Friday, October 31, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, October 31, 2014

11,902 names…11,902 stories…11,902 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, October 31, 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





Birthdays on October 31….

William L.F. Brown

Mary A. Gatewood

Harold L. Godlove

Harold L. Godlove

Wallace H. Goodlove

Dianna L. Hosford Wolf

Julia Hughes Zeigler

Carl Q. Langenberg

James Lewis

October 31, 1585: The Earls of Angus and Marr, with the other banished lords, and Lord Arbroath,^[1] enter Scotland at the head of eight thousand men, and march upon Stirling. They were but a short distance from the town when James was informed of their approach. He had merely time to throw himself into the castle, where he was immediately besieged. As for the Earl of Arran, knowing well that all these hostile demonstrations were directed against himself, he hastened to take flight. The king soon consented to a capitulation, of which Gray was the mediator,f[2] and whereby James granted a pardon to never conceived the slightest doubt of his fidelity. Yet, on the news of the invasion of Scotland by the rebels, the Earl of Arran accused Gray of being in league with them. But Gray contrived to exonerate himself, and continued with James, while secretly directing the motions of the rebel lords. [3]





October 31, 1750: Joseph Smith10 [Lawrence Smith9, Charles Smith8, Lawrence Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. abt. 1724 / d. 1780) married Mary Small on October 31, 1750. [4]



October 31, 1753

Governor Robert Dinwiddie, of Virginia, sends a force led by George WASHINGTON TO DEMAND French withdrawal from the Ohio Territory.[5]



October 31, 1753: Washington and Gist did not take the Turkey Foot Road in 1753

The route of Washington‘s October 31, 1753 to January 16, 1754 journey to Fort Leboeuf is

shown on the map (Figures 0432, 0437) that accompanied the January 17, 1754 ―Journal to the Ohio‖ that George Washington wrote from his trip notes. The purpose of the trip is described in the 1760 edition of Smollett‘s ―Continuation of the Complete History of England…‖ as follows:

The French having in a manner commenced hostilities against the English, and actually

built forts on the territories of the British allies at Niagara, and on the lake Erie…in the

mean time the French fortified themselves at leisure, and continued to harass the traders

belonging to the British settlements. Repeated complaints of these encroachments and

depredations being represented to Mr. Dinwiddie, governor of Virginia, he, towards thelatter end of this very year, sent major Washington with a letter to the commanding

officer of a fort which the French had built on the Riviere au Beuf, which falls into the

Ohio, not far from the lake Erie. In this letter Mr. Dinwiddie expressed his surprize that

the French should build forts and make settlements on the river Ohio, in the western part

of the colony of Virginia, belonging to the crown of Great Britain. He complained of

these encroachments, as well as of the injuries done to the subjects of Great Britain, in

open violation of the law of nations, .and of the treaties actually subsisting between the

two crowns. He desired to know by whose authority and instructions his Britannic

majesty‘s territories had been invaded; and required him to depart in peace without

further prosecuting a plan, which must interrupt the harmony and good understanding

which his majesty was desirous to continue and cultivate with the most Christian king.[6]



The earliest written use of the phrase ―Turkey Foot‖ that we have encountered is on the maps

[7]



that accompanied George Washington‘s January 17, 1754 ―Journal to

the Ohio‖. Washington composed his journal from notes he took during a journey with

Christopher Gist to the French forts. The journey took place from October 31, 1753 to January

16, 1754. He went to deliver a message and to surveil the French forts.



October 31, 1763: Pontiac capitulates at Detroit Indian power in the Ohio Valley is broken.

[8]

October 31, 1770: (GW) Went out a Hunting & met the Canoe at the Mouth of the big Kanhawa distant only 5 Miles makg. the whole distance from Fort Pitt accordg. to my Acct. 266 Miles.[9]

October 3lst, 1770: (GW)—I sent the canoe down about five miles, to the junction of the two rivers, that ~5, tile Kenhawa with the Ohio, and set out upon a hunting party to view the land. We steered nearly east for about eight or nine miles, themi bore southwardly and westwardly, till we came to our camp at the confluence of the rivers. ‘The land from the rivers ap­peared but indifferent, rind very broken ; whether these ridges may not be those that divide the waters of the Ohio from the Kenhawa, is not certain, but I believe they are; if so, the lands may yet be good; if not, that which lies beyond tile river bottoms, is worth but little.


