Tuesday, May 10, 2011

This Day in Goodlove History, May 10

• This Day in Goodlove History, May 10
• 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, scrapbooks 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

May 1099

• After a three year march, they finally push into the Holy Land and the first of the Crusader armies finally reach Jerusalem. Inside the city walls the Muslim and Jewish defenders consider their options.[15]

May 10, 1707. Division acknowledged by Andrew Harrison, Richard Long and Samll. Ellits.
May 10, 1707 Acknowledged.
Also, in the year after his fathers death, Andrew Harrison, Jr. was sued by a firm of merchants from Bristol, England. There are numerous entries in the Essex county order book 1717-1723, part III. It seems to have stretched through six courts with continuances and motions. Andrew ended up losing and having to pay damages of 300 pounds of tobacco, plus lost time for his witnesses, including Richard Long, and some court costs.
May 10, 1760: George Washington’s Journal: Saturday May 10. Arrived at home abt 10 O’clock where I found my
Brother Jno. And was told that my great Chestnut folded a Horse Colt
on the 6 Instt. and that my Young Peach trees were Wed according to
Order.

ADVERTISEMENT

Fairfax County, Va., May 10, 1774.
In the month of March last the subscriber sent out a number of carpenters and laborers, to build houses and clear and enclose lands on the Ohio, intending to divide the several tracts which he there holds, into convenient sized tenements and to give leases therefor for lives, or a term of years, renewable forever, under certain conditions which may be known either of him, or Mr. Valentine Crawford, who is now on the land.
The situation and quality of these lands having been thoroughly described in a former advertisement, it is unnecessary to enlarge on them here; suffice it generally to observe, that there are no better in that country, and that the whole of them lay upon the banks of the Ohio or Great Kanawha, and are capable of receiving the highest improvement.
May 10, 1775: The Second Continental Congress met in Philadelphia on May 10, 1775 and they declared themselves the government. They also named George Washington Commander in Chief of the newly organized army.
May 10, 1775: American forces under Colonel Ethan Allen take Fort Ticonderoga, New York.
The cannon that made Thomas' efforts possible were those taken by Lieutenant Colonel Benedict Arnold and Ethan Allen with his Green Mountain Boys at Fort Ticonderoga on May 10, 1775. Colonel Henry Knox then brought the cannon and powder to Boston through the winter snow in time for Washington and Thomas to employ them in the engagement at Dorchester Heights.
By muffling their wagon-wheels with straw, the Patriots were able to move their cannon unnoticed. Washington would use this same strategy to evade British General Charles Cornwallis after the Battle of Trenton.
May 10, 1779: The British capture and burn Portmouth and Norfolk, Virginia.




May 10, 1785: George Keck, son of Henry Keck, 1st, was born in North-
ampton county, Pa., about 1748, and in 1769 was married to
Catharine Helen Shaub in th same county and lived there some
twenty years. To them were born twelve sons and one daugh-
ter, ten of whom grew to manhood and womanhood as fol-
lows : Henry, born Jan. 17,1770; Peter, born Dec. 10, 1771 ;
Catherine, born April 12, 1774; Joseph, born Sept. 10, 1775;
Abraham, born May 26, 1780; George, born March 10, 1783;
Daniel, born May 10, 1785; Isaac, born Jan. 9, 1789; Philip,
born 1773; Christian, born 1782, died of smallpox in 1794.

It was his intention to leave Allentown after his marriage
and go to Westmoreland county, Pa., then called the back-
woods, and had made preparations to go, but was detained
from going as the Revolutionary war was then threatening to
break out and there would have been no safety from the Indians. He volunteered his services to the army of Washing-
ton and was in the battles of Germantown and Brandywine.
At the close of the war about 1789, he removed with his family
to Hempfield township, Westmoreland county, Pa., then al-
most a wilderness, with but a few settlers, where he com-
menced his farm in the woods, and upon which he raised his
numerous familv, and continued to live there until his death
which occurred in 1816. His wife died some five or six years
previous. He was a large man. six feet in height, while his
wife was very small and could stand under his arms. Before
leaving Allentown he bought a farm on the site of a battle-
ground and in tearing down the cabin, to rebuild a new one,
they found under the hearthstone a two gallon jar filled with
gold and silver which they took with them to their new home.
The ground around the place was strewn with accoutrements
of war such as canteens, powder horns, etc. The children were
all born near Allentown before they came West, and all came
with the parents. Isaac may have been born in Westmoreland
county, as that was the year fixed for their removal West.
The Keck homestead contained 150 acres and was six miles
north of Greensburg, the county seat. When the writer first
knew it there was a two story hewed log house, rather a double
log house suitable for two families, a two story log spring
house, a log barn, also a horse stable and a still house on an-
other part of the farm and was operated as late as 1840.
There was also a large apple orchard and an abundance of
pears and cherries.

The Lehigh County Pioneer History gives no account of
George and Eli, but makes a blank of them and also a blank in
the Revolutionary services. As George Keck had left the
county about 100 years before the history was written, there
was none to tell where he settled, or that he ever existed.

We will now proceed to take up the children of George
Keck and Catharine H. Shaub in the order they were born.

