[7] The Knights Templar, American Home Treasures CD, 2001

[8] The Knights Templar, American Home Treasures CD, 2001

[9] . The Templar Code, HISTI, 6/17/2006.

[10] The Templar Code, HISTI, 6/17/2006.

[11] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.

[12] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 5.



[13] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 37.

[14] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 45.

[15] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 4.

[16] Die mittelalterliche Arzte-Familie,, Gutleben” page 93.

[17] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.

[18] Trial by Fire by Harold Rawlings, page 33.

[19] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 24.

[20] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 52

[21] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 4.

[22] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 4.

[23] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 5.

[24] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 4-5.

[25] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 5.

[26] Die mittelalterliche Arzte-Familie,, Gutleben” page 93.



[27] Holy Grail, HISTI, 10/22/2001

[28] Holy Grail in America, 9/20/2009.

[29] The Holy Grail, HISTI, 10/22/2001

[30] Holy Grail in America, 9/20/2009.

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

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

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

[34]

[35] Conrad and Caty, By Gary Goodlove

[36] (http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-in?=GET&dbriewis&id=111822rlewis70@bellsouth.net).

(http://washburnhill.freehomepage.com/custom3.html)

[37] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969. p. 63-64..

[38] [Note 1: 1 This name in vol. iii. is erroneously given as William M. Gachen.]





[39] The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799

Letters to Washington and Accompanying Papers. Published by the Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Edited by Stanislaus Murray Hamilton.--vol. 04

[40] [The proceedings of this council are in theWashington Papers.]



[41] [Note: Lieut. Col. Edward Hand.]

[42] [Robert Magaw, of Thompson's rifle regiment.] all the last War and highly merited the approbation of his superior officers.

[43] [In the writing of Robert Hanson Harrison.]

[44] The George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress, 1741-1799, George Washington to Continental Congress, March 13, 1776 , The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. John C. Fitzpatrick, Editor.--vol. 04

[45]Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789

[46] http://www.tennesseehistory.com/class/Jackson.htm



[47] The campaign began on Sunday, March 13, 1864, as the regiment left Berwick City and marched up Bayou Tech. Pushing over the same route as the previous fall, the Iowans marched through Franklin, New Iberia, Opelousas, and arrived with seven miles of Alexandria on March 24.

(William T. Rigby and the Red Oak Boys in Louisiana by Terrence J. Winschel)

http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/spec-coll/bai/winschel.htm



[48] On the 13th joined the Red River Expedition under General Banks.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24th_Iowa_Volunteer_Infantry_Regiment

[49] Bayou Teche.

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

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

[52] www.wikipedia.org

[53] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 336.

[54] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 339

[55] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 336-337.

• [56] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

• [2] Memorial Book: Victims of the Persecution of Jews under the National socialist Oppression in Germany, 1933-1945. Gedenkbuch (Germany)* does not include many victims from area of former East Germany).





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

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

[59] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/germany-annexes-austria

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

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


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