11,805 names…11,805 stories…11,805 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, September 30, 2014
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Jeffery Lee Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com
Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove
The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), Jefferson, LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, and including ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, Teddy Roosevelt, U.S. Grant, Benjamin Harrison “The Signer”, Benjamin Harrison, Jimmy Carter, Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, William Taft, John Tyler (10th President), James Polk (11th President)Zachary Taylor, and Abraham Lincoln.
The Goodlove Family History Website:
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html
The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:
• New Address! http://wwwfamilytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx
• • 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.
Jonathon Forman (5th cousin 2x removed)
Catherine Godlove
S Goodlove
Susan J. Goodlove
Flora Jones Stewart (wife of the 4th cousin 1x removed)
George R. Marietta (5th cousin 2x removed)
DAVIS MUNN (1st cousin 7x removed)
Battaile Muse (2nd cousin 7x removed)
Charles Wright (husband of the 2nd cousin 3x removed)
September 30, 1497: Howard was an able soldier, and was often employed in military operations.[2] In 1497 he served in a campaign against the Scots under the command of his father, who knighted him on September 30, 1497.[2] [1]
September 30, 1566: She goes with him before her Council, and urges him, but in vain, to declare of what he has to complain in her. Darnley will not enter into any explanation, and sets out for Stirling, whence he had come. [2]
September 30, 1634: Phillip Smythe7 [Thomas Smythe6, John Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. May 23, 1633 / d. August 8, 1708) married Isabella Sidney (b. September 30, 1634 / d. 20 Jun 1663). Phillip also married Mary Porter (d. 1730).[3]
September 30 of 1662: Entered the spouses in London, accompanied by numerous escort being the Portuguese delegation a large group of members of the court including musicians and minstrels and among them 10 shawm players and 12 Portuguese bag pipe players being this instruments the Queen’s favorites. All this persons landed on a bridge that was specifically built and organized to reach the palace, where the queen mother waited, as well as all the court and nobility of Great Britain. There were splendid feasts and showy lighting.
Catherine possessed several good qualities, but had been brought up in a conventual seclusion and was scarcely a wife Charles would have chosen for himself. Her personal charms were not potent enough to wean Charles away from the society of his mistresses, and in a few weeks after her arrival she became aware of her painful and humiliating position as the wife of a licentious king.[9]
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A plaque at Sally Port in the Garrison walls at Portsmouth commemorates Catherine's first step in England.
Little is known of Catherine's own thoughts on the match. While her mother plotted and schemed to secure an alliance with England and her future husband celebrated his restoration by sporting with his mistresses, Catherine's time had been spent in the sombre seclusion of her convent home where there was little opportunity for fun or frivolity. Even outside of the convent her actions were governed by the strict etiquette of the royal court of Portugal. By all accounts Catherine grew into a quiet, even-tempered young woman. The Portuguese ambassador proudly remarked that she was "totally without that meddling and activity in her nature".
At the time of her marriage she was already twenty-three, something which was not lost on her critics, and had long since resigned herself to the necessity of making a grand match abroad. Contented and serene, Catherine's rather quaint response on being told of her impending nuptials was to request permission to make a pilgrimage to a favourite shrine of hers in Lisbon. Devoted to her beloved Portugal, as she set sail for England any distress she may have felt at leaving her family and her home was no doubt lessened by the knowledge that her marriage had been hailed as 'the welcomest news that ever came to the Portuguese people'.[10]
Catherine became pregnant and miscarried three times, and during a severe illness in 1663, she thought, for a time, she had given birth. Charles comforted her by telling her she had indeed given birth to two sons and a daughter. Her position was a difficult one, and though Charles continued to have children by his many mistresses, he insisted she be treated with respect, and sided with her over his mistresses when he felt she was not receiving the respect she was due. After her three miscarriages, it seemed to be more and more unlikely that the queen would bear an heir. Royal advisors urged the monarch to seek a divorce, hoping that the new wife would be a Protestant and fertile – but Charles refused. This eventually led to her being a target by the courtiers.[2] Throughout his reign, he firmly dismissed the idea of divorcing Catherine. She remained faithful to Charles throughout their marriage.
Queen
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Queen Catherine by Sir Peter Lely, 1665
Catherine was not a particularly popular choice of queen since she was a Roman Catholic.[2] Her religion prevented her from being crowned, as Roman Catholics were forbidden to take part in Anglican services. She initially faced hardships due to the language barrier, the king's infidelities and the political conflicts between Roman Catholics and Anglicans. Over time, her quiet decorum, loyalty and genuine affection for Charles changed the public's perception of her.