October 31st, 1777: This Day being a plesant day the Hessian Officers that was wounded was removed to philadelphia from Mr Joseph Lows where they had ben Carried after the Action.[10][11]

…F. October 31, 1777: this day buried the Hasan Colo. [von Donop] who said previous to his Death I fall a Victim to my own ambition & to the averice of my prince; but, full of thankfulness for the good treatment I have received from my generous Enemy, he was buried with the Honours of War. [12][13]


October 31, 1785

Tuesday, October 11, 2005 (2)

Ann Connal held a Virginia Warrant, dated in 1676. This claim was not adjusted until October 31, 1785, more than a year after her death.

Ann Crawford, the oldest daughter of Colonel William Crawford was born about 1743 in Virginia and spent her early life on the Crawford homestead in Frederick County. In 1759, at the approximate age of sixteen, she married James Connell, a son of James and Ann (Williams) Connell., who in 1740 had migrated to the Upper Shenandoah Valley from Maryland. James Connell, the younger, was born in 1742 and raised in the vicinity of Fredericksburg. James and Ann were attracted quite early to the Youghiogheny Valley in Pennsylvania, by her father and with their small family, soon joined the Crawford family at Stewarts Crossing. The journey was undoubtly made over Braddock’s Old Road, then the most accessible route into that region, which at that date, was a wilderness. The trip was supposedly made soon after Mr. Crawford brought the first of his family to their new homes. From the earliest land survey, of what later became Fayette County, Pennsylvania, it shows that Ann Connell held a Virginia Warrant, dated in 1767. This claim was not adjusted until October 31, 1785, more than a year after her death.



Following James Connell to the Youghiogheny, came his half— brother William and half-sister Rachel, who married Reason Began; an older brother Zachariah, who later founded Connellsville, and a younger brother Thomas. James Connell’s name is third in a list of twenty-four names on Lt. John Hickston’s Roll of Virginia Soldiers of 1776.. He supposedly died during the early part of the Revolutionary period, for later record of him seems to be lacking. It is quite likely that Ann was a widow prior to January 24, 1777, at which time her father acquired a deed from Ezekial Hickman, etal (and others), party of the one part, for three hundred acres, more or less, containing the home where Ann Connell and her family were living. Below the signature of William Crawford, party of the other part, was also the signature of Ann Connell and the document was witnessed by Providence Mounts, Benjamin Harrison and Thomas Moore, all of that date of Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. The deed recorded February 18, 1784. It became part of Colonel William Crawford’s estate that was left to Ann in his will, signed on May 16, 1782, before the tragic Sandusky Expedition. Will Book 1, page 9, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.

Records in the family of John Rice Connell, nephew of Ann (Crawford) Connell, indicate that Ann was married secondly to her brother-in-law, William Connell. We find in the Connell History From Sources of Information of Zachariah Connell and his Descendants’ by Colonel M. A. Reasoner, 1932, that ‘Aunt Mary’ (Aunt Mary Ortman, see No. 53, page 26), has heard her father (John Rice Connell) say that his grandfather came from Ireland; that he was from the O’Connell family and at the same time, had dropped the ‘0’ and that he married a German woman for a second wife; that William Connell who married Annie Crawford, was a half-brother of Zachariah. They lived at Fredericksburg, Virginia. Aunt Mary thinks that the girl-sister was also a half-sister of Zachariah’s.

Mary Connell Ortman, wife of Reverend Simon Ortman of New Salem, Ohio, was born in Adams County, Ohio in 1827 and was living in 1894. She was the youngest and last surviving child of John Rice Connell and his second wife, Rachel Wykoff. John Rice Connell was the son of Zachariah and Rebecca (Rice) Connell. In the statement of Mary Ortman, she seems to have confused the tradition about her father’s grandfather, James Connell, who was the son of Thomas and was the same James who brought his family to Virginia, with the tradition about her father’s great-great-grand­father, James Connell, who came from Ireland to Maryland in 1678. To confuse the lives and events dealing with early ancestors of the same name, but of different generations is a common mistake often made in stories of traditional recollection, when without the assistance of recorded history.

