Monday, September 8, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, September 8, 2014

11,759 names…11,759 stories…11,759 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, September 8, 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.





John Bacon (3rd great granduncle)

Inez M. Jones Booth

John H. LeClere (1st cousin 1x removed)

Richard I. The Lionheart (23rd great granduncle)

Effie L. McKinnon (3rd cousin 2x removed)

Nancy J. Newman Gott (sister in law of the great grandmother)

Josephine Weber Smith (wife of the 3rd great grandnephew of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

September 8, 1131: At a great council meeting on September 8, it was decided that Matilda would return to her husband.[29] Here she received another oath of allegiance, where Stephen once more made his vow to Matilda.[26] The marriage proved a success when, in March 1133, Matilda gave birth to their first child, Henry, in Le Mans.[30] In 1134, the couple's second son, Geoffrey, was born in Rouen.[31] Matilda nearly died in childbirth, and as she lay critically ill, her burial arrangements were planned.[31] However, she recovered from her illness.

Struggle for the throne of England

Main article: The Anarchy


Normans

Bayeux Tapestry WillelmDux.jpg

William the Conqueror invades England


William I
•Robert Curthose, Duke of Normandy
•Richard, Duke of Bernay
•William II
•Adela, Countess of Blois
•Henry I


William II


Henry I
•Empress Matilda
•William Adelin
•Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester


Stephen
•Eustace IV, Count of Boulogne
•William I, Count of Boulogne
•Marie I, Countess of Boulogne


Monarchy of the United Kingdom

•v
•t
•e


In 1120, her brother William Adelin drowned in the disastrous wreck of the White Ship, making Matilda the only surviving legitimate child of her father King Henry. Her cousin Stephen of Blois was, like her, a grandchild of William the Conqueror; but her paternal line meant she was senior to Stephen in the line of succession.

After Matilda returned to England, Henry named her as his heir to the English throne and Duchy of Normandy. Henry saw to it that the Anglo-Norman barons, including Stephen, twice swore to accept Matilda as ruler if Henry died without a male heir of his body. [1]

September 8, 1276: Pope John XXI appointed (Pedro Hispano) of Portugal (first). [2]

1277: In 1247, under the Treaty of Woodstock, Llywelyn had agreed that he held North Wales in fee to the English king. By 1272, Llywelyn had taken advantage of the English civil wars to consolidate his position, and the Peace of Montgomery (1267) had confirmed his title as Prince of Wales and recognised his conquests.

However, Llywelyn maintained that the rights of his principality were 'entirely separate from the rights' of England; he did not attend Edward's coronation and refused to do homage. Finally, in 1277 Edward decided to fight Llywelyn 'as a rebel and disturber of the peace', and quickly defeated him.[3]

1277: As Joan of Acre was growing up with her grandmother, her father Edward was back in England, already arranging marriages for his daughter. He hoped to gain both political power and more wealth with his daughter's marriage, so he conducted the arrangement in a very “business like style”.[9] [4]He finally found a man suitable to marry Joan born 1272 (aged 5 at the time), Hartman, son of King Rudoph I, of Germany. Edward then brought her home from France for the first time to meet him.[10][5] As she had spent her entire life away from Edward and Eleanor, when she returned she “stood in no awe of her parents”[6][6] and had a fairly distanced relationship with them.

Unfortunately for King Edward, his daughter’s suitor died before he was able to meet or marry Joan. The news reported that Hartman had fallen through a patch of shallow ice while “amusing himself in skating” while a letter sent to the King himself stated that Hartman had set out on a boat to visit his father amidst a terrible fog and the boat had smashed into a rock, drowning him.[11][7][8]

1277: Mamluks in control of Egypt, Llywelyn Yr Ail of Wales defeated by British Edward I, baibars dies by poisoning, Roger Bacon imprisoned for heresy until 1292, Pope Nicholas III elected, English Franciscan philosopher Riger Bacon exiles for heresy until 1292, Nicholas III Pope to 1280 when Pope John XXI dies , Pope John XXI dies in collapse of roof. November 25 Pope Nicholas III (Giovanni Gaetano Orsini) appointed. [9]


1277: Simon de Montacute, ?-1317


First Baron Montacute. One of the first admirals, served in senior positions in Norman wars in France, Wales, and Scotland.

Served in Welsh war against Llywelyn ab Gruffydd, 1277; also in successful campaign again in 1282; commanded a ship which broke French siege of Bordeaux (then English), 1296; in Gascony till 1297; battle of Falkirk, 1298; wars against Scotland, 1299; Governor of Corfe Castle, 1299; signed and sealed "the famous letter of the Barons to the Pope", 1301; siege of Carlaverock, 1300; Scottish wars till 1307; governor of Beaumaris Castle, 1308; Admiral of the Fleet (employed against the Scots), 1310.

Descendent of Drogo. Married Aufricia, daughter of Fergus, king of Man.

Denholm-Young provides some information on what it meant to be an admiral in 1307:

"A more traditional type of admiral was Lord Simon de Montague, a king's banneret and a baron, appointed in 1307 as Captain and Governor of the whole fleet. Simon, who bore golden griffins on a blue banner at Caerlaverock, was Constable of Corfe and later Beaumaris. He is said to have served in all Edward's wars.

After 1293 the war, not yet declared on land, was growing in intensity between merchant fleets at sea, and the control of this in the interests of the king and his subjects led to the appointment, for the first time, of admirals. There was as yet no Royal Navy, though the king had a ship or two... The nucleus for a war-time fleet was provided, under a standing agreement, by the Cinque Ports, and the rest were, like their crews, impressed... the crews had from time to time to be prosecuted because they "withdrew without licence", as in 1302 and 1303... The ships, merely armed merchantmen, with soldiers on board if battle was intended, sailed in convoy. As on land, the opposing sides sometimes agreed upon a time and place for battle...