Although her difficulties with the English language persisted, as time went on, the once rigidly formal Portuguese Infanta mellowed and began to enjoy some of the more innocent pleasures of the court. She loved to play cards and shocked devout Protestants by playing on Sundays. She enjoyed dancing and took great delight in organising masques. She had a great love for the countryside and picnics; fishing and archery were also favourite pastimes. In a far cry from her convent-days the newly liberated Catherine displayed a fondness for the recent trend of court ladies wearing men's clothing, which we are told, 'showed off her pretty, neat legs and ankles'; and she was even reported to have considered leading the way in wearing shorter dresses, which would show off her feet. In 1670, on a trip to Audley End with her ladies-in-waiting, the once chronically shy Catherine attended a country fair disguised as a village maiden, but was soon discovered and, due to the large crowds, forced to make a hasty retreat. And when in 1664 her favourite painter, Jacob Huysmans, a Dutch Catholic, painted her as St Catherine, it promptly set a trend among court ladies.[11]
She did not involve herself in English politics, instead she kept up an active interest in her native country. Anxious to re-establish good relations with the Pope and perhaps gain recognition for Portuguese independence, she sent Richard Bellings, later her principal secretary, to Rome with letters for the pope and several cardinals. In 1669 she involved herself in the relief of Candia in Crete, which was under siege by the Turks and whose cause Rome was promoting, although she failed to persuade her husband to take any action. In 1670, as a sign of her rising favour with the pontiff she requested, and was granted, devotional objects.[12]
On the first presentation to Charles' official mistress, Barbara Palmer, she fainted away when Charles insisted on making her Catherine's lady of the bedchamber.[13] She accepted Barbara, however later withdrew from the king's society, and in spite of Clarendon's attempts to moderate her resentment, declared she would return to Portugal rather than consent to a base compliance. To overcome her resistance nearly the whole of her Portuguese retinue was dismissed. She was helpless, and the violence of her grief and anger soon changed to passive resistance, and then to a complete forbearance and complaisance which gained the king's regard and favor. In the midst of Charles's debauched and licentious court, she lived neglected and retired.[14]
Catholicism
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Catherine of Braganza, Queen of England, by Benedetto Gennari
Though known to keep her faith a private matter, her religion and proximity to the king made her the target of anti-Catholic sentiment. Catherine occupied herself with her faith. Her piety was widely known and was a characteristic in his wife that the King greatly admired; in his letters to his sister Catherine's devoutness is described almost with awe. Her household contained between four and six priests and in 1665 Catherine decided to build a religious house east of St James's to be occupied by thirteen Portuguese Franciscans of the order of St Peter of Alcantara. It was completed by 1667 and would become known as The Friary.[12]
In 1675 the stress of a possible revival of the divorce project indirectly led to another illness, which Catherine's physicians claimed and her husband cannot fail to have noted, was 'due as much to mental as physical causes'. In the same year all Irish and English Catholic priests were ordered to leave the country, which left Catherine dependent upon foreign priests. As increasingly harsher measures were put in place against Catholics, Catherine appointed her close friend and adviser, the devoutly Catholic Francisco de Mello, former Portuguese Ambassador to England, as her Lord Chamberlain. It was an unusual and controversial move but 'wishing to please Catherine and perhaps demonstrate the futility of moves for divorce' the King granted his permission. De Mello was dismissed the following year for ordering the printing of a Catholic book, leaving the beleaguered Catherine even more isolated at court.[12] One consolation was that Louise de Kéroualle, who replaced Barbara as reigning mistress, always treated the Queen with proper deference; the Queen in return used her own influence to protect Louise during the Popish Plot.
Popish plot
The Test Act of 1673 had driven all Catholics out of public office and anti-Catholic feelings intensified in the years to come. Although she was not active in religious politics, in 1675 Catherine was criticised for supposedly supporting the idea of appointing a bishop to England who, it was hoped, would resolve the internal disputes of Catholics. Critics also noted the fact that, despite orders to the contrary, English Catholics attended her private chapel.
As one of the highest-ranking Catholics in the country, Catherine was an obvious target for Protestant extremists, and it was hardly surprising that the Popish Plot of 1678 would directly threaten her position. However, Catherine was completely secure in her husband's favor ( "she could never do anything wicked, and it would be a horrible thing to abandon her " he told Gilbert Burnet) and the House of Lords, most of whom knew her and liked her, refused by an overwhelming majority to impeach her.[12] Relations between the royal couple became notably warmer: Catherine wrote of Charles' " wonderful kindness " to her and it was noted that his visits to her apartments became longer and more frequent.
Later life and death
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In Portugal, Catherine spent the rest of her life as the tutor for Prince John.
At Charles' final illness in 1685 she showed anxiety for his reconciliation with the Roman Catholic faith, and exhibited great grief at his death. When he lay dying in 1685, he asked for Catherine, but she sent a message asking that her presence be excused, and "to beg his pardon if she had offended him all his life." He answered, "Alas poor woman! she asks for my pardon? I beg hers with all my heart; take her back that answer."[15] Later in the same year, she unsuccessfully interceded with James II for the life of James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, Charles's illegitimate son and leader of the Monmouth Rebellion – even though Monmouth in rebellion had called upon the support represented by the staunch Protestants opposed to the Catholic Church.
Catherine remained in England, living at Somerset House,[16] through the reign of James and his deposition in the Glorious Revolution by William III and Mary II.
