Sunday, October 5, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, October 4, 2014




11,816 names…11,816 stories…11,816 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, October 4, 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 4…

EVAN BANES (father in law of the 3rd great grandaunt)

Goldie Bateson Isaacs (4th great grandniece of the wife of the 3rd great granduncle)

Jared M. Cunningham (1st cousin 1x removed)

Thomas de Monthermer (20th great grandfather)

James Foley (brother in law of the 3rd great granduncle)

Edwin W. Godlove

John S. HARRISON (7th cousin 6x removed)

Judith A. Lorence Burns (paternal 1st cousin)

Emma McCormick Marietta (4th cousin 3x removed)

Sarah Ross (half 3rd cousin 4x removed)

Ransom E. Smith (5th cousin 6x removed)

Bessie C. Varner Adams (wife of the half 4th cousin 3x removed)

Hiram W. Winans (brother in law of the wife of the 2nd great grandfather)

October 4, 1160: In 1154 Louis VII married Constance of Castile, daughter of Alfonso VII of Castile. She, too, failed to give him a son and heir, bearing only two daughters, Marguerite of France, and Alys. Louis having produced no sons by 1157, Henry II of England began to believe that he might never do so, and that the succession of France would consequently be left in question. Determined to secure a claim for his family, he sent the Chancellor, Thomas Becket, to press for a marriage between Princess Marguerite and Henry's heir, also called Henry (later Henry the Young King). Louis, surprisingly, agreed to this proposal, and by the Treaty of Gisors (1158) betrothed the young pair, giving as a dowry the Norman Vexin and Gisors.





Louis VII receiving clergymen, from a late medieval manuscript.

Constance died in childbirth on October 4, 1160, and five weeks later Louis VII married Adèle of Champagne. To counterbalance the advantage this would give the King of France, Henry II had the marriage of their children (Henry "the Young King" and Marguerite) celebrated at once. Louis understood the danger of the growing Angevin power; however, through indecision and lack of fiscal and military resources, compared to Henry II, he failed to oppose Angevin hegemony effectively. One of his few successes, in 1159, was his trip to Toulouse to aid Raymond V, Count of Toulouse, who had been attacked by Henry II: after he entered into the city with a small escort, claiming to be visiting his sister, the Countess, Henry declared that he could not attack the city while his liege lord was inside, and went home.

Alys (October 4, 1160 – ca. 1220), engaged to Richard I of England; she married William IV, Count of Ponthieu[1]

The children had been betrothed in 1158, when Henry was three years old and Marguerite literally crying in her cradle, their engagement being the result of Henry II’s chancellor, Thomas Becket’s outstanding political skills*. The princess brought the Norman Vexin- a heated point of contention between England and France- back under Angevin rule through her dowry. Marguerite hardly knew her mother and could not have remembered her. In 1158, when taken away from her to be raised up with her future husband’s family, she was merely an infant. When two years later [on October 4, 1160] Constance died after giving birth to yet another daughter, Marguerite was two or three years old**.[2]

October 4 1497: – Henry VII arrives in Taunton, the Cornish army surrendor and Warbeck takes sanctuary in Beaulieu Abbey where he is captured. [3]



October 4, 1535: Augustinian friar and translator Myles Coverdale finishes the first complete English Bible, including both the Hebrew Bible and New Testament.[4]

Coverdale’s famous bible was printed in 1535, the same year Tyndale was confined at Vilvorde Castle.[5]



1536: Pope Paul lll formally instituted the Portuguese Inquisition in 1536.[6]

AD 1536 - Portuguese Inquisition begins

Popular support for a Portugese Inquisition surfaced in 1531, when many Christians blamed the New Christians for the recent earthquake. Pope Clement VII authorized the Inquisition and the first auto-da-fe (trial) took place in Lisbon on September 20, 1540.

The right to seize and confiscate the property of the accused led to the arrest of every prominent "New Christian" family. Once arrested, death was only escaped if one admitted to Judaizing and implicated friends and family. Other sentences included public admission of the alleged sins, the obligatory wearing of a special penitential habit and burning at the stake. Urged by greed, eventually even genuine Catholic Christians were martyred.[44] [7]

1536
** Henry VII begins the dissolution of the monasteries. Monastic property is sold, ornaments are stripped out and shrines are banned. [8]** The 10 Articles are published by Thomas Cramner. They are guidelines for the new Church in England. [9]** War resumes between Francis I and Charles V. [10]** The 1535 ‘Laws in Wales Act’ is passed by parliament. [11]

October 4, 1539: The artist Hans Holbein the Younger was dispatched to paint portraits of Anne and her younger sister, Amalia, both of whom Henry was considering as his fourth wife. Henry required the artist to be as accurate as possible, not to flatter the sisters. The two versions of Holbein's portrait are in the Musée du Louvre in Paris and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Negotiations with Cleves were in full swing by March 1539. Cromwell oversaw the talks, and a marriage treaty was signed on October 4, of that year.

Henry valued education and cultural sophistication in women, but Anne lacked these: she had received no formal education but was skilled in needlework and liked playing card games. She could read and write, but only in German. Nevertheless, Anne was considered gentle, virtuous and docile, qualities that made her a suitable candidate for Henry.