...These ad-hoc fleets helped to conquer Wales by cutting off supplies from Llewelyn. They assisted in the Scottish campaigns by transporting supplies to Scotland, and elsewhere by protecting merchant ships or even ports from attack; but most of all transporting men, horses, and bullion ... naval warfare, in the absence of guns, inevitably consisted in boarding and capturing enemy ships, with the aid of archers and "Greek fire" hurled from slings." (Denholm-Young).

Denholm-Young provides the footnote: " Simon de Montague castellated Yerdlingham, co. Somerset. He was appointed January 30, 1307 ( CPR, p. 490)."

The Cinque Ports were the English "international airports" of the times, that is, they were ports engaged in "international" trade (the concept of the nation-state did not really exist at the time). They were somewhat similar to the Hanseatic League.

Note that his family arms, a single male griffin, was supposed to be the family's original arms and was also ascribed to Osmond.[10]

1278: Death of Nicola Pisano the Italian sculptor, death of Ottokar II king of Bohemia as he is defeated bu Rudolf and killed at Durnkrut – succeeded by Wenceslas II, Death of Martin of Troppau the chronicler and historian, St. Maria Novella church built in Florence, 278 Jews in London hanged for clipping coin but Christians guilty of same offense fined. Invention of glass mirror, death of Ottokar II the Great King of Bohemia. [11]

September 8-9, 1397:


Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester

January 7, 1355

September 8/9 1397

Married Eleanor de Bohun in 1376; Had issue.


[12]

September 8, 1498: Torquemada died. Torquemada was descended from a family Morranos which makes his role in history all the more ironic. Torquemada is popularly known as the head of the Spanish Inquisition. In fact, he was not the first one to head the Inquisition; an act of evil that had the full support and control of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. According to some, the Queen was a stronger supporter of this activity than the King. More importantly, the let the Pope know that they and not he would control the Inquisition. After all, the monarchs had empty coffers to fill as well as souls to save.[13]

1499: Jews expelled from Germany.[14] Jews expelled from Nuremberg, Bavaria. (Germany).[1] [2][15] Amerigo Vespucci, Italian navigator after whom America is named, expores the northern and eastern coasts of South America.[16] Spanish Muslims rebel unsuccessfully against forced conversions to Christianity. Many are expelled.[17] Plague in England causes Henry VII to flee to Calais. Ludovico Sforza the Regent of Milan dies, Louis XII of France marries Anne of Brittany, widow of Charles VIII to keep duchy of Brittany for the French crown, Partition of Milan – Lodovico Sforza flees to the Tirol – French take Milan – Louis XII enters the city, War between Swabian League and Swiss cantons ends with the Peace of Basel – the Swiss establishing their independence, War between Turks and Venice – defeat of Venetian fleet at Sapienza – Lepanto surrenders to the Sultan, Comspiracy of Perkin Warbeck to escape from the Tower of London discovered – tried for treason and finally executed, Fernando de Rojas creates “Celistina a Spanish comedy, Willibald Pirckheimer writes “Bellum Helveticum”, death of Italian philosopher and scholar Marsilo FIcino, Spanish inquisitor general Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros introduces forced mass conversions of Moors – cause of great Moorish revolt in Granada, U of Alcala founded, Durer paints, Giorgione paints “Portrait of a Young Man”, first political cartoons appear – on French-Italian war, Signorelli creates frescoes at Orvieto Cathedral, U of Oxford institutes degrees in music, Amerigo Vespucci and Alonso de Ojeda leave Spain on voyage of discovery to S. America, Antimony first produced and exported from Hungary, Francisco Jimenez forces mass conversion on Moors, Louis XII captures Milan, Treaty of Basle, Louis XII of France invades Italy, Perkin Warbeck, attempted usurper, put to death, War between Ottomans and alliance of Venice and Hungary, Vespucci explores ne coast of Brazil, Plague in England causes Henry VII to flee to Calais. [18]

September 8, 1504: Michelangelo’s David is unveiled in Florence. The naked statue of Israel’s greatest king has a flaw- David is uncircumcised. So did Michaelangelo sculpt the likeness of a nude Florentine boy and call it David so as not to offend the sensibilites of Christian Italians? Considering that Moses is portrayed with Horns, anatomically and or texturally correct art was not the strong point of Renaissance artists.[19]

October 23, 1516 – September 8, 1524: Charlotte (October 23, 1516 – September 8, 1524) - died young, engaged to Charles I of Spain from 1518 until death. [20]

September 8, 1560: – Amy Robsart, the wife of Robert Dudley 1st earl of Leicester, is found dead at the bottom of the stairs. Foul play is suspected. [21]

September 8, 1565: St. Augustine, founded by Spanish naval officer, Pedro Menendez de Aviles, becomes the first permanent white colony in America.[22]

September 8, 1571: To M. DE La Mothe Fenelon. [23]

From Sheffield, the 8 September, 1571.