Initially on good terms with William and Mary, her position deteriorated as the practice of her religion led to misunderstandings and increasing isolation. A bill was introduced to Parliament to limit the number of Catherine's Catholic servants, and she was warned not to agitate against the government.[4]
b. September 30, 1765: DAVIS MUNN, [5]
September 30, 1774: Boone sent an express messenger to Major Campbell on the 30th of September (September 30), to inform him of the killing of Duncan, and also told him that the Indians were still lurking about Fort Blackmore, where the two negroes had recently been captured and "coursed" in front of the fort; and that Captain Looney, who was in charge of the fort, had only eleven men and could not venture to attack or pursue the enemy. The situation at Russell's fort, at Castle's Woods, was also so serious that the people there were crying for help. [6]
September 30, 1774: Upon Leaving Pittsburg, where the governor held a council with several Delaware and Mingo chiefs, to whom he recited the outrages perpetrated by the Shawnees since Bouquet’s treaty of 1764, the northern division divided into two wings. One, 700 strong, under Dunmore, descended the river in boats; the other 500 went across the “pan handel” by land, with the cattle, and both rendezvoused, September 30th at Wheeling, 91 miles below Pittsburg. [7]
Dunmore had arrived at Fort Pitt about the end of August, and for several weeks was occupied in fruitless negotiations with the Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee chiefs, the latter of whom were requested to meet him and make a treaty somewhere lower down the Ohio (Amer. Archives. 4th series, I, pp. 873-875. Accordingly the governor, with seven hundred men, set out in canoes, while five hundred more, under the command of Maj. William Crawford, marched by land where they arrived September 30 (Washington-Crawford Letters, pp. 54, 97). From this point Crawford marched to the mouth of Hockhocking, and crossing his forces began a small stockade named Fort Gower, in honor of the English earl of that name. This fort was on the upper or east side of the Hockhocking, quite near the junction of the two rivers. See Hildreth, Pioneer History of Ohio Valley (Cincinnati, 1848), p. 93.[8]
Saturday, September 30th, 1775
Went over the River and bought a Porcupine Skin of an Indian. It is something like our Hedgehog at home, only the quills are longer, the Indians dye them of various colours and work them on their trinkets. Mr. Edward Rice promised me his horse to carry me to V. Crawford’s on Monday. Sold my Gun to Mr. James Berwick, who gave me a copy of the Indian speech. Saw the Indians dance in the Council house. N. very uneasy, she weeps plentifully. I am unhappy that this honest creature has taken such a fancy to me.[9]
September 30, 1780
They crossed the Blue Ridge at Gillespies’s Gap and rode on to arrive at Quaker Meadows on September 30. There, at McDowell’s Plantation, their numbers were increased to 1,400 by North and South Carolina reinforcements. [10]
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Rendezvous for "Over-Mountain Men" prior to Battle of Kings Mountain, 1780. Home to Joseph & Charles McDowell, military & political leaders.[11]
Essay:
Joseph and Margaret O’Neil McDowell moved from Winchester, Virginia, to the North Carolina backcountry about 1765, settling on land that that had long been called Quaker Meadows. West of modern Morganton, Quaker Meadows was in Rowan County (Burke after 1777). The name “Quaker Meadows” appears in the writings of Moravian Bishop August Gottlieb Spangenberg in 1752 and is believed to be an allusion to the camp of a Quaker fur trader.
Charles (1743-1815) and Joseph (1756-1801) McDowell, sons of Joseph and Margaret, grew up at Quaker Meadows, although Joseph was educated in Virginia. At the outset of the American Revolution, Charles was selected to be a captain in the militia and shortly was promoted to lieutenant colonel. Joseph was in his brother’s militia regiment and eventually attained the rank of colonel. The McDowells served under Griffith Rutherford in his campaign against the Cherokee in 1776. They are also credited with formulating the plan for the Overmountain Men and the North Carolina militia to pursue British Col. Patrick Ferguson when the frontiersmen gathered at Quaker Meadows on September 30, 1780. At the resulting Battle of Kings Mountain, Charles consigned his troops to his brother, who played a decisive role. Joseph McDowell also took part in the Battle of Cowpens in January 1781. Both brothers went on to serve their state in the political arena—both serving in the state legislature and the Constitutional Conventions, and Joseph serving two terms in Congress as well.
Charles McDowell’s son, also named Charles, built the present house in 1812. The younger Charles McDowell married his cousin Ann McDowell (of Pleasant Gardens) the following year. At Quaker Meadows the couple raised their six children and three orphaned relatives, one of whom, Harriet Espy, married future Governor Zebulon Vance at the plantation home in 1853. The house was restored to its 1812 appearance by the Historic Burke Foundation in 1998 and is now open to the public.[12]
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Quaker Meadows
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September 30, 1781
Col. John Gibson to Gen. Washington.
A large party [of Indians] has since done some mischief in the County of Ohio, and on Ten Mile Creek they have killed and taken 16 persons, and have effected this with the loss of only two of their party.
In my last, I informed your Excellency that I had fixed on ye 4th of September as a day of general rendezvous for the troops to assemble at Fort Mcintosh, to make an excursion against the Wyandot Towns. On receiving the intelligence contained in the minister’s letter, with the advice of the principal officers, I postponed it until the 12th day of September, as by that time we might be able to obtain certain intelligence of the enemy.