Anne was described by the French ambassador, Charles de Marillac, as tall and slim, "of middling beauty, and of very assured and resolute countenance".[4] She was fair haired and is often said to have had a lovely face.[dubious – discuss] She appeared rather solemn by English standards, and looked old for her age. Holbein painted her with high forehead, heavy-lidded eyes and a pointed chin.


The Six Wives of
Henry VIII


Catherine of Aragon


Anne Boleyn


Jane Seymour


Anne of Cleves


Catherine Howard


Catherine Parr


Henry first went to meet her at Rochester on her journey from Dover. According to the sworn testimony of his companions, he was promptly disappointed with her appearance, although there are many documents from the time which describe how Henry and some of his courtiers sneaked into the room where Anne was watching bull-fighting, wearing masks and cloaks, when Henry boldly kissed her. Henry, being of tall stature and well-built in his youth, had been instantly recognised by his past wives when acting out this courtly-love tradition, although Anne had never met her husband-to-be before, and pushed him away startled, cursing in German. Henry did then reveal his true identity to Anne, although he is said to have been put off the marriage from then on. Most historians believe that he later used her 'bad' appearance and incapability in bed as excuses, saying how he felt he had been misled, for everyone had praised Anne's attractions: "She is nothing so fair as she hath been reported," he complained.[5][full citation needed] Henry urged Cromwell to find a legal way to avoid the marriage but, by this point, doing so was impossible without endangering the vital alliance with the Germans.[12]

October 4, 1568: The conferences are opened at York : the Duke of Norfolk, the Earl of Sussex, and Sir Ralph Sadler, appear there as commissioners on the part of the Queen of England ; Leslie, bishop of Ross,Lords Livingston, Boyd, Herries, and the Abbot of Kilwinning, for Mary ; and on the part of the rebels, Murray, Morton, Lindsay, the Bishop of Orkney, and the Abbot of Dunfermline : as for W. Maitland, Robert Melvil, Buchanan and Wood, they were only at York as the advisers and secretaries of Murray. [13]

October 4, 1753

1753 William and Hannah Crawford purchase 64 acres of land from Elijah Teague, October 4, 1753, on branch of the Shenandoah River, called Cattail Run (present Jefferson County, West Virginia)[14]. Deed Book B (3?), page 134, Frederick Co., VA.[15] Standing in lot 1 with George Fairfax’s line, Crawford and Teague were both represented as being from the Coloney of Virginia and county of Frederick at Winchester, Va. Witnesses to this deed were : Thomas Wood and Coriter R. Rutherford.[16]



At this time, 1753-1754, our William Crawford was living on his own plantation, on Cattail Run (present Jefferson County, West Virginia), with his wife Hannah and their three children, plus one daughter Ann (who was born to William by his first wife, Ann Stewart). William, at this time, about thirty-two years of age. He would of course, be expected to fight for his English Government, as war clouds were then hovering the colonies.



October 4, 1754: (Aughwick. Now Shirleysburg in Huntingdon County. Location of a George Croghan trading post. On Aughwick Creek leading into the Juniata River. Tanagharison, the Half-King, died there October 4, 1754? after the unsuccessful defense of Fort Necessity. Queen Alliquippa died in Aughwick that same winter.

The word Aughwick is a variation of “achweek” having a meaning of “overgrown with brush.” “Wicker” is a slender, pliant twig sometimes used in furniture. The physical appearance of the area probably gave rise to the name.)[17]

October 4, 1777

… a month later, last October 4, Brady—and Col. Crawford, too— fought in the Battle of Germantown, six miles from Philadelphia. Even though the Americans lost and had 1,000 men killed, Sam Brady[18] was again conspicuous for his bravery and received a brevet promotion to captain. For the first time he came to an impressed Col. William Crawford’s attention. The courageous young man seemed to be leading a charmed life and was obviously approaching that status of “great warrior” that his mother had predicted.[19]





John Vance, 1754. (or 1746 according to his pension application). He was married in October 1773, by his uncle Col. Wm. Crawford in southwestern PA, to Nancy ?. John served in the Rev. war as a sargeant major and was wounded at Germantown. Both John and his wife recieved pensions for his REV war service (W. 6338). [20]John died February 8, 1827. The place of his death is uncertain from the pension file. Nancy filed for her widow's pension from Pendelton Co, not WVA. She died February 8, 1845. [21]



October 4, 1777



On 4 October Rueffer noted reports by residents of Wilmington, which may have been planted by Washington to hold those crown forces away from Philadelphia, and on the next day gives a report on the Germantown battle. “4 October - Many residents from this place, who have traveled inland fifteen to twenty miles, have brought dependable information. There are 8,000 to 10,000 rebel militia about ten miles from here, who are on the march from Lancaster to attack us. As a precaution all our pickets have been extended outward and all planks on the Brandywine Bridge have been loosened so that they can be taken up at first alarm, Toward evening we could already see large groups and complete regiments working steadily on defensive positions on the heights which are across from our camp. The approach of darkness prevented more exact observations.[22]



October 4, 1777



Colonel Musgrave, who was posted a little further to the rear with the 40th Regiment under orders to support the light infantry in case of attack, then advanced, But he saw the light infantry, continually charged by the enemy, withdraw quickly toward Germantown. Thus he was in danger of being cut off by the enemy columns deploying to the right and left, and so resolved to throw himself and the regiment into a stone house [23] on the right side of the street. Having accomplished this, he barricaded the doors and windows on the ground floor (the windows also had strong shutters).