Court records show that the Connells were early of Frederick County, Virginia. William Connell, the half-brother of Zachariah, became a Captain with the Westoreland County Militia 1778 to 1783. His marriage with Ann Connell could well have existed between dates in part; may have influenced Ann’s oldest son, John in his decision to leave the home place. John Rice Connell, the latter John’s first cousin, was sixteen years old when his Aunt, Ann Connell died. He would have more clearly recalled Ann’s second marriage with his Uncle William than that of her first marriage with his Uncle James Connell, who died when John Rice Connell was a small boy. If Mary Ortman’s statement is correct, it may be assumed that Captain William Connell died before the death of Colonel William Crawford and Ann Connell, for further record of him seems lacking and he is not mentioned in either the will or settlement of Ann’s estate. Ann Connell signed her will on the 17th of May, 1783 in Westmoreland County and it was proved the 23 of March, 1784. (Will Book 1, page 13, Fayette County, Pennsylvania).

She made bequeaths to her son, John Connell, money, to son William, one-half of her plantation, to son James Connell, the other half of the plantation. She made smaller bequeaths to her daughters, Nancy and Polly Connell. She named Zachariah Connell, Providence Mounts the executors. The will was signed by three witnesses, Samuel, Zachariah Connell and Thomas Hews. (Contributed by, accredited to and by permission of Dr. Samuel Adams of Portsmouth, Ohio, 1964, who is a descendant of Col. William Crawford, through Ann (Crawford) Connell.)[14]

October 31, 1835: THOMAS ORR, c 1749 - October 31, 1835. Served as a Private and Ensign in the 3rd Battalion of the Washington County, Pennsylvania Militia. Listed as a Frontier Ranger and was on the Coshocton, Moravian, and Sandusky Expeditions. Marker location - Unknown. [15] Pvt. Thomas Orr ? settled 400 acres of land in 1775 in Middle Wheeling Twp, Ohio County, Virginia (now W. Va.); this from Alice Walker, a descendent,[i] ? tradition says he was born about 1749 in Adams Co., Pa, married Margaret Creighton (d/o John and Anne Creighton) in 1789 at Col. David Williamson?s Fort, was on the ?Crawford? expedition as well and may have been a Continental soldier (see DAR), and died October 31, 1835; ? Thomas told his descendents that he was on this expedition, but did not participate in the killing of the Moravian Indians. [16]

October 31, 1845: The emergency Cabinet meeting met on October 31 till the November 1. The first day consisted of reading reports and memoranda from Ireland on the potato failure. Peel proposed that a relief commission be established in Ireland, and a sum of money be advanced to the Lord -Lieutenant. Differences arose when Peel pointed out that these measures required an advance of public money. The purchase of food for destitute districts would open the question of Corn Laws. Was it possible, it was asked to vote public money for the sustenance of a people on account of "actual or apprehended scarcity" and still maintain restrictions on the free import of grain, Peel declared it was not.[16] On this issue then the Cabinet split, the overwhelming majority voting against Peel.[17] Unable to reach a decision, the Cabinet adjourned till November 6.[16] [17]

The principle of the Corn Laws had been to keep the price of home-grown grain up. Duties on imported grain assured English farmers a minimum and profitable price. The burden of a higher price for bread was carried by the labouring classes, in particular factory workers and operatives. It was claimed that if the Corn Laws were repealed all those connected with the land would be ruined and the established social organization of the country destroyed.[13] [18]

October 31, 1850: Martin GUTLEBEN was born on June 29, 1850.



Martin married Marie UNKNOWN about 1906 in ,,NE. Marie was born about 1864 in Alsace,Lorraine,Germany.



Martin next married Catharina Barbara FRITSCH on April 3, 1877 in Muhlbach,Munster,Colmar,Upper Rhine,Alsace. Catharina was born on October 31, 1850. [19]



October 31, 1863: Ella Jane Cornell b August 20, 1858 at Bristow, Butler Co., Ia. d May 23, 1949 at Los Angeles, Calif, buried in Roosevelt Memorial Cemetery at Gardena, Calif, md October 3, 1889 at Springville, Ia. William La Fayette Brown b October 31, 1863 near Waterloo, Black Hawk Co., Ia. son of Peris P. and Caroline L. (Ross) Brown d October 3, 1944 at Truro, Ia. buried there. [20]



Mon. October 31, 1864

Mustered for pay at 7 am[21] got a letter

From F. Hunter[22]

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[23]



October 31, 1864 : Nevada admitted to the Union.

