Sunday, April 24, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, April 24

• This Day in Goodlove History, April 24

• 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.



“Jacob’s Legacy, A Genetic View of Jewish History” by David B. Goldstein, 2008.



• 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.





The details for the GOODLOVE FAMILY REUNION were mailed Apr 9, 2011. If you haven't received the information and want to attend, please e-mail 11Goodlovereunion@gmail.com to add your name to the mailing list. RSVP's are needed by May 10.

Goodlove Family Reunion

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Pinicon Ridge Park, Central City, Iowa

4729 Horseshoe Falls Road, Central City, Iowa 52214

319-438-6616

www.mycountyparks.com/County/Linn/Park/Pinicon-Ridge-Park

The plans at the 2007 reunion were to wait 5 years to meet again. But hey, we are all aging a bit, so why wait: Because it was so hot with the August date, we are trying June this year. We hope that you and your family will be able to come. This is the same location as 2007 and with the same details. The mailing lists are hard to keep current, so I’m sure I have missed a lot of people. Please ask your relatives if they have the information, and pass this on to any relative who needs it.

Horseshoe Falls Lodge 8 AM to 8 PM. We will set up and clean up (although help is nice).

Please sign the Guest Book. Come early, stay all day, or just for a while.

Food- Hy-Vee will cater chicken & Ham plus coffee/iced tea/lemonade. Please bring a vegetable, appetizer, salad, bread or dessert in the amount you would for any family dinner. For those coming from a distance, there are grocery stores in Marion for food and picnic supplies.

Dinner at Noon. Supper at 5 PM. Please provide your own place settings.

Games-Mary & Joe Goodlove are planning activities for young & ‘not so young’. Play or watch. The Park also has canoes and paddle boats (see website for more information).

Lodging- The park does have campsites and a few cabins. Reservations 319-892-6450 or on-line. There are many motels/hotels in Marion/Cedar Rapids area.

The updated Family tree will be displayed for you to add or modify as needed.

Family albums, scrapboods or family information. Please bring anything you would like to share. There will be tables for display. If you have any unidentified Goodlove family photos, please bring those too. Maybe someone will bhe able to help.

Your RSVP is important for appropriate food/beverage amounts. Please send both accepts & regrets to Linda Pedersen by May 10.

Something new: To help offset reunion costs (lodge rental/food/postage), please consider a donation of at leat $5 for each person attending. You may send your donation with your RSVP or leave it ‘in the hat’ June 12.

Hope to hear from you soon and see you June 12.

Mail

Linda Pedersen

902 Heiler Court

Eldridge, IA 52748

Call:

563-285-8189 (home)

563-340-1024 (cell)

E-mail:

11goodlovereunion@gmail.com

Pedersen37@mchsi.com

I Get Email!



In a message dated 4/16/2011 3:09:58 P.M. Central Daylight Time, ddjdickens5@aol.com writes:


You've probably seen some of these, but there's some new ones, too. Eeeeeeeeek......



dj

































In a message dated 4/15/2011 5:25:48 P.M. Central Daylight Time, JPT@donationnet.net writes:



Dear Jeff,

Moishe Holzberg, a four-year-old child orphaned when his parents were killed in a terrorist attack in Mumbai, India, has been named to light one of the beacons at Mount Herzl military cemetery in celebration of Israel's Independence Day next month. The orphaned boy, who is being raised by his grandparents, will light this powerful symbol of Chabad light overcoming the darkness.

Another of the twelve beacons will be lit by Holocaust survivor Michael Goldman Gilad, who still bears the Auschwitz number 161135 on his arm. Gilad headed the team that interrogated the notorious Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann after his capture in Argentina. He also witnessed the execution of the man who was responsible for the death of so many during the Holocaust.


This ceremony is just one of many that will mark Israel's annual celebration of their rebirth as a nation in 1948. This year the anniversary will be marked on May 9th. This special day remembers the fulfillment of ancient Bible prophecy that God would gather His Chosen People back to the Promised Land after they had been scattered.