On this floor he posted as many men as were necessary to hold back with the bayonet any who might gain an entrance to the house. With the rest of his men he went to the second floor, from which he fired with great effect upon the troops now completely surrounding the house. They, however, cannonaded the building with four 6-pounders and were determined to push the attack with all their strength. This and our especially courageous defense delayed their advance an hour and a half, Although cannon balls had torn open both outside doors, the bayonets kept the enemy from entering. In this attack they lost over one hundred men killed and one hundred and fifty wounded.

By this time the entire army was in motion and formed as follows: The 1st and 2nd Brigades, leaving the Abington road on their right, marched toward the road leading to the Frankford Creek bridge. The 3rd and 4th Brigades and the Hessian Leib Regiment advanced from their encampment and took position in Germantown, Von Minnigerode’s Grenadier Battalion remained at its post on the left to support the jagers, who were to be reinforced by von Linsing’s Grenadier Battalion from Philadelphia. Similarly, the English grenadier battalion advanced to strengthen/ the right wing. Von Donop’s Regiment marched a little to the front and to the right toward the town to maintain communication with the left wing and support the pickets of the 3rd and 4th Brigades on that side of Germantown and also the Leib Regiment and von Donop.[24][25] [26]

Benjamin Chew’s House.



October 4, 1777

Their killed and wounded, which are estimated at about eight hundred, are said to include several generals [27] and staff members. There are some forty officers among the three hundred and eighty prisoners. Von Linsing’s and the English battalions which had come from. Philadelphia to reinforce the army returned to the city, where the 23rd English Regiment and von Lengerke’s Grenadier Battalion had been stationed during their absence.

Although everything has remained quiet in Philadelphia, several inhabitants were arrested because they had aroused suspicion of being well disposed toward the enemy. Later it was announced in the city and in the country that everyone must surrender his arms within a definite time, those failing to do so and later found with arms in their possession being threatened with very severe.. punishment. We are told that a great quantity of arms has already been surrendered. [28]



October 4, 1821: Attended public dinner and ball in his honor at Austin’s Tavern in Pensacola.[29]

Brother Jackson was the sixth Grand Master of Masons of Tennessee, serving from October 7, 1822 until October 4, 1824.

Brother Andrew Jackson was the seventh president of the United States. In this signed and numbered sculpture by T. Clark he is standing before an "Old Hickory" branch which was a nickname bestowed upon him during the War of 1812 by soldiers who declared him "tough as hickory." The coin on the branch's cut edge is a mark, a token received by all York Rite Masons. Jackson is claimed as a native son by both the North Carolina and Tennessee, and it is still disputed if he was actually born in North or South Carolina. [30]



October 4, 1831: Ransom E. Smith (b. October 4, 1831 in GA / d. August 11, 1905 in GA).[31]

Ransom E. Smith12 [Gabriel D. Smith11 , Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5,Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. October 4, 1831 in Franklin Co. GA / d. August 11, 1905 in Carroll Co. GA) married Nancy Caroline King (b. June 7, 1837 in Gwinnett Co. GA / d. February 13, 1917 in Carroll Co. GA) on July 18, 1851 in Carroll Co. GA. [32]



October 4, 1838: Elijah Hicks, Conductor; White Path (died near Hopkinsville, Kentucky) and William Arnold, Asst. Conductors; 809 persons left October 4, 1838 from Camp Ross on Gunstocker Creek and 744 people arrived January 4, 1839 at Mrs. Webber's place in Indian Territory. [33]


*1-5-5-1-1-4-2

HIRAM WEBSTER WINANS b October 4, 1830 in Miami Co., Ohio md May 27, 1853 at Quinsey, Ohio Priscilla Ann Hollingshead. [34]