October 31, 1895

Oscar Goodlove was unloading a load of lumber last Tuesday, when his horses became frightened and ran down 4th street and around onto 5th, back on main to 4th street and around onto 5th, back on main to 4th again, and when they passed Jenkins livery barn Billy Keithley caught them by the bits and went with them when they went around the corner, running them into the hitching post by Tom’s blacksmith shop and stopping them without injury to either horses or wagon. It was very courageous of Billy’s part.[24]





1896: Svante Arrhenius calculates how rising carbon dioxide levels will raise global temperatures.[25]




1896: The pandemic in China and India is over.[26]

1896-1902: Indian Famine

Indian Famine The Worst Droughts and Famines in History Politics & History picture

Affecting the presidencies and provinces of British India, the Indian Famine was a six-year event that took place between 1896 and 1902. One of many famines to hit India throughout the years, this one was the worst, claiming an estimated 19 million lives.





100_2628[27]

October 31, 1897



October 31, 1897 – December 21, 1931


Wallace Harold Goodlove











Birth:

Oct. 31, 1897


Death:

Dec. 21, 1931


http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif



Burial:
Jordans Grove Cemetery
Central City
Linn County
Iowa, USA



Created by: Gail Wenhardt
Record added: Apr 04, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 67902349









Wallace Harold Goodlove
Added by: Gail Wenhardt



Wallace Harold Goodlove
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Jackie L. Wolfe






[28]





1898: In 1898, Theodore Herzl met Kaiser Wilhelm just outside Jerusalem’s Jaffa Gate. William Hechler, a Bible-believing Protestant and Christian Zionist, had a profound influence on Herzl, as he supported and motivated him to continue with his goal of establishing a Jewish State in Palestine. Hechler was motivated by his reading of the Bible prophets and his believe that the God of Israel was able to fulfill these prophecies for His people, Israel, in their ancient homeland.[29]



October 31, 1900: On board convoy 29 was Isaac Gottlieb born October 31, 1900, in Dzwatoszycs, Poland. [30]



The convoy contained 435 women and 565 men. The age is unknown for 130 women and 145 men. Among the 725 deportees whose age we know, 122 were children under 17 (71 girls and 51 boys). The largest age group among the men was the late thirties (157 in this group); among the women, the thirties (87 were between 31 and 40.)



This list is on onionskin. It was typed partly with blue carbon and partly with black, and is in very poor condition. It is divided into seven sublists.



1. Drancy—111 names. Among them were single people, including children, couples; and families.

2. Various camps==29 names. These were twenty four men, women, and children from Le Vernet and five from Gurs.

3. Belfort==9 names, all Dutch.

4. Unoccupied Zone—283 names. Family and first nbames were given, without any not of age or nationality. There were many families and many children.

5. Volunteers—32 names, without date of birth. Some had to have been children. The majority came from the camp of Rivesaltes.

6. Les Milles camp—488 names. One page with 16 names (number 524 to 540) is missing; 81 names are crossed out. The page covered letters SZ to WE. Many children were on this list.

7. Last minute departures—77 names from various camps in the south. Among them were families. Among these last minute departures there were undoubtedly mothers who fought to leave with their children from whom they had been separated.



On September 7, 1942, Ernst Heinrichsohn composed the telex (XXVb-155) which his superior officer Heinz Rothke signed. It announced to Eichmann, to the IOnspector of Concentration Camps, and to Auschwitz that convoy D 901/24, carrying 1,000 Jews, left the station at Le Bourget/Drancy at 8:55 AM under the supervision of Sergeant Kruger.



The convoy arrived in Auschwitz on September 9. Before arrival, an undetermined number of men were selected in Kosel (see Convoy 24). In Auschwitza itself, 59 men were selected and given numbers 63164 through 63222; 52 women were given numbers 19243 through 19294. The rest were immediately gassed.



The registry of the Ministry for War Veterns shows 12 survivors, all men. In Belgium we found nbames of 22 additional deportees, also all men, who returned to Belgium in 1945 without going first through France. Thus there were 34 survivors of record.[31]



October 31, 1907

Mr. and Mrs. William Goodlove attended the reception given for the minister of Prairie Chapel at his home in Marion, Saturday.[32]



October 31, 1917: The British War Cabinet accepted the Balfour Declaration.[33]



July 10, 1940 to October 31, 1940: The Battle of Britain.







October 31, 1941:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f5/Mount_Rushmore2.jpg/170px-Mount_Rushmore2.jpg

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Construction of Mount Rushmore monument.