Today as Israel prepares for this anniversary, it is under assault from all sides. The Jewish people are hated more than any other group on earth, and at this crisis moment, we must stand with them as never before.



Your ambassador to Jerusalem,

Dr. Michael Evans



In a message dated 4/15/2011 12:05:54 P.M. Central Daylight Time, cultural@chicago.mfa.gov.il writes:



'Impending diplomatic tsunami' is greatly exaggerated

By E. KONTOROVICH
04/11/2011 22:50




When friends of Israel fret about delegitimization by the UN General Assembly, they unwittingly give the body more power than it has.

Talkbacks (16)



The Palestinian Authority’s declared intention of seeking admission to the United Nations from the General Assembly would be considered a triumph for the Palestinians and would ostensibly put Israel in instant legal and diplomatic jeopardy if it does not promptly withdraw to the armistice lines of 1949. But these assumptions give the possible GA vote far more significance and legitimacy than it deserves.

First, the General Assembly can only admit states upon the recommendation of the Security Council, where an American veto appears to block the way. In the absence of such a recommendation, seeking recognition from the GA resolution is at best a legal nullity, and a mockery of the procedures enshrined in the UN Charter.

Even within the scope of its role in admitting new members, the GA only has the power to admit states, not the power to create or determine members’ borders. (That role, within the UN system, would fall to the International Court of Justice or the Security Council). The Security Council has already determined in Resolution 242, adopted in the wake of the Six Day War, that Israel need not return all of the land it took from various Arab states in that conflict. Certainly the GA cannot overrule the Security Council. Moreover, one of the first opinions of the Court held that decisions about membership cannot be leveraged to push other substantive agendas. Thus it is meaningless to speak of the GA recognizing Palestine with any particular set of borders. Just as the GA had no binding role to play in 1947, when it came out in favor of a partition of the Palestine Mandate, it can no more enforce partition now.

Another major fallacy contends that the GA’s recognition of a Palestinian state within all of the Green Line would automatically make Israel an international outlaw, because it would be occupying some of that territory. Palestinian leaders dramatically claim that Israel would be in “daily violation” of the GA resolution. If the GA’s resolutions controlled Israel’s legitimacy, it would long have ceased to exist within any borders. The international parliament in 1975 famously adopted its “Zionism equals racism” resolution, condemning the very project of a Jewish state in the Middle East within any borders. Yet the endorsement of the idea by an overwhelming vote of the GA did not make it real or true, and the resolution was eventually rescinded, the only GA measure to meet such a fate.

EVEN IF Palestine were properly admitted to the UN, the occupation of territory within the internationally recognized borders of a UN member by another member is not uncommon. It does not result in condemnation, boycotts or even any attention. For example, Turkey occupies half of Cyprus; Russia occupies several sections of Georgia, Moldova and other former Soviet states. And that is just tranquil Europe. Indeed, Russia significantly expanded its occupation and colonization of Georgia in the war two years ago, yet it remains an erstwhile member of the Middle East Quartet. Even if a Palestinian state were announced by the GA, conflict would exist only over a small portion of the territory. Because of the Oslo process, which turned half of the West Bank over to Palestinian control, and the 2005 disengagement, which took all Israeli troops and civilians out of Gaza, Israel’s central demands now involve sovereignty over settlements, which make up a small percentage of the total area. A Palestinian state would join the long list of states that have unresolved border disputes with neighbors. None of these situations results in a diplomatic tsunami.

To be sure, GA recognition of Palestine may be turned into an occasion for further demonizing and isolating the Jewish state. But that would not be the obvious and natural effect of such a resolution. It would simply be the illegitimate use to which Israel’s critics and enemies may choose to put it, a use that has nothing to do with international law or neutral principles. Those nations and organizations willing to jump on such a hollow excuse for a diplomatic assault on Israel have clearly already made up their minds.

Delegitimization by the UN can be a self-fulfilling prophecy. When friends of Israel fret about delegitimization by the GA, they unwittingly give the body more power than it has.