Winans, Hiram W., farmer, P.O. Springville; was born October 4, 1830, in Miami Co., Ohio; son of Moses P. and Susan Simmons-Winans. He married May 27, 1852, to Priscilla A., daughter of John B. and Elizabeth Persinger Hollingshead; she was born November 24, 1832, in Shelby Co., Ohio; moved here in 1852, have four children-Moses W., born January 8 1854; Ella E., born May 16, 1856; Myrtle May, born May 1, 1867; Ivy D., born November 10, 1872; the first was born in Johnson Co., Iowa, and the others here. Mr. Winans served in Co. H, 24th I. V. I., over eighteen months, and until the close of the war. Members of the M. E. Church. He is a Republican. His father was born January 4. 1808; son of Lewis and Lydia Winans. Married in Miami Co, Ohio, September 11, 1828; moved to Shelby Co. about 1831;in 1853, he came here; have nine children, all born in Ohio: Lewis, born June 29, 1829;still single; Hiram W., John S., born July 11, 1832, died February 28, 1869; Amy, born September 18, 1834; married to Jas. Cornell; Esther J., born October 8, 1836, died August 7, 1864, wife of W. H. Goodlove; William B., born December 21, 1838, married Mary J. Gibson; David C., born November 30, 1843, married Mary M. Hossler; Susan M., born November 29, 1845, married O. D. Heald, and live in Cedar Co., Lydia K., born June 13, 1849, married O. F. Glenn and live in St. Paul Minn. Moses P. Winans died here August 25, 1871; was a member of the M. E. Church, and a Republican; left a farm of 265 acres, valued at $15,000. Susan Simmons Winans was born February 18, 1812; her father was killed, and her mother and she were taken prisoners by the Indians, and held six monthes or more; a little brother 3 years old was also killed; in the following Spring, mother, with Susan, made her way to friends in Miami Co., Ohio. Mrs. Simmons afterward married John Redenbaugh, who died in Ohio, August 1847, she came here and died February 27, 1857, aged about 72 years.[35]

October 4, 1844: Thomas Green Clemson, through representation of the United States government, served as the Chargé d’affaires to Belgium starting October 4, 1844 and ending January 8, 1852. He received the position largely due to his father in-law John C. Calhoun. Calhoun, currently, was the Secretary of State under the Taylor Administration. President Taylor had given the task of filling the position to Calhoun, who quickly nominated his son in-law Clemson. Clemson was more than qualified to serve this position for the government. From his time spent in Paris studying, he picked up on European culture and their way of living. In addition, the time there also gave him a feel for continental problems and thinking. It goes on from there, with his extensive knowledge of not just Belgium’s but the vast majority of Europe’s economics, politics, and social life, he was better able to connect the United States to Belgium, as well as the other European countries. In his time in Belgium, only one treaty was passed by the two countries. The treaty was the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation. The treaty, which was set to last ten years, removed trade and tariff restrictions between the two countries. This led to an increase in commerce between the United States and Belgium.[4] Clemson was awarded the Order of Leopold by King Leopold I during his time as chargé.[5] [36]







October 4, 1861

The Confederates sign treaties with the Cherokee, Shawnee, and Seneca Indians, during the Civil War.[37]



October 4, 1864: John Godlove was born about 1781, probably in Pennsylvania, although Virginia is listed as his place of birth in the 1850 and 1860 censuses. John died in Washington County, Iowa, on October 4, 1864 and is buried in Riverside Cemetery. He was a farmer. [38]

Tues. October 4, 1864

In camp boys out foraging some taken

Up by provest marshal

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[39]



October 4, 1865:




12

650

Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 1809-1894 (A.L.S.), October 4, 1865 [40]







October 4, 1867: Samuel Preston Adams, b March 18, 1869, Delhi, Hamilton County, Ohio. m December 17, 1891, Portsmouth, Ohio Bessie Cecelia Varner b October 4, 1867, Portsmouth, Ohio dau. Of Sampson E and Maria Huston Varner. [41]

October 4, 1917

(South Side) Sunday afternoon while playing, little Gladys Goodlove broke her arm between the wrist and the elbow.[42]



October 4, 1917: W.S. Beels, the editor of the Hopkinton Leader, suggested that in his new position Chalice would be in a better position to advance his splendid work on the rural church and rural life with the Home Missions Board of the Methodist Episcopal Church.[43]


October 4, 1919: Parker
Gladys married Ardis Ulan Mashburn, Sr. (b. October 4, 1919 / d. April 30, 1993 in GA).[44]



October 4, 1927:





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] [45]

October 4, 1927: Construction of Mount Rushmore

Coordinates: 43°52′58.41″N 103°27′20.13″W / 43.8828917°N 103.4555917°W / 43.8828917; -103.4555917





Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor of the memorial.

The construction of Mount Rushmore National Memorial took about 14 years, from 1927 to 1941.

Designing the monument

Doane Robinson of the South Dakota Historical Society wanted a monument to be built in South Dakota in order to help the economy of the state by attracting tourism. In 1923, he proposed that this monument should be built from the granite cliffs in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Senator Peter Norbeck of South Dakota approved the proposal, and federal funds helped the project. Robinson asked architect and sculptor Gutzon Borglum to sculpt and design the monument. Borglum decided to use Mount Rushmore for the sculpture, since it seemed to be the easiest of the cliffs to work on.[1]

Gutzon Borglum, having decided on the location of the sculpture, he decided to make this monument of four Presidents of the United States. He chose the two most famous Presidents in American history, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. He chose Thomas Jefferson because Jefferson nearly doubled the size of the United States in the 1803 Louisiana Purchase (which included the land that became South Dakota). The last President Borglum chose was Theodore Roosevelt, suggested by President Calvin Coolidge (who insisted that at least there be two Republicans and at least one Democrat represented.[2]) because of Theodore Roosevelt's introduction of the National Park Service.