Between October 4, 1927, and October 31, 1941, Gutzon Borglum and 400 workers[17] sculpted the colossal 60 foot (18 m) high carvings of U.S. presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln to represent the first 130 years of American history. These presidents were selected by Borglum because of their role in preserving the Republic and expanding its territory.[15][18] The image of Thomas Jefferson was originally intended to appear in the area at Washington's right, but after the work there was begun, the rock was found to be unsuitable, so the work on the Jefferson figure was dynamited, and a new figure was sculpted to Washington's left.[15]

In 1933, the National Park Service took Mount Rushmore under its jurisdiction. Julian Spotts helped with the project by improving its infrastructure. For example, he had the tram upgraded so it could reach the top of Mount Rushmore for the ease of workers. [34]



The monument was deemed complete and all work shut down on October 31 of the same year. Though Borglum’s children tried over the years to renew interest in their father’s last dream, it was not until 1998 that the National Park System, together with the Borglum Family, put “finishing touches” on the Hall of Records. A titanium vault was installed in the granite floor of the unfinished hall, and filled with 16 porcelain enamel panels that include the United States Constitution and other important historical documents. The Hall of Records entrance can be seen from west-facing aerial photographs of the monument.[4][5]

Present day

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/82/Mount_Rushmore.jpg/220px-Mount_Rushmore.jpg

http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.23wmf19/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png

The granite remains from the construction of Mount Rushmore are still visible below the heads of the Presidents.

Every year more than 2 million people travel to South Dakota to see Mt. Rushmore.

The Presidential Trail, a walking trail and boardwalk, starts at Grandview Terrace and travels through the forests to the sculptor's studio, now a museum with information about the construction of the monument and the tools used by workers.[6] [35]

October 31, 1942: On October 31 and November 2 (XXVc-192), Rothke (in Paris) asked Berlin for the green light on the departure of three convoys scheduled for November 4, 6, and 9. On November 4, Eichmann’s assistant, Gunther, agreed.



Convoy 40 was about equally divided between males and females, with 468 males, 514 females, and 18 undetermined. Almost half (415) were Poles. About 125 were Germans; 100 french; 60 Austrians; and 50 from Benelux. Two hundred children were among the deportees.



The list is divided into 11 sublists:



1. Drancy 1—485 people (plus seven more whose names appear on the list for Convoy 41, which is in fact a copy of the list for Convoy 40). In this group there were many Poles and Germans, and a few Romanians, Czechs, and Austrians.

2. Drancy—91 people, who had been living in Paris, Belfort, Angouleme, Nevers, and Rivesaltes. There were many Poles.

3. Angouleme—269 people. Some Jews were arrested at Mareuil, Salles, St. Michel e Riviera, Angouleme, Festalemps.

4. Chalons-sur-Marne—45 people, mainly Poles.

5. Camp of Voves—7 people, all French.

6. Besancon—35 people, mainly Dutch, with some Belgians and Poles.

7. Saint Quentin—6 people, almost all Poles.

8. Nevers—21 people, almost all Poles.

9. Caen—8 people, all Poles.

10. Nantes—25 people, Poles and some Romanians.

11. Evreus—6 people.



The routine telex (XXVc-192) covering the departure of the convoy of November 4 was singed by Rothke. It indicates that convoy D901/35 left the station at Le Bourgeyt/Drancy at 8:55 AM on November 4, with 1,000 Jews, toward “Auschwitz, under the direction of Stabsfeldwebel Brand.



When they arrioved in Auschjwiotz on November 6, 269 men were selected for work and received numbers 73219 through 73482. The size of the group selected suggests that there had been no selection in Kposel before the arrival in Auschwitz, as ther had been in previous convoys since August 26. Ninety two women received numbers 23625 through 23716. The remaing 639 people were immediately gassed.



There were only foure survivors, all men, in 1945, which further convfirms thaqt no men were selected at Kosel for workd camps. None of the 92 women selected survived.[36]



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



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



In 1945 there were four survivors, all men.[37]



October 31, 1962 A Federal court rules against Carlos Marcello’s attempt to have

is 1938 drug conviction nullified.

David Ferrie calls the Highlander today.

Also today, JFK speaks at the graduating exercises of the FBI National Academy. He is

effusive about both J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI. JFK comments: “We have the greatest debt to all

of you. You make it possible for all of us to carry out our private lives.”