Colonel Brodhead, though for what reason I am at a loss to determine, wrote circular letters informing the country that he had fixed on the 15th of September as a day of general rendezvous on Montour’s Run for the militia to assemble. This, and the Indians striking near Wheeling, threw the country into confusion. However, at the day I had appointed, upwards of 100 assembled, but the number was too small to attempt anything; while Colonel Brodhead had the mortification to find that not a single man appeared on the day fixed on for his general rendezvous. A day or two after, the officers wrote Colonel Brodhead a letter, informing him it was their opinion he could not, with propriety, in the present situation of affairs, re-assume the command, a copy of which I did myseif the honor of enclosing in my last letter to your Excellency. He sent me an arrest by the Brigade Major, informing me that I was arrested for assuming the chief command at this post, thereby exciting mutiny and sedition amongst a number of the officers in this Department, and also for neglect of duty and disobedience of orders, and I was to confine myseif to the range of the garrison; on receipt of which I desired the Brigade Major to inform him that I should pay no attention to his arrest, as it was evident to me as welifrom the letters of your Excellency, as also from the charge that had been exhibited against him, that he could not with any degree of propriety re-assume the command.
He continued attempting to command until the return of the express with letters from your Excellency at the Head of Elk. This put an end to the dispute, though Colonel Brodhead, even after the receipt of those letters, sent to inform me that he intended to publish it in General Orders that I was to take command of the Western Department, and wished to know whether it would be agreeable to me. I returned him for answer, that I thought there was no necessity for doing so, as the letters from your Excellency had been made known to the officers.
The express returned here on the 17th instant, and the depositions against Colonel Brodhead were not begun being taken until yesterday, owing to a difference between Colonel Brodhead and Captain Fowler respecting the appointment of the Deputy Judge Advocate; however, the matter is now settled, and I hope the business will go on without any interruption.
I hope your Excellency will pardon my intrusion on your patience with the length of this letter, as I do it in justification of my conduct in this dispute, lest any reports may prejudice me in your Excellency’s esteem.
I have, with the advice of Colonel William Crawford and other principal gentlemen of this country, fixed on the 15th day of October for the militia to assemble at Fort McIntosh, in order, if possible, to make an excursion against the Wyandotte Towns; and from the accounts which I have from the different parts of the country, the people will turn out, and I expect to be able to collect 700 men at least for that purpose. Colonel Crawford goes with me, and most of the principal gentlemen of this country.
Inclosed are the returns of the troops of this department. This will be handed your Excellency by Major William Croghan, who has spent some time in this department; he will be able to give your Excellency a full account of every transaction in this country. Permit me, therefore, to refer your Excellency to him.
I have the honor to be, with perfect respect,
Your Excellency’s most ob’t. humble Servant, John Gibson, Col.
Comdg. W. D.
His Excellency Genl Washington [13]
September 30, 1796
Page 14, Military Warrant no. 21, no. 2680. John Crawford (heir). On lower side of Darb’s Creek, 955 acres. September 30, 1796-November 29, 1796. No. On line of survey no. 2679. Surveyed by Lucas Sullvant, D. S., John Ellison, Robert Dixson C.C., John Florence.[14]
September 30, 1797
William Crawford (6th great grandfather): Vol. 21, No. 4627. 1000a. Military and Shelby. Little Kentucky. 930-1797, Bk. 6, p. 624. Same and Heirs June 19, 1800, Bk. 15, p. 94-95.[15]
September 30, 1800: The end of the Treaty of Alliance
Despite the deteriorated relations, and the previously stated official and mutual public sentiment against the alliance, it would not be until September 30, 1800, that the treaty would officially be absolved by both signing parties with the signing of the Treaty of Mortefontaine, or Convention of 1800, and the Franco-American Alliance that began in 1778 was ended.[7][16]
September 30, 1809: Tecumseh's War
In 1800, William Henry Harrison had become the governor of the newly formed Indiana Territory. Harrison sought to secure title to Indian lands in order to allow for American expansion; in particular he hoped that the Indiana Territory would attract enough settlers so that it could qualify for statehood. Harrison negotiated numerous land cession treaties with American Indians, including the the Treaty of Fort Wayne on September 30, 1809, in which Miami, Pottawatomie, Lenape and other tribal leaders sold 3,000,000 acres (approximately 12,000 km²) to the United States.[2][3]
Tenskwatawa, known as the Prophet, had been leading a religious movement among the northwestern tribes calling for a return to the ancestral ways. His brother, Tecumseh, was outraged by the Treaty of Fort Wayne, and thereafter he emerged as a prominent leader. Tecumseh revived an idea advocated in previous years by the Shawnee leader Blue Jacket and the Mohawk leader Joseph Brant[17],
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which stated that American Indian land was owned in common by all tribes, and land could not be sold without agreement by all the tribes.[2][4] Not yet ready to confront the United States directly, Tecumseh's primary adversaries were initially the American Indian leaders who had signed the treaty. He began by intimidating them and threatening to kill anyone who carried out the terms of the treaty. Tecumseh began to travel widely, urging warriors to abandon the accommodationist chiefs and to join the resistance at Prophetstown. Tecumseh insisted that the Fort Wayne treaty was illegitimate.[5] In a 1810 meeting with Harrison, he demanded that Harrison nullify the treaty and warned that Americans should not attempt to settle the lands sold in the treaty. Harrison rejected his demands and insisted that the tribes could have individual relations with the United States.[6]
Shawnee_Prophet
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Tenskwatawa, by Charles Bird King.[19]
Fri. September 30, 1864
Started back at 1 pm marched to Harrisonburg at snset cold and rainy out of rations land hilly red clay good for wheat and fruit
(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[20]
Late Sept.? After spending four weeks in Libby Prison in Richmond, VA, Gilbert Prey (from Job Kirby's 104th New York Volunteer Infantry, Possibly Job was here as well) was sent to Salisbury, North Carolina for two weeks and then on to Danville, VA, until he was exchanged nearly six months later on February 21, 1865.[21]
September 30 to October 1, 1864: Battle of Preble’s Farm, VA.[22]
September 30, 1887: Albert Elwell STEPHENSON. [6] Born on September 7, 1886 in Chariton County, Missouri. Albert Elwell died in Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri on April 21, 1972; he was 85. Buried in Stephenson Cemetery, Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri.