The writer is a professor of law at Northwestern University, specializing in international and constitutional law.

Caroline Glick’s Our World column will resume on April 26.





This Day…



April 24, 1479 B.C.: 1479 BC – Thutmose III ascends to the throne of Egypt, although power effectively shifts to Hatshepsut (according to the Low Chronology of the 18th Dynasty). [1]

1479 to1425 BC[2]

1468 BC
• Thutmose III thrusts northward and lays siege to Megiddo, the fortified Canaanite town in the Jezreel plain.[3]
1467
• Slavery under Cushan.[4]

1450 BC
• Canaan falls to Pharaoh Thutmose III, who pushes his army up to the Euphrates River.[5]
(c. 1400 BCE- c. 1277 BCE)

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

Aaron was Moses older brother. He was born in 2365 (of the Jewish calendar), three years before Moses, before the Pharaoh's edict requiring the death of male Hebrew children. He was the ancestor of all koheins, the founder of the priesthood, and the first Kohein Gadol (High Priest). Aaron and his descendants tended the altar and offered sacrifices. Aaron's role, unlike Moses's, was inherited; his sons continued the priesthood after him (Num. 20:26).

Aaron served as Moses's spokesman. As discussed above, Moses was not eloquent and had a speech impediment, so Aaron spoke for him (Ex. 4:10-16). Contrary to popular belief, it was Aaron, not Moses, who cast down the staff that became a snake before Pharaoh (Ex. 7:10-12). It was Aaron, not Moses, who held out his staff to trigger the first three plagues against Egypt (Ex. 7:19-20; Ex. 8:1-2 or 8:5-6; Ex. 8:12-13 or 8:16-17). According to Jewish tradition, it was also Aaron who performed the signs for the elders before they went to Pharaoh (Ex. 4:30).

Aaron's most notable personal quality is that he was a peacemaker. His love of peace is proverbial; Rabbi Hillel said, "Be disciples of Aaron, loving peace and pursuing peace, loving people and drawing them near the Torah." According to tradition, when Aaron heard that two people were arguing, he would go to each of them and tell them how much the other regretted his actions, until the two people agreed to face each other as friends.

In fact, Aaron loved peace so much that he participated in the incident of the Golden Calf (Ex. 32), constructing the idol in order to prevent dissension among the people. Aaron intended to buy time until Moses returned from Mount Sinai (he was late, and the people were worried), to discourage the people by asking them to give up their precious jewelry in order to make the idol, and to teach them the error of their ways in time (Ex. 32:22).

Aaron, like Moses, died in the desert shortly before the people entered the Promised Land (Num. 20). [He was 123 years old.][6]

The Cohen Modal Haplotype DNA is said to descend from Aaron, the patriarch of the Priestly line which is quoted in the Bible. The DNA was proven to be a unique line that continues today in those who claim to be descendants of the Cohens or priestly line. The Goodloves also have the unique Cohen DNA.



Moses

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

Along with God, it is the figure of Moses (Moshe) who dominates the Torah. Acting at God's behest, it is he who leads the Jews out of slavery, unleashes the Ten Plagues against Egypt, guides the freed slaves for forty years in the wilderness, carries down the law from Mount Sinai, and prepares the Jews to enter the land of Canaan. Without Moses, there would be little apart from laws to write about in the last four books of the Torah.

Moses is born during the Jewish enslavement in Egypt, during a terrible period when Pharaoh decrees that all male Hebrew infants are to be drowned at birth. His mother, Yocheved, desperate to prolong his life, floats him in a basket in the Nile. Hearing the crying child as she walks by, Pharaoh's daughter pities the crying infant and adopts him (Exodus). It surely is no coincidence that the Jews' future liberator is raised as an Egyptian prince. Had Moses grown up in slavery with his fellow Hebrews, he probably would not have developed the pride, vision, and courage to lead a revolt.