RFK scribbles notes today referring to McGeorge Bundy’s behavior during the Missile

Crisis: “First he was for a strike, then a blockade, then for doing nothing because it would upset the

situation in Berline, and then, finally, he led the group which was in favor of a strike - and a strike without

prior notification, along the lines of Pearl Harbor.” The Color Of Truth[38]



October 31, 1963 J. Edgar Hoover has a private, off-the-record lunch with JFK at

the White House. The meeting may very easily be concerning LBJ. At a news conference this

afternoon, JFK, under possible pressure from Hoover, reaffirms LBJ as his 1964 running mate. It is

speculated that this meeting is deeply humiliating for JFK. Hoover has only recently helped him

at the height of the Ellen Rometsch crisis. Ben Bradlee says: “He [JFK] told me Hoover had talked

to him about that German woman, that they’d looked at pictures of her, and Hoover had discussed what she

did with various politicians.” Dave Powers, JFK’s aide has hinted that Hoover’s future is discussed

at this meeting. According to Bradlee, JFK decides he will have to have Hoover over more often.

“He felt it was wise -- with rumors flying and every indication of a dirty campaign coming up.” There

have been only six meetings between Hoover and JFK since 1961, and there will never be another.

In twenty-two days, JFK will fly to Dallas, Texas.

Press reports: “Vice President Johnson’s play on the Demoractic ticket ... was assured

today by President Kennedy.” AOT

An FBI listening device picks up a conversation today between two of the Maggadino

brothers of the Buffalo, New York, crime family:

Peter Maggadino: President Kennedy, he should drop dead.

Stefano Maggadino: They should kill the whole family, the mother and the father too.

A Yale political science professor named Frederick Barghoorn is in Russia meeting with

Walter Stoessel for drinks. When he returns to the Metropole Hotel, a young Russian thrusts a

roll of old newspapers into his hands. KGB agents quickly handcuff him and take him away.

In his attempt to locate the whereabouts of LHO, FBI Agent James P. Hosty does a

background check on Ruth and Michael Paine by calling the sheriff’s office, the local police

department, the helicopter company, and the credit bureau. He finds out that there are no

criminal records on the Paines, that Michael is a research engineer with a security clearance at

Bell Helicopter, that Ruth is classified as a housewife, that they are reputed to be good,

responsible citizens of their community.

George Nonte today travels to Dallas and meets with “George Perrel” and John Masen.

Nonte learns from Perrel that an invasion of Cuba is being planned to begin the last week of

November. Oswald Talked

Today in Vietnam -- which is already 12:30 PM, Nov. 1 -- General Big Minh stands up

during a luncheon at the Officers’ Club of the Joint General Staff of the Army of the Republic of

Vietnam and announces that a coup is underway. Immediately, military policemen march

throught he doors, aiming machine guns at the assembled generals and colonels. Minh begins

extracting pledges of support from both the plotters and the few commanders still loyal to

President Diem.

McGeorge Bundy has signed a cable received by Ambassador Lodge this morning. It

reads:

“We do not accept as a basis for U.S. policy that we have no power to delay or

discourage a coup . . .

This paragraph contains our present standing instructions for U.S. posture in

the event of a coup;

U.S. authorities will reject appeals for direct intervention from either side, and

U.S.-controlled aircraft and other resources will not be committed between the

battle lines or in support of either side, without authorization from Washington.

But once a coup under responsible leadership has begun, and within

these restrictions, it is in the interest of the U.S. Government that it should

succeed.”

In a news conference toady, JFK reaffirms his administration’s intention to pull 1000

troops out of Vietnam by the end of the year.

NOTE: This past month, the CIA has produced five documents on Lee Harvey Oswald:

three cables, a teletype, and a memo. One month from now, after the assassination of JFK,

the cumulative effect of these documents will be to give investigators the impression that

Lee Harvey Oswald, the leading suspect in the assassination, had met in Mexico City

with KGB agent Valeriy Kostikov, a suspected Soviet assassinations operative.