On May 31, 1914 when Albert Elwell was 27, he married Maude Ann VANCE, in Dade County, Missouri. Born on September 30, 1887 in Dade County, Missouri. Maude Ann died in May 1929; she was 41. Buried in Stephenson Cemetery, Dean Lake, Chariton County, Missouri.
They had the following children:
i. Nelda May (1915-1973)
ii. Lois (Louis?) Eldridge (1917-1993)
iii. Eldon Pershing (1918-)
iv. Ollie Verlee (1920-)
v. Robert (1922-)
vi. Glendon Dale (1924-)[23]
September 30, 1921: The Buck Creek board found itself in a very difficult position. While the consolidated district had finally obtained voter approval, the issue of consolidation itself appeared to be rapidly losing the support of opinion leaders in the county. On the one hand, the board was tempted to proceed with readying a bond issue proposal to submit to the voters. If they delayed, they risked building costs rising higher, farm prices falling lower, and public opinion switching even more decisively against consolidation. On the other, consolidation opponents and a growing number of Buck Creek Church members themselves argued that the district could not afford to go ahead with the proposal until the economy improved. The board still had not reached resolution on the matter, when, on September 30, Reuben Moulton, acting on behalf of the opponents of consolidation, filed suit against the bgoard in the district court. His petition charged that the district had been illegally formed and that its directores possessed no authority to continue with steps to build the school. [24]
September 30, 1938: Hitler convinced Chamberlain and Daladier that he wanted to protect German rights in the Sudetenland by annexing it, (hence, the Munich Agreement) and that he had no further demands. Chamberlain gave in, claiming that by doing so he had achieved “peace in our time”.[25]
September 30, 1939
A Polish government is formed in Paris after the fall of Warsaw to the German Army.[26]
1939-1945
The Holocaust. About 6 million Jews, including 1.5 million children, systematically killed by Nazi Germany.[27]
September 30, 1941: German Panzer groups attack and break the Soviet lines east of the Dnieper River in the Soviet Union. [28]
September 30, 1941: After two days, the Germans had slaughtered 33,000 Jews at Kiev in the Soviet Union.[29]
September 30, 1941: Opening of the Battle of Moscow. This clash of the Nazi and Red armies would last for five months. If the Nazis had been successful, and in the opening stages it looked as if they would the Soviet capital, it might well have meant the end of meaningful Soviet resistance in Europe. As the two armies slammed against each other through the Russian Winter, the fate of European Jewry hung in balance. Had the Red Army not held, the total Jewish victims of the Holocaust would have been closer to nine or twelve million and not the six million who actually perished.[30]
September 30, 1942: New construction at the Treblinka death camp greatly increases its gas chamber capacity.[31]
September 30, 1942: Polish Jews trapped in the Warsaw Ghetto begin the construction of bunkers for a military defense. By January of 1943, they will have constructed more than 600 fortified bunkers.[32]
September 30, 1942: The Ternopol Judenrat is ordered to hand over 1,000 Jews to the Nazis, and refuses. The Nazis and their helpers arrest Jews and deport 800 of them to Belzec.[33]
End of September: Because of increasingly dire reports from France, the American relief agencies soon asked Washington to raise the number from 1000 to 5,000 visas for Jewish children. By the end of September, the State Department had complied.[34]
September 30, 1942: The last convoy, Convoy 39, left September 30 with only 211 Jews, as the telex showed, because of reasons of politics and prestige.”
The documents of the anti-Jewish section of the Gestapo (XXVc-254) show a total of 1,745 arrests of Jews in October in the provinces in the occupied zone. The arrests by area (1723) were: Angers 296, Chalons-( ) Saint-Quentin 37, Dijon 122, Rennes 36, sur-Marne 52, Melun 69, Orleans 40, Poitiers 617, Bordeaux 135, Nancy 234, Rouen 85.