Monsieur de La Mothe Fénélon, I wrote to you by two of my servants, George Robison and Robert Mackieson, and having received no reply to any of my letters, I fear that they have not been delivered to you. I send this at random after the others, to tell you that to-day the Earl of Shrewsbury informed me that he had received letters from the Queen his mistress, who wrote to him that she had discovered that I had

attempted to escape ; that I had besought the assistance of the King of Spain to excite a rebellion in this country by Ridolfi ; that she is informed of a negotiation between the Duke of Norfolk and me in reference to the said rebellion ; that I have offered my son to the King of Spain ; and that she knows the opinion which I have of Don Carlos. And therefore she has recommended the said Earl of Shrewsbury to restrict my liberty, leaving me only sixteen attendants, namely,

ten men and six women, and to dismiss the rest in the course of two hours, the French to France, and the Scotch to Scotland ; apprising his said mistress of those to whom he shall give passports, and of the road which they shall take ; that therefore I should consider whom I chose to retain, with the exception of four whom the said Queen intended should go: Beton my steward, Raulet my secretary, Gilbert Curie my

Scotch amanuensis, and Archibald Beton my usher.



And I replied to him, that I had of my own free will placed myself in the hands of the Queen his mistress, relying upon her promises and friendship ; that since she has detained me forcibly, if she suspects that I desire my liberty, I cannot help it. Nevertheless I am a free princess, and in that am not responsible to her or any other. I have always wished the most Christian King, my good brother, to know that I

have not sought for my said liberty by stratagem, or otherwise than by treaty and reference, with which she has held in expectation my good brother and me. And therefore. Monsieur de La Mothe Fénélon, I submit to you to whom, me thinks, I wrote plainly enough, when I heard that, for evasion of the promises made to my said good brother of restoring me to liberty, they accused me of wishing to take it myself, that if I have implored the aid of his Catholic Majesty in any way, it has been as from other Christian sovereigns, and especially that he might concur in and favour that which it may please the Most Christian King to give me for the restoration of my kingdom : but that it is to excite any rebellion in this country, is a false and malicious assertion, as it is

that Ridolfi, of whom they make mention, has any instructions from me to that effect; and the assistance which I endeavour to procure for my faithful and obedient subjects ought not to be construed as rebellion by those who have no right to authority over them or me. That the Duke of Norfolk is the subject of this Queen, from whom she can verify the suspicions conceived against him, if there be any thing in them ; but seeing the state in which he at present is, I am not, thank God ! so destitute of sense, as not to know how little it would profit me to have any understanding or negotiation with him, and the danger which I should thereby encounter ; and I believe that he is wise enough on his part to be influenced by the same and higher considerations ; that

my son is nearer to me than to this Queen, not having to account to her or any other, if I should offer him to the King of Spain or to any other prince friendly to him and me : besides, that is false : it is not in my power, and I would not offer that which I could not be certain of performing : moreover, there would no need of my offering that which they had done me the honour to request from me. The late Queen of Spain, my good sister, whom G od absolve ! wrote to me

shortly before her death as to the marriage of one of her daughters with him, concerning which I still have her letters. She was the Most Christian King's own sister, and was equally resolved with myself that nothing should be done in that without the consent of the said sovereign ; and therefore there should be no suspicion or jealousy on this head, for it is unreasonable, and for my part I am anxious that everybody should know that I heartily desire for my son the alliance of

such princes. And as for Don Carlos, I shall always avow that I cannot but have a good opinion of him, both for his valour and merit, and on account of those with whom he is connected. As for the rest, the pretence which this Queen takes thereon to restrict the little liberty which she had left to me, is very ill and unjustly founded. And I call God to witness the wrong which she does me.



During this conversation no one of my servants was permitted to come nigh me; and therefore I asked the said Earl of Shrewsbury permission to speak to Raulet in his presence before his departure; which he granted. But having heard that I ordered him to give a faithful account to the King, my good brother, of my actions and conduct since his arrival here, and of the peril of my life in which he left me, he has changed his mind, and says that these four excepted individuals shall not depart until he has heard upon this point the pleasure of the Queen his mistress, and has refused to grant the solicitations and request

made to him by the steward and Raulet, for permission to depart. I have not chosen to name any of the sixteen to him, leaving him to act therein according to his instructions ; and in truth I should not know where to begin, as all those who were left to me at the last retrenchment are so necessary, that it is impossible I can be served by fewer. The said Earl of Shrewsbury has made election of some, who have demonstrated to him that they could not serve, nor be burthened with my kitchen: for there is only one for each particular office, and this would cause one to discharge the duties of two or three, as butler, pantler, and fruiterer, which is not in their power ; and all together, with my leave, have requested him to give them their passport to go away, which he has refused them, replying, that he will keep them and make them serve by force. He will not permit those who remain with me to go out of this castle, to which I shall also be confined. You

see the great cruelty exercised in this towards me and mine.

All means of communication with my kingdom are taken

from me, and it seems that this blow is to complete my ruin. I entreat you. Monsieur de La Mothe Fénélon, to inform the King, my good brother, of this, and that having had the honour to be related to him, besides the ancient and strict alliance between us and our predecessors, beseech him from me that he will not suffer me to be thus treated ; and I beg you also to apprise my ambassador the Archbishop of Glasgow of it, that he may memorialize and urge it upon the said King and

Queen, my good sister, and make it known wherever it may concern. I have no means of writing to him, and not without great difficulty leisure to send you the present, and less to provide for the poor people who are driven from me in a miserable plight ; Praying God, Monsieur de La Mothe Fénélon, to give me patience, and you what you most desire. From Sheffield Castle, this 8th September, 1571.

Since this was written, my Lord Livingstone, whom I expected to be the bearer of it, was on the point of setting out ; but he is forcibly detained like the others. From the window of my chamber I saw Kobison arrive at the castle-gate, where he is still a prisoner ; and the packet which you delivered to him has been taken from him and sent back to the Court ; and the said Kobison is guarded closely, and none of my

people permitted to go near him.