The Torah records only three incidents in Moses' life before God appoints him a prophet. As a young man, outraged at seeing an Egyptian overseer beating a Jewish slave, he kills the overseer. The next day, he tries to make peace between two Hebrews who are fighting, but the aggressor takes umbrage and says: "Do you mean to kill me as you killed the Egyptian?" Moses immediately understands that he is in danger, for though his high status undoubtedly would protect him from punishment for the murder of a mere overseer, the fact that he killed the man for carrying out his duties to Pharaoh would brand him a rebel against the king. Indeed, Pharaoh orders Moses killed, and he flees to Midian. At this point, Moses probably wants nothing more than a peaceful interlude, but immediately he finds himself in another fight. The seven daughters of the Midianite priest Reuel (also called Jethro) are being abused by the Midianite male shepherds, and Moses rises to their defense (Exodus).

The incidents are of course related. In all three, Moses shows a deep, almost obsessive commitment to fighting injustice. Furthermore, his concerns are not parochial. He intervenes when a non-Jew oppresses a Jew, when two Jews fight, and when non-Jews oppress other non-Jews.

Moses marries Tzipporah, one of the Midianite priest's daughters, and becomes the shepherd for his father-in-law's flock. On one occasion, when he has gone with his flock into the wilderness, an angel of the Lord appears to him in the guise of a bush that is burning but is not consumed (see next entry). The symbolism of the miracle is powerful. In a world in which nature itself is worshiped, God shows that He rules over it.

Once He has so effectively elicited Moses' attention, God commands-over Moses' strenuous objections-that he go to Egypt and along with his brother, Aaron, make one simple if revolutionary demand of Pharaoh: "Let my people go." Pharaoh resists Moses' petition, until God wreaks the Ten Plagues on Egypt, after which the children of Israel escape.

ca. 1446 B.C.

The Exodus.[7]

Ca. 1445 B.C.

God gives Moses the Ten Commandments.[8]

Months later, in the Sinai Desert, Moses climbs Mount Sinai and comes down with the Ten Commandments, only to discover the Israelites engaged in an orgy and worshiping a Golden Calf. The episode is paradigmatic: Only at the very moment God or Moses is doing something for them are they loyal believers. The instant God's or Moses' presence is not manifest, the children of Israel revert to amoral, immoral, and sometimes idolatrous behavior. Like a true parent, Moses rages at the Jews when they sin, but he never turns against them-even when God does. To God's wrathful declaration on one occasion that He will blot out the Jews and make of Moses a new nation, he answers, "Then blot me out too" (Exodus 32:32).

The law that Moses transmits to the Jews in the Torah embraces far more than the Ten Commandments. In addition to many ritual regulations. the Jews are instructed to love God as well as be in awe of Him, to love their neighbors as themselves, and to love the stranger-that is, the non-Jew living among them-as themselves as well.

The saddest event in Moses' life might well be God's prohibiting him from entering the land of Israel. The reason for this ban is explicitly connected to an episode in Numbers in which the Hebrews angrily demand that Moses supply them with water. God commands Moses to assemble the community, "and before their very eyes order the [nearby] rock to yield its water." Fed up with the Hebrews' constant whining and complaining, he says to them instead: "Listen, you rebels, shall we get water for you out of this rock?" He then strikes the rock twice with his rod, and water gushes out (Numbers 20:2-13). It is this episode of disobedience, striking the rock instead of speaking to it, that is generally offered as the explanation for why God punishes Moses and forbids him to enter Israel. The punishment, however, seems so disproportionate to the offense, that the real reason for God's prohibition must go deeper. Most probably, as Dr. Jacob Milgrom, professor of Bible at the University of California, Berkeley, has suggested (elaborating on earlier comments of Rabbi Hananael, Nachmanides, and the Bekhor Shor) that Moses' sin was declaring, "Shall we get water for you out of this rock?" implying that it was he and his brother, Aaron, and not God, who were the authors of the miracle. Rabbi Irwin Kula has suggested that Moses' sin was something else altogether. Numbers 14:5 records that when ten of the twelve spies returned from Canaan and gloomily predicted that the Hebrews would never be able to conquer the land, the Israelites railed against Moses. In response, he seems to have had a mini-breakdown: "Then Moses and Aaron fell on their faces before all the assembled congregation of the Israelites." The two independent spies, Joshua and Caleb, both of whom rejected the majority report, took over "and exhorted the whole Israelite community" (Numbers 14:7). Later, in Deuteronomy, when Moses delivers his final summing-up to the Israelites, he refers back to this episode: "When the Lord heard your loud complaint, He was angry. He vowed: "Not one of these men, this evil generation, shall see the good land that I swore to give to your fathers, none except Caleb.... Because of you, the Lord was incensed with me too, and He said: You shall not enter it either. Joshua ... who attends you, he shall enter it" (1:34-38).