In Chicago, the Secret Service has learned of a potential threat to JFK’s life when he visits

the city on November 2. After a brief surveillance operation, police arrest a former Marine with a

history of mental illness. The man, Thomas Vallee, is found to be in possession of an M-1 rifle

and three thousand rounds of ammunition. Vallee, who is a member of the John Birch Society

and an outspoken opponent of the Kennedy administration, has arranged to take off from his job

on the day of the President’s visit. (NIYL) [39]

October 31, 1978: In Iran, further widespread strikes halted the flow of oil. The strikers, who demanded an end to martial law and the release of all political prisoners, brought to a standstill oil wells and natural gas plants. Troops opened fire on students outside the university, Vehicles were set on fire in the streets, and banks and government t buildings were attacked.[40]

October 31, 1983: More about Jackson Burch
Jackson married Ella Cadle (b. January 31, 1901 / d. October 31, 1983).[41]

October 31, 2003: South Africa was rocked by the effects of a chronal mass ejection. (EMT).[42] It knocked out 14 transformers and the power grid for two years. [43]



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[1] * Lord Arbroath had become reconciled to the rebels, in the hope of overthrowing the Earl of Arran, who then possessed the whole of the immense estates of the Hamilton family.


[2] I Gray had so ably disguised all his intrigues, that James had all the rebel lords. In order to guarantee the fidelity of his word, he placed in their hands the majority of the strong-holds of the country. Dumbarton was delivered to Lord Arbroath, and Stirling to the Earl

of Marr. At the same time, the Earl of Arran was declared guilty of high-treason.



The Queen of Scots, watched with the utmost strictness since the arrival of her new keeper, was for a long time ignorant of these important events. Her only thought at this time was to obtain the ful-

filment of the promise which had been made to her of removal to another residence.



Sir William KnoUys, sent by Elizabeth to resume the negotiations for a treaty of alliance between England and Scotland, obtained an audience of James VI, on 23rd November, at Linlithgow.



In consequence of the treaty concluded 10th August with the States-General, the Queen of England nominates the Earl of Leicester Governor-General of the Netherlands, and gives him the command of all

the forces which she had sent thither.


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


[4] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.


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


[6] In Search of Turkey Foot Road, pages 67-68.


[7] IN search of Turkey Foot Road, page 5.


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


[9] GW’s calculations on the distance from Fort Pitt to the mouth of the GreatKanawha at present-day Point Pleasant, W.Va., agree substantially with thoseof Capt. Harry Gordon, chief engineer of the Northern Department in NorthAmerica. In Gordon’s table of distances it is logged as 266¼ miles (Pownall,

Topographical Description, i66).


[10] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html


[11] The Battle for Fort Mercer: The American Defenders Text below extracted from the Diary of Colonel Israel Angell, Commanding Officer, 2nd Rhode Island Regiment, Continental Army. Battle for Fort Mercer: The American Defenders


[12] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html


[13] The Battle for Fort Mercer: The American Defenders Text below extracted from the Diary of Colonel Israel Angell, Commanding Officer, 2nd Rhode Island Regiment, Continental Army. Battle for Fort Mercer: The American Defenders


[14] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford. 254-256.)


[15]http://www.wvgenweb.org/ohio/rw-tombstones.htm

[16] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~gwilli824/moravian.html




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


[18] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_the_Great_Famine


[19] Descendents of Elias Gutleben, Alice Email, May 2010.


[20] http://cwcfamily.org/egy3.htm


[21] October 31. Mustered At Martinsburg, West Virginia.


[22] Dr. Franklin C. Hunter, son of Milton Reader Hunter and Nancy Jane Goodlove, was born 1846 in Clark County Ohio. In the 1860 census he was in the Marion, Iowa Twp. He is Conrad Goodlove’s grandson.


[23] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[24] Winton Goodlove papers.


[25] http://www.beacon.org/client/pdfs/8577_chron.pdf


[26] http://www.twoop.com/medicine/archives/2005/10/bubonic_plague.html


[27] Linda Peterson Archives, June 12, 2011


[28] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Goodlove&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GSsr=41&GRid=67902349&


[29] 365 Fascinating Facts about the Holy Land by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr.


[30] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944. Page 251.


[31] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944. Pages 251-252.


[32] Winton Goodlove papers.


[33] 365 Fascinating facts about the Holy Land, by Clarence H. Wagner Jr.


[34] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Rushmore


[35] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Rushmore


[36] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 328-328.


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


[38] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf


[39] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf


[40] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 502


[41] jProposed Descendants of William SMythe


[42] Countdown to Apocalypse, H2, 11/09/2012


[43] Countdown to Apocalypse, H2, 11/09/2012



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[i] Alice Walker, letter to the author, from Blue Mound, Kansas 9 April, 1999.

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