Borglum's original design was a sculpture of the four presidents intended to go down to their waists, but time and money only provided for their heads.[3] Ivan Houser, father of John Sherrill Houser, was assistant sculptor to Gutzon Borglum in the early years of carving; he began working with Borglum shortly after the inception of the monument and was with Borglum for a total of seven years. When Houser left Gutzon to devote his talents to his own work, Gutzon's son, Lincoln, became assistant sculptor.

Construction





Workers used harnesses attached to steel cables while sculpting.





Mount Rushmore before construction around 1905.

A few hundred workers, who were usually miners, sculptors, or rock climbers, used dynamite, jackhammering, and chiseling to sculpt the model from the mountain. A stairway was constructed to the top of the mountain first and ropes fixed. Workers were supported by harnesses attached to the ropes.

The irises of the eyes were sculpted as holes. A cube of granite was left in each to represent the reflection highlight thereby making the appearance of the eyes more realistic.

Construction began on October 4, 1927.

George Washington[edit]





Construction on the George Washington portrait at Mount Rushmore, c. 1932.

George Washington's head was started first. Due to the economic instability of the United States caused by the Great Depression, it was completed in seven years, and dedicated to the public on Independence Day 1934. A large American flag was placed over Washington's head before it was revealed, and this became a tradition for each of the Presidents' heads.

Thomas Jefferson[edit]

Thomas Jefferson's head was started next, left of Washington. Before the head was complete, Borglum ordered that it be blasted off due to poor rock quality. Jefferson's head was started again to the right of Washington. Jefferson's head was dedicated in 1936. [46]

October 4, 1940

Prefects are authorized by Vichy to confine foreign Jews to their homes or to intern or assign them to forced labor.[47]



October 4, 1940:




7

409

Roosevelt, James, 1907- (T.L.S.), March 7, 1934; October 4, 1940


[48]



• October 4, 1944: Kurt Gottlieb, born April 4,1932 in Linnich. Resided Siegberg. Deportation from Trier-Koln, July 27,1942, Theresienstadt . October 4,1944, Auschwitz[49]



October 4, 1944: Kurt Gottlieb, born April 4, 1932 in Linnich. Resided Siegberg. Deportation from Trier-Koln, July 27, 1942, to Theresienstadt. October 4, 1944, Auschwitz[50]



October 4, 1944: Helene Gottlieb, born Kaufmann, March 17, 1907 in Linnich.

Resided Siegburg. Deportation: From Trier-Koln, July 27, 1942, Theresienstadt

October 4, 1944, Auschwitz. Missing.[51]



October 4, 1946:




16

810

Utley, George B., October 4, 1946 [52]




October 4, 1961 Lee Harvey Oswald writes to the American Embassy in Moscow

• to request that the U.S. Government officially intervene to facilitate his and his wife’s applications

• for exit visas. He states that there has been systematic and concerted attempts to intimidate

• Marina into withdrawing her application for a visa, which has resulted in her being hospitalized

• for a five-day period on September 22 for nervous exhaustion. [53]



October 4, 1962 David Ferrie calls The Highlander from Kenner and another

unidentified number today. Ferrie’s contact with Dallas/Ft. Worth picks up during this month. [54]



October 4, 1963 Attorney Carroll Jarnagin says he visits Jack Ruby’s Carousel

Club to discuss a legal case with one of Ruby’s strippers. While seated in a booth, Jarnagin

overhears Ruby -- whom he knows well -- talking with another man. Jarnagin hears the man tell

Ruby, “Don’t use my real name. I’m going by the name of O.H. Lee.” This is the name used by Lee

Harvey Oswald to rent a room on North Beckley in Oak Cliff.

Also on this day, in Dallas, Oswald goes to Jobco, an employment agency, and applies

for work at Padgett Printing Corp. AOT

At around noon, LHO is seen at the Hill Machinery company He is looking for a job. He

is driving a car and leaves his wife and child sitting in it as he goes inside to apply.

Also, during the month of October, Jack Ruby’s rate of out-of-state calls rises tenfold over

September’s rate.

JFK, just back from a one-day trip to Arkansas, has at least five out-of-town trips

scheduled before the end of November. The next one, the White House announces, is a visit, Oct.

19, to Boston. On Nov. 18, the President has a date to address the Florida Chamber of

Commerce at Tampa in the afternoon and the Inter-American Press Association in Miami that

night. Senator William Fulbright has accompanied JFK on this trip. They discuss the upcoming

Dallas trip and Fulbright warns JFK not to go because Dallas is a very dangerous place.

Governor of Texas, John Connally, flies to Washington to finalize plans for the

President’s trip to Texas. JFK has been advised not to make the trip by members of his staff. In a

meeting tomorrow, Connally and Johnson urge him to go. (TTC)

RFK tells the CIA Mongoose sponsors that the President “feels that more priority should be

given to trying to mount sabotage operations.”

Later in the evening of this same day, Vice President Johnson and Gov. Connally dine

together. Not long after this, and as the Bobby Baker scandal is emerging, Vice President

Johnson leaves for his Texas ranch in order to get ready for JFK’s visit and to plan a “Texas

welcome.” Aside from one or two short trips out of Texas, Johnson does not return to

Washington and has nothing to do but prepare for JFK’s Texas trip, which is now a month

away.