Your very good friend and obliged,

Marie R. [24]



September 8, 1598

The parish of St. Augustine, Florida, becomes the first Catholic parish in North America.[25]





September 8, 1650:


Elizabeth, Princess of England

December 29, 1635

September 8, 1650

Died young; no issue. Buried Newport, Isle of Wight


[26]





Sunday September 8, 1754:

The Marquis Duquesne, Governor of New France, sends a letter to Contrecoeur, the commander of Fort Duquesne. The letter contains a translation of George Washington's journal which he lost after the July 3 battle at the Great Meadows. Duquesne hopes the document will aid Contrecoeur in defending the French frontier from English incursions. "You will see that he (Washington) is the most impertinent of men, but that he is as clever as he is crafty with credulous Indians. Besides, he lies a great deal in order to justify the assassination of Sieur de Jumonville, which has recoiled upon him, and which he was stupid enough to admit in his capitulation." [27]



September 8, 1755: In the Co. of Capt. Jona. Harris, despatched upon the expedition to Grown Pt., and in service from March 27, to September 8, 1755, are the following from Framingham:



John Nixon, Capt., 16 w. 5 d.

Jona. Gibbs, Lieut, 38 w.

Amos Gates, Sarg't., 27 w. 4 d.

Eben'r. Boutwell, Corp., 30 w. 1 d.

John Mathis, Priv., 30 w.

Geo. Walkup, Drum Major.



September 9, 1756: "Kittanning or Attiqué Indian Town was located on this river flat. The chief settlement as early as 1727 of the Lenni Lenape or Delaware Indians in their early westward movement from the Susquehanna River. Became the most important Indian center west of the Allegheny Mountains. Destroyed September 8, 1756 by Colonel John Armstrong and his 300 frontier troops from the Cumberland Valley. Marked by the Pennsylvania Historical Commission and the Armstrong County Historical Society, 1926."[28]



September 8, 1760

A British force led by General Jeffrey Amherst[29] forces the French to surrender at Montreal, during the French and Indian War.[30] Montreal Montreal falls to the British; letters are signed finishing the surrender of Canada. [31]







September 8, 1761: Princess Sophia Charlotte (b. May 19, 1744, m. September 8, 1761, d. November 17, 1818).[32]





September 8, 1762: Valentine Crawford obtained a patent for one hundred acres in old Frederick County, Virginia, which was applied for in 1748 and dated June 21, 1754. He and his wife Sarah, sold the one hundred acres in question, to Jacob Townsend, September 8, 1762. Witnesses were: David Shepherd and Elijah Garis. [33]



September 8, 1762

Valentine Crawford’s oldest known document reads as follows:

Frederick County, Virginia. Deed Book 7, Date 1762. Adjoining entry of land as yet waste and ungranted. ... sell unto Jacob Townsend land to be paid for within one year, yielding and paying the yearly rent of one Indian corn at the feast of St.Michael, the Archangel.

Signed, Valentine Crawford

Sarah Crawford

Witnesses: David Shepherd James Gamlle

James Stephenson







At court held in Frederick County, Virginia, September 1762.



This indenture made the 7th, Sept.(September 7, 1762) in the year of our Lord 1762 between Valentine Crawford and Sarah his wife of the County of Frederick and Colony of Virginia of one part and Jacob Townsend clerk and Batchelor of Arts of the other part... in consideration of 30 Ls. current money... a certain tract of land granted to said Valentine Crawford by patent bearing date the 21st day of June, 1754 lying and being situate in the county upon the east side of Opeckon joining Jacob Hite’s late survey Dr. Stephen’s Hollings— worth and John McMahan and Opeckon and bounded as by a survey made by John Daylis showeth begining at 3 pines on the east bank of Opeckon and runnng thence N 61 E 61 ‘ 27 poles to a red oak said to be the corner of Stephen Hollingworth’s land thence with his line A 41 poles to a Spanish oak red oak and white oak saplins corner to John McMahan’s late survey thence with his line 13° E202 to 2 locust, corner to the said McMahan .. . Colonel Adam Stephen’s line thence with Colonel Stephen’s line S 70 34 poles to 2 hicc— orys (hickorys) white oak and red oak saplins corner to said Stephen’s in line of Jacob Kite’s late survey thence with Mr. Hite’s lines No. 1 30 W 84 poles to red oak and hiccory on the bank of Opeckon thence down the meandore of the same N 23 W 25 poles N 61 JV 30 poles to the begining containing 100 acres together with an entry warrant for one hundred and 70.0 acres of land adjoining Mr. Jacob Hite’s southwards and the said granted tract and all improvements, waters water courses...

Signed Valentine Crawford

Sarah Crawford

Witnesses: Thomas Specke

David Shepherd

Elijah Isaacs

At court held for Frederick County, Va. September 7, 1762 the same was ordered to be recorded.

James Keith, C.C~.[34]



On September 8, 1762, sold 180 acres, Deed Book 7, page 519. He willed his son, Richard Stephenson, Jr. 190 acres, just before Richard, Jr. married the Summers girl, of Loudoun County, Va.[35]



September of 1762, brought peace and a treaty in Paris, at the close of the war. Fort Duquesne, Acadia, Louisburg, Crown Point, Ticonderoga, Fort Niagara, Quebec, along with other Frenchg outposts, had fallen into the hands of the British. Spain gave up her Florida territory to England, while she gained New Orleans and the territory west of the Mississippi from France. [36]



September 8, 1768



By Horatio Sharp Espuire Lieutenant Governor and Commander in Chief in and over the Province of Maryland



In Testimony that the Reverend Henry Addison, John McPherson, Isaac Campbell, and William Brogdon are Clergymen of the Church of England and Rectors of Parishes in this Province I have vcaused the great Seal of the said Province to be hereunto affixed this Eighth Day of September (illegible word) in the Year of Our Lord 1768



Hora. Sharpe



The Right Reverend Father in God Richard Lord Bishop of London.