Despite these two sad episodes, Moses impressed his monotheistic vision upon the Jews with such force that in the succeeding three millennia, Jews have never confused the messenger with the Author of the message. As Princeton philosopher Walter Kaufmann has written: "in Greece, the heroes of the past were held to have been sired by a god or to have been born of a goddess ... [and] in Egypt, the Pharaoh was considered divine." But despite the extraordinary veneration accorded Moses — "there has not arisen a prophet since like Moses" is the Bible's verdict ()) — no Jewish thinker ever thought he was anything other than a man. See And No One Knows His Burial Place to This Day.[9]

70 A.D.: During the Jewish rebellion against Rome, Roman legions break through Jerusalem’s middle wall, but are driven back by the Jewish defenders.[10]

April 24, 1288: A Christian body was placed in the house of the richest Jew of Troyes, France. The resulting tribunal condemned fourteen of the city's wealthiest men and women to be burned at the stake. This was part of a blood libel which the Dominicans and Franciscans used to “provoke a massacre of the local Jews.[11]

In 1290 Edward I expelled all Jews from England.[12] This lasted 350 years. Many resettled to Holland.[13]

1290 Jews expelled from Wales, resettled to France and Holland[14]

1290: The Mamuks assembled 60,000 cavalry, 160,000 infantry, a hundred manganel siege engines around the Christian capital of Acre. The Temple compound was the last building to fall and the Grand Master and all the remaining Templars were killed in the fighting. [15]

April 24, 1342: Pope Benedict XII passed away. In 1337 Benedict’s effort to protect the Jews when Christian mobs in Germany Bavaria, Bohemia, Moravia and Austria attacked them because of false accusations of “host desecration,” proved futile. Benedict’s intervention on behalf of the Jews marks him as unusual. His failure is a testament to the strong power of these false allocations.[16]

April 24, 1558 – Mary, Queen of Scots, marries the Dauphin of France, François, at Notre Dame de Paris. [17]

1558

After the death of Queen Mary in 1558, a new climate favorable to Protestantism arrived with the accession of Elizabeth I as queen of England.[18]

In line to the throne was Elizabeth, Mary’s half-sister and the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Bolyn. The last monarch of the Tudor dynasty, Elizabeth reigned from 1558 to 1603. Her long reign is remembered for many reasons, chief of which was the reinstitution of Protestantism as the state religion in England. She set in motion once again the reforming policies of her mother, and to some extent of her father.[19]



1559 Jews expelled from Austria.[20]



April 24, 1769: William Jacobs applied for a survey on April 24, 1769. Having sold the tract to Lawrence Harrison arid Prior Theobald, he executed a deed to them dated June 2, 1769. ‘ ,

Lawrence Harrison transferred his right to Theobald, July 10, 1769, and on April 5, 1776, Theobald deeded it to Jesse Martin, who, in 1777, sold it to William Jackson.” [21]



April 24, 1775

Winch, Jason, Roxbury.Sergeant, Capt. Joseph Morse's co., Col. John Paterson's regt.; muster roll dated Aug. 1, 1775; engaged April 24, 1775; service, 3 mos. 14 days; also, company return [probably Oct., 1775].[22]