On this day, an internal memo to H.L. Hunt family describes possible incidents during

JFK trip to Dallas. [55]









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


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


[2] http://henrytheyoungking.blogspot.com/2013/02/marguerite-of-france-young-queen-c1158.html


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


[4] Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 2010 Vol 36 NO 5 Page 26


[5] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 114.


[6]


[7] The Virtual Jewish History TourPortugal by Rebecca Weiner, retrieved October 18, 2006 from http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Portugal.html, http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/


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


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


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


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


[12] wikipedia


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


[14] From River Clyde to Tymochgtee and Col.William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, page 34.


[15] The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Scholl, 1995+


[16] The River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969 p.42.


[17] http://www.thelittlelist.net/coatocus.htm


[18] Brady. Captain Sam Brady (c1743-c1795). Raised in Shamokin (Sunbury), PA and buried in West Liberty, WV. Some sources have him born in 1756 in Shippensburg—the son of John Brady, Indian fighter. His younger brother, James, was killed by the Munsee Chief Bald Eagle while attempting to protect farmers while they harvested grain. Not long after that, Brady's father was killed. Sam Brady was reported to have been six-feet one inch in height, 175 pounds, blue-eyed, black hair, and apparently very athletic. After the Revolutionary War, Brady was a scout employed to make reports on Indian action in western PA and Ohio. He scouted several western Ohio villages with John Williamson and Lewis Wetzel while reporting to Colonel Daniel Brodhead. Brady was a friend of Guyasutha, and while with Indian friends they came across a camp of enemy braves and when they opened fire, a ball from Brady's rifle killed Chief Bald Eagle. (See Brady's Bend below.) After William Crawford’s disastrous venture into northwest OH in 1782 where his troops were slaughtered and Crawford himself tortured before being killed, Brady kept close account of unfriendly Indian actions. Josiah Harmar nearly replicated Crawford’s venture in 1790 when he lost most of his troops—again in Ohio. Two of Brady’s scouts were “Sandy” McGuffey and Duncan MacArthur. McGuffey fathered the young men who later wrote a renowned primary reader. MacArthur became governor of Ohio. (See School.)

During one of his Ohio trips, Brady was captured by Indians and taken to their village where they would have him run the gauntlet, be tortured, and then shot and scalped. They were elated at having captured such a famous man. At a point in the process, Brady found himself near a large fire surrounded by seemingly the entire tribe. He noticed a squaw nearby carrying a baby. He lunged across the squaw's body and wrestled the baby from her and ran to the fire and threw the baby in. The crowd went wild. They jumped into the fire to find and save the baby. Meanwhile, Brady made his way through the chaos and ran into the woods. The Indians quickly took up pursuit but were unable to trace him. He escaped. The stories do not explain the fate of the baby.

Brady found himself in big trouble in 1791 when in hot pursuit of an opposing Indian group he chased them into a trading post on the Big Beaver River and in the following melee, Brady’s group killed an old man and four squaws.



Brady's Bend - Samuel Brady. PA 68 1.3 miles east (up the hill) from East Brady, Clarion County. Photo by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged photo

"Brady's Bend. Named for Capt. Samuel Brady (1756-1795), famed frontier scout and the subject of many legends. Near here in June 1779—in what was then Seneca territory—he led a force seeking to redress the killing of a settler and her four children, and the taking of two children as prisoners. The force surrounded a party of seven Indians—apparently both Seneca and Munsee—killing their leader (a Munsee warrior) and freeing the two children.

"Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission."

Possibly the most renowned Sam Brady story is his “leap.” In 1780, while being chased by hostile Indians, Brady approached the Cuyahoga River near Kent, OH at a point where the river was no more than a gorge through the earth. On foot, Brady leaped across the river and evaded the Indians who realized that circumventing the gorge would cost them too much time—so they gave up and Brady was free. Persons returning to the gorge at a later date, measured the gap at twenty-two feet. The pursuing Indians were to have said, “He did not jump: he flew.”



West Liberty (Brady's burial). WV 88 in West Liberty (northeast of Wheeling, Ohio County). Photo by compiler with Joyce Chandler. Enlarged photo..

"West Liberty. First organized town in the Ohio Valley. Formed in 1787. First court of Ohio County met at Black's Cabin here in 1777. Near by is grave of Captain Samuel Brady, hero of the Pennsylvania and Virginia frontiers."

In 1783, Sam Brady married Drusilla van Swearingen—the daughter of Captain Andrew van Swearingen. Van Swearingen had arrived in the area in 1771 after William Houston had caught a thirty-pound catfish on a creek and proclaimed the water as "catfish creek." (This tale conflicts with the story of a Delaware Indian - "Catfish" who was associated with the same area—now Washington, PA). Van Swearingen bought up claims in his name, his wife s name, and—and apparently several others who may or may not have ever walked on the face of the earth. The Brady family of four survived many perils until Sam's death at age forty-three in 1799.

(See Bald Eagle, Crawford, Girty, Guyasutha, and Lewis Wetzel.)