We the underwritten, being all of us regular parochial Ministers in the Province of Maryland, do certify to your Lordship that we have for three Years last past been personally acquainted with Mr. Daniel McKinnon, who now appears before Your Lordship as Candidate for Holy Orders; and that during that time, as well as before, He has behaved himself to our entire Satisfaction.—We therefore beg Leave to recommend him to Your Lordship as a ___orderly, virtuous, and pious Person, and well affected to the Government, both in Church and State; and as such, no unmeet or unworthy Candidate for Holy Orders.





H. Addison, M.A.

Rcctor of St. John’s



John MacPherson A.M.

Rector of Wm. And Mary Parish

Charles County



Jo____Campbell Rector

Of Trinity Parish



William Brogden

Queen Anne parish, (Anne Arundel County)[37]





September 8, 1771; At home all day. Mr. Crawford went away after breakfast.[38]

September 8, 1774: The first attack by the Indians upon the settlers in the Upper Clinch Valley was made on the,8th of September (September 8), 1774. On that day a band of 12 or 15 Indians were in Thompson Valley, and about daybreak killed John Henry and his wife and three small children. Bickley, in his History of Tazewell, has related the incident in very interesting style, and his account of the occurrence will be quoted in succeeding pages of this volume, along with his accounts of all the massacres that were committed in Tazewell County by the Indians. Dr. Bickley made a mistake as to the date of the Henry massacre, placing it in May, 1776 (May 1776).

Henry was living in Thompson Valley, on the southside of Rich Mountain, a short distance east of Plum Creek Gap, upon land now owned by Archie Thompson. He had settled there in the month of May preceding. [39]

September 8, 1777

On the eighth, the American army took its position behind Red Clay creek, the left resting upon Newport on the Christiana, being on the road leading directly from the British camp to Philadelphia. the right extended a considerable distance up the creek to Hockesson. Here a battle was anticipated. But on that day, Gen. Grant having embarked the tents and heavy baggage rejoined the remainder of the army, which was again put in motion. The main body advanced by Newark, near which they had been posted, upon the right of the American encampment and took post within four miles of that point, extending their left still further up the country. A strong column made a feint of attacking in front, and after some maneuvering, halted at Milltown, within two miles of the centre of the Americans.

This show of attacks and the simultaneous extension of the enemy’s left so far up the country, indeed Washington to change his position, as he believed the object of the enemy to be to turn his right, cross the Brandywine, and cut off his communication with Philadelphia. If this if successfully carried out, would have hemmed him in upon a tongue of land between the British army and their fleet, where he must have been overpowered or compelled to fight his way out under every disadvantage.[40]

September 8, 1777

Howe’s transports at last showed up on Chesapeake Bay south of Philadelphia, where the British disembarked and began moving toward the capital. Washington chose to make his stand on a creek called the Brandywine, twenty miles or so from the city. His first brief report of the clash to John Hancock was made the night of the battle.[41]

September 8, 1778

When the 8th Regiment, in command of Colonel Brodhead, arrived at Fort Pitt the Indians were encamped on the Allegheny side of the Forks of the Ohio, and the treaty conference went into session two days later. General Andrew Lewis, the commander of the Vir­ginia troops in the battle of Point Pleasant, was the representative of the United States, and the Indian agent, Colonel George Morgan, also participated. General Lewis told the Indians of the intention to send an army against Detroit, and asked permission to pass through the Delaware country westward. The treaty resulted in a pledging of friendship, and an agreement to cooperate and establish the new Del­aware state. This treaty was signed by White Eyes, Captain Pipe and Kilibuck, for the Delawares, and by General Lewis and his brother, Thomas Lewis, for the Colonial Government. Present at the confer­ence and witnessing the treaty were General McIntosh, Colonel Brod­head, Colonel William Crawford, Colonel John Gibson, Major Arthur Graham, Captain Joseph L. Finley, Captain John Finley, and John Campbell, John Stephenson, and Benjamin Mil1s, interested traders and pioneers at Fort Pitt.[42][43]

September 8, 1781: Battle of Eutaw Springs -

September 8, 1815: Treaty of Springwells

The Treaty of Springwells was signed at Springwells, Michigan (near Detroit) on September 8, 1815. The agreement was signed between the United States federal government and the Chippewa, Ottawa, and Pottawatomi tribes inhabiting the Genessee County. This treaty officially ended all hostilities between the U.S. and the Native Americans dating back to after the Treaty of Detroit (1807). Based on the terms of the agreement, the United States waived all territorial rights over the Genessee County. Moreover, the U.S. agreed to restore to the Indians all of their possessions, rights, and privileges before their engaging in the War of 1812 as allies of the British. In return, the Native American tribes agreed to only place themselves under the protection of the U.S. government. The treaty also reaffirmed the Treaty of Greenville, the Treaty of Detroit, and any other accords established between both parties. The purpose of the Treaty of Springwells was to absolve the Native Americans for supporting the British in the War of 1812 and to secure their further allegiance to the United States.[44]




September 8, 1831: William IV

William IV.jpg


William IV, painted by Sir Martin Archer Shee, 1833


King of the United Kingdom (more...)