April 24, 1800: The Library of Congress is founded in Washington, D.C.[23]

April 24, 1802: The United States promises to remove the Creeks and Cherokees from Georgia in the Compact of 1802.[24]

April 24, 1830: The Senate passes the Indian Removal Act by a 28–19 vote.[25]



April 24, 1838: William H. McKinnon mentioned as Justice of the Peace.[26]



Sun. April 24[27][28], 1864

Started at 10 am[29] Smith skirmished in rear

Heavy at sunrise drove rebs back

Front marched until 11 pm 15 mi camped

On rapide in cornfield

Formed 2 lines of battle today[30]



April 24, 1865: Samuel Koontz on April 24, 1865, wrote in a letter that Booth went through the door of the box, told the man who was Lincoln’s servant at the door, that Lincoln had sent for him. [31]



Grant arrived in Raleigh on April 24th to inform Sherman that the surrender he had negotiated with Johnston had been rejected by the Federal government.[32]



April 24, 1880: Jacob "Jake" GUTLEBEN was born on April 24, 1880 in Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace and died in 1930 at age 50.

Jacob married Ruth FOGARTY before 1910.

Jacob next married Myrtle ARNEY about 1916. Myrtle was born about 1887 in ,,PA.

F vii. Frederica "Freda" GUTLEBEN was born on May 4, 1882 in Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace and died on August 17, 1966 in Fruitvale,Alameda,CA at age 84.

M viii. Christian Theophil GUTLEBEN was born on December 6, 1883 in Fontanelle,Washington, NE and died on May 10, 1968 in , Contra Costa,CA at age 84.

Christian married Emma Wilhemina WOLKENHAUER on November 30, 1911 in Fruitvale,Alameda,CA. Emma was born on March 17, 1885 and died on November 4, 1983 in ,Contra Costa,CA at age 98.

F ix. Johanna Elizabeth "Bettie" GUTLEBEN was born on February 2, 1886 in Fontanelle,Washington,NE and died on June 3, 1933 in Fruitvale,Alameda,CA at age 47. [33]



April 24, 1898: Spanish American War began with the sinking of the USS Maine.[34]



April 24, 1915: The Armenian Genocide began when the Young Turks undertook the systematic annihilation of Armenian intellectuals and entrepreneurs within the city of Constantinople and later the entire Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire. The Jewish population of Palestine was aware of this slaughter. The leaders of its nascent military force, Hashomer, were especially cognizant of what had happened. They were determined that the Jews would not suffer a similar fate.[35]

April 24, 1921: At the hearing before the county superintendent on April 25, 1921, ten men representing all of those signing the remonstrances against the formation of the district, except for those signing the fourth petition, testified. Each of these was well respected and came from a family with a long history in the area. These included F. E. Williamson, the president of one of the two banks in Hopkinton and the treasurer of the Hopkinton School District; Reuben Moulton, farmer and former director of the Union No. 3 sub district; W. P. Hogan, farmer, major landowner, and former school director from Union No. 5; W. J. Kehoe, farm owner operator and school director from Union No. 4; Frank G. Kehoe, farm owner operator and former school director from Union No. 6; W. H. Milroy, farm renter from Union No. 6; Cliff Dighton, farm renter from Union No 6; John Flanagan, Jr., farm renter from Union No. 6; Thomas Supple, farm owner-operator and former director from Hazel Green No. 6. Moulton had been a member of the Buck Creek Church but left it because of his opposition to the Klan. Other Moultons in the Buck Creek neighborhood were staunch supporters of consolidation. Dighton and Milroy were Methodists but attended church in Hopkinton, ostensibly because of Klan involvement in the Buck Creek Church. All the others, except for Williamson, a Presbyterian, were Catholics and members of either the Castle Grove or Ryan Parishes. After listening to their testimony, County Superintendent Ottilie perfunctorily and summarily overruled their objections and informed them that they had ten days to file an appeal of his decision to the county board of education.[36]