Brady’s Bend. Clarion County site on the Allegheny River in June 1779 of a fight between Sam Brady and a Delaware war chief (Bald Eagle). The chief was killed and several Indians were injured. Some question the site believing it was more probably on Red Bank Creek (this may be moot, as Red Bank Creek and Brady's Bend are basically the same place). Brady was leading a small ranger unit ahead of Colonel Brodhead when they spotted Indians ahead of them (mostly Seneca and Delaware), Brady's group avoided Bald Eagle's men and ran to the side and disappeared into the woods. Captain Brady allowed the Indians to pass knowing that they would soon meet Brodhead with the major part of his force. He reasoned when they met Brodhead they would retreat up the same path from whence they had come. He placed his men on both sides of a narrow pass on the path and when the Indians retreated as Brady had expected, they walked into a deadly crossfire with many being killed and a number injured. (Although there's no way Brady would have known, but—this same manoeuvre was used by Napoleon in his battle with some Mamelukes some twenty-five years later.) Retreating out of a woods, or swamp using the same path used going in is contrary to basic infantry tactics—and should be avoided (even if you are an experienced fighter). Bald Eagle was killed. Young Cornplanter, the Seneca, was among those in the battle, but he managed to jump in the river and swim to safety.



Brady's Bend - Panorama. Lookout at the marker 1.3 miles up PA 68 above East Brady, Clarion County. Photo by compiler. Enlarged photo

The view from the "lookout" affords the visitor a complete panoramic sight of Brady's Bend. The "bend" is a complete horse-shoe turn by the Allegheny River. "West" Brady is in Armstrong County, while "East" Brady is in Clarion County. The river is the dividing-line. "West" Brady was the home of Brady's Bend Iron Company which was one of the largest iron works of the mid 19th century and the first iron works to make iron rails west of the Alleghenies.

In the current era, East Brady is perhaps best known as the hometown of Hall of Fame football player Jim Kelly (quarterback for Buffalo Bills). The "main street" is "Kelly Way."

http://www.thelittlelist.net/boatobye.htm


[19] That Dark and Bloody River, Allan W. Eckert pg 174


[20] Rev. War Pension File for John and Nancy Vance, W 6338

John Vance, served from VA W 6338. File received May 1980 from National Archives.

PETITION OF JOHN VANCE;To the Honourable the Speaker and Members of the Legislature of the State of Virginia,

Gentlemen, Your petitioner humbly sheweth that in the year seventy-six I turned out a Volunteer under Captain Stevenson as sargeant and Clerk to the Company and marched to Williamsburg, and then joined the eighth Virginia regiment commanded by Colonel Peter Milinsky and marched from there to Charles Town in South Carolina, and the Company I belonged to, with two more companys, was sent to assist at the Battle of Sulivans Island, from thence we marched to Sunsberry in Georgia under General Lee and remained there untill our time of service was out. I then returned to Fort Pit and then joined the 13th Virginia regiment commanded by Colonel Crawford in Captain Robert Bell's Company, and acted as Sargeant Major to the said regiment, and part of the said regiment was sent down to join the main army at Philadelphia under General Washington where I then acted as Agetant for said regiment for three months, was at the battle of Brandywine, and at the Battle of Germantown, wounded through the cheek with a bayonet, and sometime after the Battle General Milinsbuy gave me a very honorable discharge, which I took good care uf until my house was burned down by accident, and so lost it, and the wound I received in my leg still continues to run and so disables me to walk that I am not able to labour for my support, being now sixty-seven years of age, and as I served in our Revolutionary War for Liberty, I hope and trust that your honorable body will take my poor and distressed situation under your serious consideration, and grant me as a poor old soldier such relief as may support me in my old age. And you Petitioner as in duty bouned shall ever pray,

John Vance




[21] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett p. 910.3


[22] Enemy Views, Bruce Burgoyne, pgs.184-185


[23]55 The house of Justice Benjamin Chew.




[24]The enemy, who had already penetrated far into German­town and were firing from gardens and behind houses…


[25] Revolution in America, Confidential letters and Journals 1776-1784 of Adjutant General Major Baurmeister of the Hessian Forces. Pg 120


[26] George Washington, A Biography in His Own Words, Edited by Ralph K. Andrist.




[27]Brigadier General Francis Nash, of the Continental Army, died on October 7 of wounds received during the battle.




[28] Revolution in America, Confidential letters and Journals 1776-1784 of Adjutant General Major Baurmeister of the Hessian Forces. Pg 122


[29] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824


[30] http://www.ebay.com/itm/ANDREW-JACKSON-DOLLAR-COIN-WITH-MASONIC-STAMP-/151064439025?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item232c2468f1


[31] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[32] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[33] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_trail_of_tears


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


[35] Brown Township, p 735 is in History of Linn County, Iowa, published 1878 by Western Historical Company, Chicago. IL.


[36] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Green_Clemson


[37] ON This Day in America by John Wagman.


[38] JFj.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net


[39] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove


[40]


Series 6: Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1858-1938


This series contains an assortment of letters that were apparently neither written by, nor sent to, Harrison or his family. It is not clear why Harrison kept many of the letters in this series, or even how he obtained them in the first place. Some may have been collected because Harrison felt that the author was a person of historical significance, such as the letters written by William Jennings Bryan and the note written by Oliver Wendell Holmes, others may have been forwarded to Harrison by the addressee. Some of the letters refer to Harrison's father or other members of his family. The letter from A. S. Trude, for example, relates to Patrick Eugene Prendergast, the man who murdered Carter H. Harrison III.