Reign

June 26,1830 – June 20, 1837


Coronation

September 8, 1831


Predecessor

George IV


Successor

Victoria [45]






September 8, 1847: Battle of Molinodel Rey, in the War with Mexico.[46]



September 8, 1849:

Inscriptions of graves copied and compiled. The following

statement is made about the cemetery: "This cemetery was destroyed by the

Pittsburg 7 West Virginia Railroad Company when they constructed their

branch through this section, about the year 1935. There are only two stones

remaining, and they are large flat table stones, in excellent condition,

with inscriptions that are very legible, and as follows:"

VANCE "In memory of ELIZABETH VANCE, consort of MOSES VANCE, who departed

this life, September 8, 1849, age 76 years."

MOSES VANCE, who departed this life, June 27, 1829, age 56 years.

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

Postscript and History:

"A descendant of the MOSES VANCE Family, who retained a copy of their

original family bible, states several of the

MOSES VANCE descendants were buried in this same cemetery, but no doubt

their stones were destroyed when the

Railroad constructed their branch, or they could have been moved elsewhere,

but the above two stones remain under a

group of trees.

We shall add here the bible records as follows:

MOSES VANCE, b. May 23, 1773; died January 27, 1829; married ELIZABETH, daughter of

JACOB & ELIZABETH STRICKLER, settlers in Tyrone Township in 1797.

ELIZABETH STRICKLER, b. 1773; died September 8, 1849, and both (husband and wife)

are buried on the NATHANIEL KING Farm.

Their Children:

JOHN VANCE, b. January 11, 1797; d. March 12, 1886; married MARY STRICKLER, daughter

of ABRAHAM STRICKLER.

JACOB VANCE, b. November 7, 1798; d. November 4, 1883; married CHARLOTTE HARDY

SAMUEL VANCE, b. July 30, 1800

FRANCES VANCE, b. Mary 27, 1802

WILLIAM VANCE, b. December 6, 1804

CRAWFORD VANCE, b. March 13, 1806; married SUSAN CLAYTON

MARGARET VANCE, b. March 29, 1808

ALFRED VANCE, b. April 22, 1810

ELISA VANCE, b. September 22, 1813; single

GEORGE VANCE, b. January 12, 1815; single"

[Reference, MOSES VANCE FAMILY, found in the book "History of Fayette

County, Pennsylvania, pages 401, 784, 787", by author Franklin Ellis;

information transcribed for PA Archives, November 1997.]

End of Vance index[47]



September 8, 1859: Robert Crooks Barkley born 1829, Civil War Private in Co. h 24TH IA Volunteer Infantry. Died January 27, 1863 on Board Hospital Ship 'Ida Mary", between Cairo & Memphis on the Mississippi River. Burial near Cairo, IL Civil War Cemetery. Robert married Emma Jane Dunlap September 8, 1859. After his death Emma Jane Dunlap remarried Henry Kimball. They had a daughter Nettie Emma Kimball who married William Henry Armstrong. Their son Hillis married Wilma Goodlove and their son Kenneth married Ethel Goodlove. It was Armstrong brothers marrying Goodlove sisters.[48]





September 8, 1862: Zebulon Baird Vance


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/88/Zebulon_Baird_Vance_-_Brady-Handy.jpg/220px-Zebulon_Baird_Vance_-_Brady-Handy.jpg


37th and 43rd Governor of North Carolina


In office
January 1, 1877 – February 5, 1879


Preceded by

Curtis Hooks Brogden


Succeeded by

Thomas Jordan Jarvis


In office
September 8, 1862 – May 29, 1865


Preceded by

Henry Toole Clark


Succeeded by

William Woods Holden


[49]

September 8-13, 1862: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Expedition from Memphis to Coldwater and Herando, Miss, [50]

September 8, 1863: Battle of Sabloe Pass, TX.[51]

May 1-September 8, 1864: Dr. William McKinnon Goodlove (1st cousin, 3 times removed) and the 57th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.at the Atlanta (Ga.) Campaign. [52]

Thurs. September 8, 1864

Rained a little was in camp all day

Nothing of importance

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[53]



September 8, 1865 – Treaty of Fort Smith was signed between the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Comanche, Creek, Osage, Quapaw, Seminole, Seneca, Shawnee, Wichita and Wyandot and the United States. Among other provisions, it recognized the John Ross party as the sole legitimate representatives of the Cherokee Nation. Ignored were the claims of Stand Watie, principal chief of the Confederate Cherokee, who had summoned his nephew John Rollin Ridge from California to negotiate for recognition of a "Southern Cherokee Nation", aspirations for which died the same day.[54]

1866

[55]
Buffalo on the Platte River, 1866

[56]



1866: Like many of his maskil colleagues, Gottlober also published collections of poems praising the Russian royal family: ‘Anaf ‘ets ‘avot (1858), Mizmor le-todah (1866), and Rane falet (1879).[57]



1866-1868

Benjamin F. LeFevre represented Shelby county in the Ohio legislature, 1866-68[58]



September 8, 1872: "DOOLITTLE AND THE INDIANS.; What the Senator Knows About Suppressing Reports A Good Secretary of the Interior for Greeley's Reform Cabinet", New York Times, September 8, 1872.[59]

September 8, 1893: Also from Altenbamberg, Eugenie Gottlieb, born September 8, 1893 in Altenbamberg. Resided Altenbamberg.[60]



September 8-11. 1920: Buck Creek Fair. September 8, 1920: Professor Earl Roadman was rescheduled to give the keynote address on that same topic on the first day of the Buck Creek Fair on September 8. Roadman was the rural leadership expert from Upper Iowa University at Fayette who had been scheduled to speak on rural school consolidation at the community life institute that had been postponed in April. Macy Campbell had agreed to make good on his earlier promise and speak on the commhujnity benefits of rural school consolidation on September 12, the eve of the election. [61]