• April 24, 1938: A decree calling for the registration of all Jewish property is promulgated in Germany.[37]

April 24: 1939: In apparent response to pressure from the British government the Greek government announced that a law prohibiting Greek vessels from carrying any more Jewish refugees unless their papers are strictly in order would be enforced. The move will strike a blow against the Greek economy since Greek ship owners and “brokers” had been able to make “exorbitant profits” from trafficking in Jewish misery.[38]

• April 24, 1941: The Lublin ghetto is sealed.[39] The Lublin (Poland) Ghetto was established in March, 1941 and contained about 34,000 Jews. As of this date Jews could only leave if they had a special permit or were part of a labor group. The Lublin Ghetto was the first ghetto in the General Government to be liquidated, and the Nazis gained much experience, for future deportation actions. Jews from Lublin were the first victims of the newly constructed death camp at Belzec. Only 200-300 of formerly 40,000 Lublin Jews survived in hiding or were finally liberated in several concentration camps. About 1000 Jews survived the war in Soviet areas.[40]



April 24, 1942: Jews throughout Greater Germany were prohibited from taking public transport.[41]

April 24, 1943: Oliver Harvey, Anthony Eden’s Private Secretary described the British Foreign Minister’s attitude toward the Jews with an entry in his diary stating “Unfortunately AE is immovable on the subject of Palestine. He loves Arabs and hates Jews.” This entry explains why the British Foreign office did nothing to save the Jews of Europe from the Holocaust and gives some example of the type of society in which Churchill was forced to make his decisions.[42]

April 24, 1944: Two escapees from Auschwitz, Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler reached Zilina, in northern Slovakia, where they worked with Jewish leaders on their report. The two men provided separate but consistent accounts. Factual assertions were checked against records whenever possible. The 32-page report was sent to the British and United States governments, the Vatican and the International Red Cross. Most important, it went to the leadership of Hungary's Jews, next on Hitler's list.[43]

April 24, 1945: When Soviet troops entered the German capital, they found 800 Jews alive at Berlin’s Jewish Hospital.[44]



April 24, 1950: King Abdullah of Jordan annexed all of the land west of the Jordan River and the Dead Sea seized by his troop. The state of Jordan was formed by the union of Jordanian-occupied Palestine and the Kingdom of Transjordan. In the view of some, the creation of the original state of Trans-Jordan by the British after World War I was an illegal act since amounted to a partition of the Palestine Mandate. That is why there are those that contend that if the Arabs want a state in Palestine, they already have it. It is called Jordan. The creation of Jordan in 1950 was another act of illegality. The land west of the Jordan River including the eastern part of Jerusalem had been seized by the Jordanian Army during the Israeli War for Independence. Since the Arabs held what is now called the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza in 1950, you would have expected that the Arab State of Palestine would have been created. The demand for an Arab state of Palestine in these areas only began after June, 1967.[45]

April 24, 1981: President Reagan lifts the grain embargo imposed on the Soviet Union.[46]



1983: The Mystery of the Disappearing Nuts is Published by Pearl Goodlove Bowdish

















1983

The Lutheran Church- Missouri Synod officially disassociates itself from “intemperate remarks about Jews: in Luther’s works. Since then, many Lutheran church bodies and organizations have issued similar statements.[47]



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[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/April_24

[2] The Oriental Institute Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, January 2, 2011.

[3] The Time Tables of Jewish History, A chronology of the Most Important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 7.
[4] The Works of Josephus, Translated by William Whiston, page 854.

[5] The Time Tables of Jewish History, A chronology of the Most Important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 8.
[6] http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Aaron.html

[7] The One Year Chronological Bible NIV

[8] The One Year Chronological Bible NIV

[9] http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/moses.html

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

[11]

[12] "Edward I," Microsoft’ Encarta’ Encyclopedia 2000. b 1993-1999 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

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

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

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

[16]

[17] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/April_24

[18] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 138.n

[19] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 89.