This series is arranged alphabetically by the sender's name. Multiple items within a folder are then arranged chronologically.





[41] http://www.brookecountywvgenealogy.org/CONNELL.html


[42] Winton Goodlove papers.


[43] There Goes the Neighborhood by David R. Reynolds, page 174.


[44] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


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


[46] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Construction_of_Mount_Rushmore


[47] French Children of the Holocaust, A Memorial, by Serge Klarsfeld, page 14.


[48]


Series 2: Incoming Correspondence, 1867-1953


The majority of this series is personal correspondence sent to Harrison, although there are also a significant number of items that were sent to Harrison in his official capacity as Mayor of Chicago or Collector of Internal Revenue. Several letters have handwritten annotations by Harrison explaining the letter's context or giving his thoughts on the sender or the letter's subject.


Much of Harrison's official incoming correspondence involves patronage job appointments. The rest of Harrison's incoming correspondence covers a wide range of topics, including: (a) his three books (Stormy Years, Growing Up With Chicago, and With the American Red Cross in France, 1918-1919); (b) the political activities of the Democratic Party at both the local and national level, including four letters from Tammany Hall boss Richard Croker; (c) early Chicago history; (d) hunting and fishing trips; (e) efforts to locate the whereabouts of various individuals with whom Harrison was acquainted in the past; and (f) responses from well-known people of Harrison's day from whom he requested autographs as a young man.


Among the correspondence in this series are two interesting letters from then Senator Harry Truman in 1936 in which Truman tells Harrison what he thinks of the French and expresses his displeasure at France's failure to repay the United States for debts incurred during World War I in connection with the purchase of war supplies. There is also a letter from Harrison's brother, William Preston Harrison, giving his eyewitness account of the assassination of Harrison's father in 1893, and a letter from Lawton Parker inviting Harrison to attend a meeting to discuss the formation the Arts Club of Chicago. Finally, this series includes letters relating to Harrison's service with the American Red Cross in France at the end of World War I, and his gifts to the Art Institute of Chicago.


There is a fair amount of correspondence (i.e., over five letters) from the following individuals or entities: American Red Cross; Art Institute of Chicago; Bobbs-Merrill Company; William Jennings Bryan; Charles Collins; Charles G. Dawes; Charles S. Deneen; Edward F. Dunne; E. K. Eckert; James Farley; Alexander Hugh Ferguson; Charles Fitzmorris; Sophonisba Preston Harrison; William Preston Harrison; Henry Horner; Cordell Hull; Harold L. Ickes; James Hamilton Lewis; Frank O. Lowden; Edgar Lee Masters; William Gibbs McAdoo; John T. McCutcheon; F. Millet; Henry Morgenthau Jr.; Battling Nelson; Lawton Parker; Henry T. Rainey; Frederick Rex; Franklin Delano Roosevelt; Julius Rosenwald; A. J. Sabath; Adlai E. Stevenson; William Hale Thompson; Henry Emerson Tuttle; and Walter Ufer.


Letters to Harrison specifically about his family's genealogy and history are arranged separately in Series 11 (Harrison Family History). Letters to Harrison about the Chicago Commission for the Encouragement of Local Art are arranged separately in Series 12 (Chicago Commission for the Encouragement of Local Art).


This series is arranged alphabetically by the sender's name. Multiple items within a folder are then arranged chronologically.





[49] [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


[50] [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


[51] [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).


[52]


Series 8: Clippings, 1858-1952, bulk 1907-1948


This series consists of clippings of newspaper and magazine articles that either mention Harrison or were about subjects of particular interest to him. Clippings of articles primarily about Harrison's life rather than Harrison's connection to another person or matter are arranged in Series 1 (Biographical Materials). In some cases, Harrison clipped only a portion of the article, cutting it off part way through.


Several of the articles in this series are stories of graft, corruption, prostitution, gambling, and other illegal activities in Chicago, which Harrison apparently saved to favorably compare his record as mayor to that of some of his successors, such as William Hale Thompson and Edward J. Kelly. Others relate to Harrison's books, or to historic Chicago people, places, or events to which Harrison had some connection. A number of the clippings are about people whom Harrison or his father knew. This series also includes two copies of the Chicago Times from 1858 and 1861 which may have been saved by Harrison's father.


Some of the clippings are accompanied by Harrison's handwritten or typed notes providing his thoughts on the subject of the article, or explaining how the subject of the article related to him. These annotations generally range from one sentence to a couple of paragraphs in length.


See also clippings in five bound volumes, cataloged separately as Case + E5 H24608.


This series is arranged alphabetically by the primary subject of the clippings. Multiple items within a folder are then arranged chronologically.





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




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




[55] http://www.dallasnews.com/news/jfk50/reflect/20131012-extremists-in-dallas-created-volatile-atmosphere-before-jfks-1963-visit.ece

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