These Jews, transferred to Drancy, were to be part of four convoys leaving in November, designated to include Jews arrested in and around Paris, and Greek Jews, who were to be the subject of round ups all over the occupied zone. [35]
September 30, 1943: The Krupp arms factory at Mariupol, Ukraine, is dismantled and relocated west to Funfteichen, Silesia, Poland, where it is staffed by Jewish slave laborers.[36]
September 30, 1943 to April,1944: Between now and April of 1944, Jewish slave laborers exhume at least 68,000 corpses of murdered Jews and Soviet POWs at the Ponary, Lithuania, killing ground, near Vilna.[37]
September 30, 1943: Brunner telexed to Eichmann and asked for the green light for the departure of a convoy on October 7 (XLIX-49). [38]
September 30, 1946: Twenty two top Nazi leaders were found guilty of war crimes at Nuremberg.[39] The only Nazi ever excommunicated by the church of Rome, even after all the war crime tribunals was Joseph Gerbils. His crime? He married a Protestant. [40]
September 30, 1948: On December 2, 1886, he married his childhood and family friend Edith Kermit Carow (August 6, 1861 – September 30, 1948), a daughter of Charles Carow and Gertrude Elizabeth Tyler.[48] The couple married at St George's, Hanover Square in London, England. English diplomat Cecil Arthur Spring Rice, Roosevelt's close friend, served as best man.[49] The couple honeymooned in Europe and while there Roosevelt led a group to the summit of Mont Blanc, an achievement that resulted in his induction into the Royal Society of London.[50] They had five children; Theodore "Ted" III (1887–1944), Kermit (1889–1943), Ethel (1891–1977), Archibald (1894–1979), and Quentin (1897–1918). At the time of Ted's birth, Roosevelt was initially both eager and worried at the same time for Edith after losing Alice shortly after childbirth.[19] [41]
September 30, 1951 - May 23, 1989
Susan Jane Goodlove
•
Birth:
September 30, 1951
Death:
May 23, 1989
http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
Burial:
Lyndon Cemetery
Lyndon
Osage County
Kansas, USA
Created by: David Woody
Record added: Sep 08, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 76195694
[42]
September 30 - October 1, 1962 General Edwin A. Walker is arrested by federal
authorities for insurrection against enrollment of black student James Meredith at University of
Mississippi. Walker is sent to federal medical center for mental tests. Walker was commander of
the U.S. Army’s 24th Division stationed in West Germany, where he used his position to
indoctrinate his troops with right-wing propaganda. Walker has resigned from the military in
1961 and has made an unsuccessful bid for governor of Texas in 1962, losing to John Connally. [43]
September 30, 1963 Lee Harvey Oswald returns to the Russian Embassy in Mexico
City for a final attempt to get his transit visa. A guard, apparently unacquainted with Oswald’s
case, asks to whom Oswald has spoken at the embassy. Oswald explains that he has seen
“Comrade Kostikov” on September 28.
< NOTE:
Valery Vladimirovich Kostikov, although listed merely as “attaché, consular office” on the
embassy roster, has been identified for some time as an intelligence officer for the KGB,
who specializes in handling Soviet agents operating under deep cover within the United
States. The FBI has recently followed another Soviet agent from the United States into
Mexico and observed his contact with Kostikov. He is also suspected of being part of the
Thirteenth Department of the KGB, which is involved with planning sabotage and other
violent acts.
David Ferrie today receives the final decision from the Eastern Airlines appeal board: it
unanimously upholds his discharge from the airlines. AOT
During the last week of this month, it is alleged that JFK severely tears a groin muscle
while frolicking poolside with one of his sexual partners during a West Coast trip. The pain is so
intense that the White House medical staff prescribes a stiff canvas shoulder-to-groin brace that
locks his body in a rigid upright position. It is far more constraining than his usual back brace,
which he also continues to wear. The two braces are meant to keep him as comfortable as
possible during the strenuous days of campaigning, including the upcoming trip to Dallas, Texas.
JFK’s groin brace is not in the possession of the National Archives in Washington, DC. [44]
September 30, 1970
The New American Bible is published in its entirety for the first time.[45]
September 30, 1991: USS SCAMP was the second SKIPJACK - class nuclear-powered attack submarine and the second ship in the Navy to be named after the fish. Both decommissioned and stricken from the Navy list on April 28, 1988, the SCAMP later entered the Navy’s Nuclear Powered Ship and Submarine Recycling Program at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Wash., and finished it on September 30, 1991. [46]
September 30, 2009:
From: James Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 2:09 PMTo: Jeffery goodlove Subject: RE: This Day in Goodlove History, September 30
In the censuses of 1850 (Philip), 1860 (George), 1870 (George P.) his age was 29, 39, and 50, so born 1820-21 in Virginia
In all three censuses his wife’s name was Mary.
On Eva’s death certificate, her mother’s name was Mary Pendleton.
From: Jeffery goodlove [mailto:jefferygoodlove@aol.com] Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 1:40 PMTo: JamesSubject: RE: This Day in Goodlove History, September 30
Jim, is it possible that despite the spelling inconsistencies, that george p goodloe-goodlove is george phillip gottlieb?
From: James Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 11:40 AMTo: JEFFERYGOODLOVE@aol.com Subject: RE: This Day in Goodlove History, September 30
Jeff:
We’ve looked for Goodlove in Va., Tenn, and Ky before. The people misidentified as Goodlove are GOODLOE.