September 8, 1921: As the summer of 1921 wore on and crop prices dipped still lower, more and more farmers in Delaware County began to wonder if perhaps rural school consolidation was indeed a “huge and expensive joke” on them. IN short, rural school consolidation was recognized as having the potential for rending asunder rural neighborhoods and undermining the spirit of neighborhood cooperation upon which family farming had always depended. In early September, the Manchester Press also printed a syndicated piece by the Chicago Tribune describing the dramatic impact of falling corn prices in the Midwest. It noted that corn in Nebraska was fetching only 28 cents a bushel and was expected to fall to less than 25 cents once the new crop entered the market. Oats were down to 18 cents. With coal prices going up, “famres will be burning corn to keep warm in the coming winter.” The combination of internecice conflict over consolidation and the collapse of the farm economy had finally led theManchester Press, the county’s leading newspaper, to question whether rural school consolidation was worth the cost. “In some districts the tax figures are as high as $7 per acre…Are we not in danger of making our rural educational faciilites such a burden to the patron as to become insupportable? … It is a serious question with us if we are not going to extremes in this consolidated school business,” wrote the editor.[62]



September 8, 1939: Two hundred Jews were forced into the synagogue in Bedzin, Poland. The synagogue was then set on fire.[63]



September 8, 1939: German forces occupy Lodz, Radom, and Tarnow.[64]

September 8, 1941: The siege began officially on September 8, 1941. The people of Leningrad began building antitank fortifications and succeeded in creating a stable defense of the city, but as a result were cut off from all access to vital resources in the Soviet interior, Moscow specifically. In 1942, an estimated 650,000 Leningrad citizens perished from starvation, disease, exposure, and injuries suffered from continual German artillery bombardment.

Barges offered occasional relief in the summer and ice-borne sleds did the same in the winter. Slowly but surely a million of Leningrad's young, sick, and elderly residents were evacuated, leaving about 2 million to ration available food and use all open ground to plant vegetables..[65]

September 8, 1942: In the House of Commons, Winston Churchill reacts angrily to the deportation of French Jews. No mention was made of the fate of the rest of the Jews of Europe. This silence was not for lack of information available to the Allied government.[66]



September 8, 1942: Eight thousand Jews are deported from Tarnow to Belzec; about six weeks later another 2,500 are sent there.-[67]



Gustav Gottleib, born February 27, 1886 in Borken. Resided Borken I, Hessen/Bez Kassel. Deportation: 1942, Auschwitz. Declared legally dead.[68]



September 8, 1942: Eight thousand Jews are deported from Tarnow to Belzec; about six weeks later another 2,500 are sent there.[69]



September 8, 1943 : Italy surrenders to the Allied forces.[70] The Badoglio government in Italy signs an armistice with the Allies.[71] Italian forces capitulate to the Germans in Rhodes.[72]



September 8, 1943: German forces occupy Athens; [73]



September 8, 1943: The five thousand Jews deported from the Theresienstadt, Czechoslovakia Ghetto arrive at Auschwitz.[74]



September 8, 1944: There were more reprisals in reaction to the Slovakia Uprising. Einsatzkommando broke into Jewish population of Topoclcany, Slovakia.[75]



September 8, 1947: The refugee ship Exodus is returned to Hamburg and its cargo of 4500 holocaust survivors removed by force. Some claim that this act more than any other helped force international public opinion against British policy. Others would contend that this is a slightly romanticized view of the outcome of this episode. The saga of the Exodus did supply the opening scenes, and title for, Leon Uris’ epic novel Exodus.[76]



September 8, 1962: Having gained its independence from France, Algerians voted to adopt a new constitution. “When Algeria attained independence in 1962, legislation granted Algerian citizenship only to those residents whose father or paternal grandfather were Muslims. Moreover, the Supreme Court of Justice of Algeria declared that the Jews were no longer under the protection of the Law. Most of Algeria’s 140,000 Jews left the country for France together with the pied-noirs; only about 10,000 stayed, a number that would rapidly decrease.”[77]



September 8, 1978: Tehran and eleven other Iranian cities were poaced under martial law. Violent demonstrations in the capital caused 58 deaths according to official figures; unofficial estimates ranged up to 250. The casualties resulted principally from troops firing on the crowds; in addition over 100 cases of arson were reported in thich banks, cinemas, police sstatios, shops, and other buildings were destroyed.[78]



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


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


[2] mike@abcomputers.com


[3] http://www.royal.gov.uk/HistoryoftheMonarchy/KingsandQueensofEngland/ThePlantagenets/EdwardILongshanks.aspx


[4] ^ Green (1850), p.321


[5] ^ Green (1850), p321.


[6] ^ a b Parsons (1995), p.40


[7] ^ Green (1850), p.323


[8] Wikipedia


[9] mike@abcomputers.com


[10] http://www.bing.com/search?q=simon+de+Montague&src=IE-TopResult&FORM=IE10TR


[11] mike@abcomputers.com


[12]


[13] This Day in Jewish History.


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


[15] [1] http://christianparty.net/jewsexpelled.htm

[2] Encyclopedia Judaica, Volume 4, page 345.


[16] Timetables of American History, Laurence Urdang.


[17] Timetables of American History, Laurence Urdang.


[18] mike@abcomputers.com


[19] This Day in Jewish History.