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

[21] Monongahela of Old, by James Veech, p. 119. Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 324

[22] About Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols.Prepared by the Secretary of the Commonwealth, this is an indexed compilation of the records of the Massachusetts soldiers and sailors who served in the army or navy during the...
[23] ON This Day in America by John Wagman.

[24] http://www.milestonedocuments.com/document_detail.php?id=49&more=timeline

[25] http://www.milestonedocuments.com/document_detail.php?id=49&more=timeline

[26] References in Old newspapers, gathered by Mrs. G. W. (Sylvia) Olson, address above, 22 Oct 1979.

Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 112.48

[27] April 23 Moneti’s Bluff, LA to Cane River, LA-April 24 Cloutersville, LA

U.S.A. 350 Killed and Wounded

C.S.A. 400 Killed and Wounded

40 Missing or Captured

(Civil War Battles of 1864;) http://users.aol/dlharvey/1864bat.htm



[28] The following names appeared in the New York Times, Sunday, April 24, 1864, Vol XXI - No. 3926, as casualties during the Red River Campaign. The list did not say in which battle the individuals were casualties. Nor, in most cases, did it state whether they were wounded, killed, or captured. The article was about the battles of Mansfield and Pleasant Hill



Adams, J. , Sgt

Becker, Capt -K

Birdwell, James, Sgt

Brown, Lt - W

Burnhaud, George, Pvt

Button, William, Pvt

Carey, George W., Pvt

Carr, LtCol -W

Chambers, George M., Pvt

Collins, D. J., Pvt

Cramer, M., Pvt

Doherty, J. M., Pvt

Douane, Lt - M

Eaton, Thomas, Pvt

Emerson, Colonel - W&C

Ford, Martin, Pvt

Frances, Harrison, Pvt

Graham, John, Lt

Green, LtCol - W

Grimes, Barney, Pvt

Gorman, Lt, W
Hall, Lt - MW

Jones, Lt - W

Jones, James, Pvt

Kelly, Thomas, Cpl

King, Capt -W&C

Landier, John H., Pvt

Letton, August, Pvt

Lindsey, LtCol - K

McCulloch, Capt - W

McCulloch, Lt - M

McRae, D. Pvt

Maher, Thomas, Capt - K

Mahler, Capt - W

Mann, Maj - W

Markham, Capt - W

Meader, P. S., Lt

Meedower, Lt - W

Michael, Jules, Pvt

Miller, Lt - M

Morse, Capt - W

Morse, Capt, - W
Morse, Andres, Capt- W

Napier, Andrew, Lt - W

Philip, August, Pvt

Quinn, Peter, Sgt

Randall, Capt - W

Reed, May, M

Robinson, Harai, Col - W&C

Sanderson, Lt - MW

Schormwald, August, Pvt

Simpson, John M., Sgt

Smith, Eilas, Pvt

Stearn, Capt - M

Stevenson, Lt - M

Stone, C. S., Lt - M

Sullivan, Ed., Pvt

Thomas, D. T. H., Lt -W

Welch, Thomas, Sgt

Whitman, Royal E, Maj - W

Wyman, Lt- M


http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/pottery/1080/red_river_campaign_la_10mar64.htm



[29] A bridge was put down, over which the army of General Banks had passed by 10 A.M. The line of march was again taken up and the army arrived at Alexandra on the 25th.

(Roster of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion Vol. III, 24th Regiment-Infantry ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgienweb/ia/state/military/civilwar/book/cwbk 24.txt.

[30] William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary by Jeff Goodlove

[31] Timothy S. Good, We saw Lincoln Shot:One Hundred Evewiotness Accounts, Jackson, MS: Univ. Press of Miss., 1995 p. 65-65.

[32] Civilwaralbum.com

[33] Descendents of Elias Gotleben, Email from Alice, May 2010.

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

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

[36] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 207.

• [37] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page1760.

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

• [39] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1765.

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

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

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

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

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

[45]

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

[47] www.wikipedia.org

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