George P. GOODLOE and 11-year old Evie are found in Spottsylvania Co. census 1860
Eva Goodloe Briscoe died May 5, 1924. Her father’s name was given as Philip Goodloe
From This Day… September 30, 2009
Hi Folks,I was looking thru local newspapers today and spotted this." Spirit of Jefferson " newspaperCharlestown, Va. (Jefferson Co, WV now)Tues Dec 4 (December 4), 1866- Married -On the 27th ultimo (November 27, 1866), at the residence of the bride's father, by Rev. F. L. Kregel, Mr. Wm. D. Briscoe, of this county, to Miss Evie Goodlove, only daughter of Geo. P. Goodlove, Esq., of Spottsylvania county, Va.[1]
I don’t know a George P. Goodlove, but I do know a George Phillip Gottlieb born 1809 died 1875 who married Wilhelmina Hendrick Van Schaik. His father was George Phillip Gottlieb born 1758, died 1812 who was married to Machteld Koppelhof.
Summary
During the American War of Independence troops from var-
ious German territories fought on the British side,
including one unit from Waldeck called the Third English-
Waldeck Mercenary Regiment. All these auxiliary troops
are known under the name "Hessians" because the Land-
gravate of Hesse-Kassel provided the largest contingent
of mercenary units.
1875 DOTTLIEB GEORD 0/ 0 GE WLD5 62 June 1782 942,118
1876 GOTTLIEB GEOR~ 0/ 6 GE WLD5 01 June 1783 942/132
3877 GOTTLIEB GEORD 0/ 6 WLD 12 August 1783 978/25
Ge Private (Gemeiner)
WLD 5 Fifth Company (Captain Georg von Haacke,
after August 1778 Major Konrad von Horn)
62?
01 appointed, especially in the unit rolls
12 deserted; deserted to the enemy
• Also, George Gottlieb the elder had a daughter , Margaret (Peggy”) Godlove, born August 13, 1792 in Hampshire Cnty WVA or Pennsylvania?, died August 30, 1873 in Buffalo, Guernsey County, OH Married 1816 to Michael Spaid.
Is this Conrad’s father and is there a descendant out there that would do a DNA test?
More to come.[47]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] Wikipedia
[2] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt
[3] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe
[4] Wikipedia
[5] http://penningtons.tripod.com/jeptha.htm
[6] http://genealogytrails.com/vir/fincastle/county_history_3.html
[7] Chronicles of Border Warfare by Alexander Scott Withers, (Reuben Gold Thwaites notation) 1920 edition; pgs. Pg. 179.
[8] Dunmore’s War by Thwaites and Kellog pg. 302.
[9] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg. 116
[10] Battles of the Revolutionsary War 1775-1781 by W.J. Wood pgs. 193.
[11] http://www.ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?sp=search&sv=N-3%20-%20QUAKER%20MEADOWS
[12] References:
Edward W. Phifer Jr., Burke: The History of a North Carolina County (1977)
William S. Powell, ed., Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, IV, 148, 152—sketches by William S. Powell and John Inscoe
J. Randall Cotton and others, Historic Burke: An Architectural Sites Inventory of Burke County (1987)
Charlotte Observer, September 6, 1998
Historic Burke website: http://www.historicburke.org/
[13] That Dark and Bloody River, Allan W. Eckert
[14] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 p. 183.
[15] Index for Old Kentucky Surveys and Grants in Old State House, Fkt. KY. (Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett, Page 454.50.)
[16] [edit] References
1. ^ a b "The United States Statutes at Large". Memory.loc.gov. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/amlaw/lwsl.html. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
2. ^ The XYZ Affair and the Quasi-War with France, 1798–1800[dead link]
3. ^ "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774–1875". Memory.loc.gov. http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsl&fileName=008/llsl008.db&recNum=19. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
4. ^ Simms, Brendan. Three Victories and a Defeat: The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire. London, 2007. pp. 502–31
5. ^ Longmate, Norman. Island Fortress: The Defense of Great Britain, 1604–1945. Pimlico, 1991. pp. 183–85
6. ^ Model Treaty (1776)[dead link]
7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j French Alliance, French Assistance, and European diplomacy during the American Revolution, 1778–1782[dead link]
8. ^ Model Treaty (1776[dead link]
9. ^ a b c "Perspective On The French-American Alliance". Xenophongroup.com. http://www.xenophongroup.com/mcjoynt/alliance2.htm. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
10. ^ a b c d e f g h "Avalon Project: Treaty of Alliance Between The United States and France; February 6, 1778". Avalon.law.yale.edu. http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/fr1788-2.asp. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
11. ^ Edler 2001, pp. 163–166
12. ^ a b c d e "French-American Relations in the Age of Revolutions: From Hope to Disappointment (1776–1800)". Xenophongroup.com. http://www.xenophongroup.com/mcjoynt/ros6-2e.htm. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
[edit] Further reading
•Hoffman, Ronald; Albert, Peter J., eds. Diplomacy and Revolution : the Franco–American Alliance of 1778 (Charlottesville: Univ. Press of Virginia, 1981); [ISBN 978-0-8139-0864-9].
•Ross, Maurice. Louis XVI, Forgotten Founding Father, with a survey of the Franco–American Alliance of the Revolutionary period (New York: Vantage Press, 1976); [ISBN 978-0-533-02333-2].