[20] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_I_of_France


[21] http://www.tudor-history.com/about-tudors/tudor-timeline/


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


[23] [Copy, — Archives of the Kingdom, at Paris, Cartons des Eois,

K. N. 95.]




[24] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt


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


[26] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrietta_Maria


[27] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm


[28] http://www.thelittlelist.net/abetoawl.htm#abenaki




[29] Amherst. General Jeffery Amherst. (1717-1797). Commander of British Operations in North America in 1758 and forward. He joined the army when he was eighteen and had served in Germany (Flanders) under the Duke of Marlborough and when sent to the colonies received royal instructions March 3, 1758 to take Louisbourg from the French. Amherst was promoted to Major General upon the insistence of William Pitt. He captured forts at Ticonderoga (French Fort Carillon) July 26, 1759 and then Crown Point (French Fort Frédéric) July 31, 1759.

The fall of New France followed Amherst’s capture of Montreal in 1760. In August 1761, he banned the practice of gift-giving at the western posts and instituted new rules regulating trade practices with the Indians. In addition, powder distribution to Indians was to be no more than the minimum required for hunting (5 pounds of powder and 5 pounds of lead shot per visit to the trading post). Trade was limited to the actual trading posts—no visits to the Indian villages (thus, Indians might be forced to travel a hundred miles to trade for anything, no matter how minor). Whether caused by the new trading policy or not, famine rose in the western villages in 1762 and much of the blame was placed on Amherst. Amherst's action weakened the influence of the older sachems and brought many of the younger, more ambitious, warriors to power within many of the Indian nations. Indians in the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes regions (Ottawa, Ojibway, Wyandot, Potawatomi, Kickapoo, Miami, etc.) gathered and formed an anti-British alliance. Many fell under the influence of Neolin. (See Neolin and Pontiac.)

Leading into Pontiac’s Rebellion in 1763, the experienced Indian hands George Croghan and William Johnson warned Amherst of Indian problems brewing on the frontier, but Amherst appeared to ignore their cries. Amherst was adamant in his refusal to pay “gifts” to the Indians to appease and to gain favor. He was determined that “gifts” were a waste of money and an unhealthy precedent. Amherst felt the Indians must hunt, trade, raise food, and otherwise perform in a manner insuring their ability to maintain themselves. It was Amherst’s order that took Colonel Bouquet west in 1764 to Muskingum. Amherst was never a great backer of Fort Pitt. He criticized its construction. When flooding on the Allegheny River nearly destroyed the fort, he declared the design should be redrawn, and the fort rebuilt at a different site. Amherst was exasperated by the lack of interest by the Penn Proprietary in the defense of its western frontier.

On July 16, 1763 in a letter to Colonel Bouquet he authorized genocide against the Indians. This order followed an event in May 1763 at Fort Venango when a group of Senecas on the pretense of a peaceful mission entered the fort and killed the occupants. The captain of the fort (Lt. Francis Gordon) was tortured for several days before being killed. The fort was burned to the ground. Amherst’s concluding words were “…no punishment we can inflict is adequate to the crimes of those inhuman villains.”

In 1763, Amherst was appointed temporary Governor of Virginia—which proved to be his final service in the colonies as he was then recalled to England in the fall of the same year. When the Revolutionary War started, Amherst declined command over British forces due to his belief that the colonists would prevail. Amherst’s wife developed considerable emotional problems and the General grew to detest nearly everything about North America.

Historians write of Amherst as both brave hero and despicable villain—a complex character.

http://www.thelittlelist.net/abetoawl.htm#abenaki




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


[31] http://www.sparknotes.com/history/american/frenchindian/timeline.html


[32] http://www.nndb.com/people/948/000068744/


[33] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 p.20.


[34] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969. pp76-77.


[35] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser 1969 p. 12.


[36] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser 1969 p. 36.


[37] Letter from JoAnn Naugle, 1985


[38] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 119.)


[39] http://genealogytrails.com/vir/fincastle/county_history_3.html


[40] The Battle of Brandywine, Joseph Townsend


[41] The Battle of Brandywine, Joseph Townsend


[42] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kemp%27s_Landing


[43] Annals of Southwestern Pennsylvania, by Lewis Clark Walkinshaw, Volume II pg. 138-139.


[44] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Springwells


[45] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_IV_of_the_United_Kingdom


[46] Memorial in the Capital, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.


[47] http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/fayette/cemeteries/scems0001.txt


[48] From “Our Grandmothers” by Linda J Petersen, page 162


[49] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zebulon_Baird_Vance


[50] Ohiocivilwar.com/cw57.html


[51] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012


[52] History of Logan County and Ohio, O.L. Basking & Co., Chicago, 1880. page 692.


[53] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[54] Timetable of Cherokee Removal.


[55] Art Museum, Austin, TX. February 11, 2012


[56] Art Museum, Austin , TX. February 11, 2012.


[57] http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Gottlober_Avraham_Ber


[58] The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans:Volume I.


[59] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_R._Doolittle


[60] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.




[61] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 194.


[62] There Goes the Neighborhood, Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Twentieth Century Iowa, by David R. Reynolds, page 213-214.


• [63] This Day in Jewish History


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


[65] http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/siege-of-leningrad-is-lifted


[66] This Day in Jewish History.


[67] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1773


[68] [1] Gedenkbuch, Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. 2., wesentlich erweiterte Auflage, Band II G-K, Bearbeitet und herausgegben vom Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, 2006, pg. 1033-1035,.

[2] Gedenkbuch (Germany)* does not include many victims from area of former East Germany).


[69] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1773


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


• [71] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1777.


• [72] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1777.


• [73] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1777.


[74] This Day in Jewish History.


• [75] This Day in Jewish History




• [76] This Day in Jewish History.


[77] This Day in Jewish History.


[78] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 501.

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