Henry Keck the eldest son was born near Allentown, Pa.,
3 January 17, 1770, and died February 1, 18 13 on the home-
stead. He married Catharine Gottleab in Westmoreland
county. Pa., in 1798. She was born in 1784, and died Dec.
12, 1863. She was but 14 years of age when she married. To
them were born five sons and two daughters, namely : Esther
Keck, born Jan. 31, 1799, died February 16, 1859; John, born
May 4, 1801, died July 31, 1880; Henry, born April 14, 1804,
died June 10, 1863; Samuel, born August 12, 1806, died Dec.
19, 1 88 1 ; Peter, born Sept. 10, 1808, died July 1, 1832 ; George
born June 9, 1810, died Dec. 14, 1864; Elizabeth, born Nov.
15. 1812, died Feb. 4, 1833.

May 10, 1837: The financial panic of 1837 occurs when New York banks cease making specie payments.
May 10, 1860: Congress passes the Morrill Tariff Bill to regulate imports.
Tues. May 10, 1864
Had a chill quite sick all day
May 10, 1865: Confederate President Jefferson Davis is captured by a cavalry detachment commanded by General James H. Wilson, in Irwinville, Georgia.
May 10, 1900
(Pleasant Valley) W. H. Goodlove has purchased a new surrey .
May 31, 1900
(Jordan’s Grove) Dick Bowdish was surprised with a birthday present, a new buggy.

It is speculated that W.H. Goodlove purchased this birthdat present on May 10, 1900.

May 10, 1917
Mr. Dick Bowdish has purchased a new automobile.

May 10, 1921: Ottilie set May 10 as the date for the county board to meet.. Howver, in apparent ignorance of the law, he failed to notify each of the objectors of the time and place for the hearing of the appeal by registered letter.

May 10, 1921: Most of the objectors who had testified before the county superintendent on April 25 presented their objections again at the May 10 meeting of the county board called for that purpose. Overruling both sets of objections, the county board sustained the decision of the county superintendent and approved the boundaries of the district as proposed in the petition of April 12. The objectors from Hazel Green and Union Township who testified were surprised and infuriated when the county board took the time to also hear presentations from the advocates of consolidation from the Buck Creek Church. They maintained correctly that the hearing was supposed to be devoted to hearing and evaluating their objections to the boundaries of the district, not to be a debate on the merits of consolidation. They argued that the hearing was a charade, a “put-up deal.” Several of those who had appeared before the county superintenjdent on April 25 did not attend the appeal. One of these, Reuben Moulton, objected to the fact that the county superintendent had not informed him of the time and place of the appeal. Therefore, he maintained that the hearing had not been a legal hearing. Recognizing that Moulton was correct, Ottilie had no recourse but to go through the whole appeal process again.
May 10, 1929: William T. Rigby;
Born in Red Oak Grove, Iowa, on November 3, 1841. He was appointed 2d Lieutenant in Company B, 24th Iowa Infantry on September 18, 1862 and was promoted to captain on October 2, 1863. He was mustered out as a captain on July 17, 1865. After the war he entered Cornell College (Iowa). He was a farmer for a number of years and in 1895 was appointed Secretary of the Vicksburg National Military Park Commission on March 1 1899 and was subsequently elected Chairman on April 15, 1902. Rigby served in that capacity as the 1st resident commissioner of Vicksburg National Military Park until his death in Vicksburg on May 10, 1929. Captain Rigby and his wife are interred in the Vicksburg National Cemetery.

May 10, 1934: A severe dust storm blows 300 million tons of topsoil from Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Colorado, ausing the abandonment of hundreds of farms.
May 10, 1940: The German Army invades Belgium and Luxembourg.
Neville Chamberlain resigns as British prime minister and Winston Churchill assumes the post.[23]
May 10, 1941 Rudolf Hess flies to England.
May 10, 1942: Maly Trastsianiets extermination camp, a small village on the outskirts of Minsk, Belarus, was the site of a Nazi extermination camp. The camp became a Vernichtungslager, or extermination camp, on May 10, 1942 when the first transport of Jews arrived there. While many Jews from Germany, Austria and the present-day Czech Republic met their deaths there (in most cases almost immediately upon their arrival, by being trucked to the nearby Blagovshchina (Благовщина) and Shashkovka (Шашковка) forests killing grounds and shot in the back of the neck), the primary purpose of the camp was the extermination of the substantial Jewish community of Minsk and the surrounding area. Mobile gas chambers deployed here performed a subsidiary if not insignificant function in the genocidal process..[22]
May 10, 1988: Covert Lee Goodlove Initiated March 11, 1946 Passed April 1 1946, Raised April 22, 1946, all at Vienna Lodge No 142. Suspended November 13, 1972, Reinstated January 10, 1973. Demitted May 10, 1988 when they closed. Birthdate November 12, 1911, Died August 30, 1997. May 10, 1988 joined Benton City LodgeNo. 81, Shellsburg, IA. Became a 50 Year Mason, June 19, 1996.
May 10, 2010
I Get Email!
Jeffery,
The second sentence is incomplete, and the full sentence is not
available on Google Books. But here is what I was able to reconstruct:
'One also finds in these sources a Jew by the name of Gottlieb /
Gutleben, who first [appears in the sources (?)] as a Jew from
Mülhausen in 1409 and 1435...'
Ferner begegnet in den Quellen noch ein Jude namens Gottlieb bzw. Gutleben, der
erstmals 1409 und 1435 noch immer als Mülhauser Jude nachweisbar
Good luck with your research,
P.

P,
Thank you once again for this translation. Placed against the fabric of the chronology of the period, the Jewish
Gottlieb/Gutleben adds a new dimension in our search. Since I have space here is that snapshot of time.

Jeff Goodlove

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