•Corwin, Edward Samuel. French Policy and the American Alliance of 1778 (New York: B. Franklin, 1970).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Alliance_%281778%29
[17] When the smoke of wood fires and burning leaves clings to the November mists in the Mohawk Valley, men still talk about Joseph Brant, the great Mohawk war captain who tried all his life to keep a foot in two worlds, the red and the white.
He refused to bend his knee to King George but gallantly kissed the hand of his queen. He had his portrait painted by the famous English painter George Romney. He was at ease drinking tea from fragile china cups, but could hurl a tomahawk with deadly accuracy. He was a graduate of the Indian school that later became Dartmouth College, and he translated the Bible into the Mohawk language, yet he could leave the Mohawk a blazing ruin from Fort Stanwix, near Rome, to the very outskirts of Schenectady. He was one of the greatest of American Indians; had he given his support to the struggling Continental army the course of our history would certainly have been changed.
But it would have been improbable if not impossible for Brant to wear a Continental tricorn;he was too vain and too closely allied with the Lords of the Valley to consider casting his lot with the humble Palatine Dutch farmers who talked so much of freedom. For Brant, they had the stink of cow dung about them; he was familiar with buckled shoes and cologne.
His decision to side with the British was tragic for the Iroquis Confederacy or Six Nations as it was called. That ancient confederation bound together by wisdom, skill at war, and diplomacy became helplessly divided when it was agreed that each nation should go its own way. In the past a declaration helplessly divided when it was agreed that each nation should go its own way. In the past a declation of war had to be voted unanimously. Some nations like the Oneida went with the Americans other tried to stay neutral, or like Brant’s Mohawk fought for the British.
Brant joined Colonel Barry St. Leger’s invasion of the Mohawk, one of the prongs of Burgoyn’s doomed campaign. The famous Battle or Oriskany, undoubtebly the bloodiest and most ferocious of the Revolution, was fought with Herkimer’s gallant farmer standing musket to musket with the King’s Own, the best of his Hessian gamekeeper-sharpshooters, and Brant’s painted warriors. Brant, who despised defeat,m led his Indians back to Frot Niagara, bitterly advising the British high command in Montreal that from now on he would fight his way.
For six years he led his Indian raiders into the Mohawk, again and again leaving the beautiful valley a sea of flames while the alarm bells in the tiny forts clanged frantically.
Some raids became classic atrocity stories of American wars: Cherry Valley, where women and children lay dead in the snow with Brant protesting fiercely that Walter Butler, who led Butler’s Rangers, was to blame; Wyoming, which gave birth to the celebrated eighteenth-century poem “Gertrude of Wyoming,” which pictures Brant as a murderousd fiend who slaughtered the innocent. But as it developed Brant was never there.
Following the Revolution Brant led his people, the first American DPs, across the border to settle in Canada.
He came in solitary glory to Philadelphia in 1792 to see Washington and his cabinet, but only after the other Iroquois chiefs, like Cornplanter and Red Jackt, had already left the capital. It was typicalof Brant. Humilyut was alien to the Mohawk; in fact, pride and arrogance were his major flaws.
Brant was no wigwam, story book Indian dressed in Buckskins staind with bear grease and smelling of a thousand campfires. He was educated, he wrote with the grace and lucidity that was far beyond many of the farmers he had fought against. His clothes were of the finest material, and in his luxurious home elaborate meals were served on crisp Irish linen. He had a host of slaves, as many as the aristocratic Virginians who would later rule the United States
He died in his fine home on Grand River, Ontario, November 24, 1807, whispering with his last breath: Have pity on the poor Indians.” Painter: Brant was painted by many famous artist; among them were Romney, Charles Willson Peal, George Catlin, and Wilhelm Berezy. It is not certain who painted this post-revolutionary portrait. (The McKenney-Hall Portrait Gallery of American Indians by James D. Horan.)
[18]
[19] wikipedia
[20] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove
[21] (Stories from the Prisoners of War by Kathy Dhalle page 65.)
[22] (State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.)
[23] http://www.historyorb.com/events/august/14
[24] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 215.
[25] This Day in Jewish History.
[26]On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[27] www.wikipedia.org
[28]On This Day ih America by John Wagman.
[29] This Day in Jewish History.
[30] This Day in Jewish History
[31] This Day in Jewish History.
[32] This Day in Jewish History.
[33] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774
[34] The Abandonment of the Jews, America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945 by David S. Wymen page 37.
[35] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 328-328.
[36] This Day in Jewish History.
[37] This Day in Jewish History.
[38] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 450
[39] This Day in Jewish History.
[40] Remnantofgod.org/NaziRCC.
[41] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt
[42] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=76195694&
• [43] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf
[44] http://www.dallasnews.com/news/jfk50/reflect/20131012-extremists-in-dallas-created-volatile-atmosphere-before-jfks-1963-visit.ece
[45]On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[46] http://navysite.de/ssn/ssn588.htm
[47] Posted by: Daniel Robinson (ID *****7243)
Date: June 02, 2008 at 16:17:28
http://genforum.genealogy.com/g/goodlove/messages/4.html
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