11,923 names…11,923 stories…11,923 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, November 6, 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, Theodore 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! https://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/
• • Books written about our unique DNA include:
• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.
•
• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004
Robert S. Armstrong (1st cousin of the husband of the 1st cousin 2x removed)
Elizabeth Brittain (5th cousin 4x removed)
Ralph Godlove
Agnes V. Goodlove
Batteal Harrison (3rd cousin 4x removed)
Sarah A. Jenkins Grunkemeyer (sister in law of the 1st great grand uncle)
Charles E. LeFevre (brother in law of the 1st cousin 3x removed)
Alexander F. Rowell (8th cousin 3x removed)
Gregory S. Snell (1st cousin 1x removed)
James D. Stewart (5th cousin)
Angeline R. Yates (5th cousin 2x removed)
355: Roman Emperor Constantius II promotes his cousin Julian to the rank of Caesar, entrusting him with the government of the Prefecture of the Gauls. Constantius II followed the pro-Christian and anti-Jewish policies of his father, Constantine The Great. Julian would follow his cousin as Caesar and enter history as Julian, the Apostate. Julian was a Pagan who sought to reverse the Christianizing policies of his two predecessors. He reversed the rules against the Jewish people and was reportedly planning to allow them to re-build the Temple; a plan that was aborted by his assassination.[1]
359 A.D.
Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus
Sarcophagus of Junius BassusCredit: Public Domain.As we move into the late 19th and early 20th centuries scholars begin to make use of photography to record and study ancient Christian artifacts. This image of the Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus was published in the late 19th century in the Nordisk familjebok, a Swedish encyclopedia. Bassus was a wealthy Roman Christian who was involved in politics, and who passed away in A.D. 359. The artifact shows images from the bible and is considered to be one of the most impressive works of early Christian art. [2]
360-420 The Vulgate’s fifth century translation of Isaiah’s “lost in Assyria” speaks of qui perditi fuerant de terra Assyriorum, those lost from the land of Assyria. Similarly, the great ecclesiastical writer Sulpitius Severus (360-420) writes in hhis Sacred History that “the ten which had previously been carried away beingt scattered among the Parthians, Medes, Indians, and Ethiopians never returned to their native country, and are to this day held under the sway of barbarous nations.” Note how Severus adds the Indians and the Ethiopians, that is, the eastern and southern boundaries of the Greco-Roman oikoumene, to the more biblical Parthians and Medes.[3]
361-363 CE: Roman Emperor Julian the Apostate, allows the Jews to return to “holy Jerusalem which you have for many years longed to see rebuilt” and to rebuild the Temple. In 362 Julian the Apostate, left Constantinople and arrived in Antioch to prepare for the invasion of Persia. While preparing for the invasion he met Jewish leaders to whom he promised he would re-build the Temple. Julian’s short reign would come to an end in the following year and nothing came of his plans for the Third Temple.[4]
November 6th, 1534 - Zealand hit by heavy storm[5]
November 6, 1555: Mary recognized Elizabeth as her heir.[40] [6]
November 6, 1564: To THE Duchess D'Arschot.* [7][8]
From Edinburgh, the 6th November, 1564.
My aunt, — Having heard that this vessel sails for Flanders tomorrow, I will not allow it to depart without tliis note, to recall me to your favour, and also to apprise you that I received intelligence from France, the day before yesterday, by one of my people, whom the Bishop of Glasgow, my ambassador there, sent to me. And, among other things of which I am informed, I learn that the Prince of Oondè has sought me in marriage from my grandmother, and my uncle, the cardinal, to whom he has made the handsomest proposals, as well regarding religion as other things; and especially he wishes to give his children as pledges that he will defend my friends from all their enemies, in permitting them to get redress from them by solemn justice ; and to this effect he is to
send to me a gentleman of this country, pretty well acquainted with diplomatic intrigues, assuring himself that he will so manage the lords of this country who are of the Protestant religion, that they will entreat me to consent to it.
My neighbours request another thing, which I have no great liking for either ; but I have wished much to write to you what I have heard upon that point, in order that you may give me an answer to it, with all the rest ; for the Constable*[9] has assured my people of the marriage of him
whom you know, and others also, with the eldest daughter f[10] of the newly elected.
This is all that I can say, without a cipher; but, if I hear from you, I shall write to you at greater length. Meanwhile, I beg you to believe me the most affectionate relative and friend you have ; and so I kiss your hands, as heartily, to conclude, I pray God to give you, my aunt, in health, a very happy and long life.
From Lislebourg, 6 November, 1564.
Addressed : — To Madame the Duchess d'Arschot. [11]
November 6, 1577: To THE Archbishop of Glasgow. [12]
From Sheffield, the 6th November [1577.]
I shall reply by this to yours of the 5 th of October, and to what I have heard by your former ones, not having had leisure to accomplish it by my last. And to begin with the most important points, I shall say, as to what you write to me of my transaction with the Pope, that I am by no means satisfied with the little care and regard which 1 perceive his Holiness has for the good of my affairs, being sufficiently disquieted otherwise, as I understand, on account of his own private matters and those of his house. For, although that apparently he gives
promises of watching over this island and those whom God has called to govern there, I find that his design is only to protract matters, and by this means get rid of my just and too reasonable and commendable suit ; I regret to trouble him with importunity. But, to obtain a final determination, without labouring in it more uselessly, I pray you to inform him, on the earliest opportunity, that what remains to me of
my jointure (as more particularly you can shew to him) being insufficient for the maintenance of my domestic servants, and the wants of the banished English and Scotch, whom I am obliged to assist, seeing them unworthily abandoned on all sides; and the gentlemen my relations not being in such easy circumstances that any ready assistance of a sum so large as this business may require can be expected from them ;
considering that for a less, if they could supply it, they would not demand from me any security : and that everywhere, perceiving the other Christian sovereigns almost in a similar want of money with myself, it appears to me, in this extremity, that I cannot do less than look to my son's condition, and in discharging my conscience, not to be wanting to the common cause of religion, which I consider that he himself should
have, in the end, of much importance, in offering him as I have done to the bosom of the Catholic Church, and to the arms of the Pope as her head. In which, although maternal affection incites me to it, if I have been so little concerned for my own account, as every man of sound judgment may know the small regard which I have had for my safety, and
the inconveniences into which I might fall in this captivity, in order to procure the safety of my son and the Catholics of this island, which is only that wherein I . seek the means of his Holiness, wanting all others. If, then, he has any inclination to assist me, you shall declare to him openly (over and above the particulars and circumstances which you have already set before him) that it is necessary to have, in time and place, ready money, without which, and for the sum of 12,000 crowns, of which you write to me that he has made only a verbal offer of security, I will not attempt the removal of my son's person, knowing that I should come to a stand under the business. I shall say nothing of the presents which it would be expedient to make in dealing with and remunerating those who may interfere in it, or of the expenses of removal, although they would be very considerable ; but I wish much to provide for the inconveniences which might subsequently arise from it, both in Scotland and in this kingdom, where, if the good will which Erskine and Drumquhassil have for me there is not speedily assisted and supported, I should have in nothing profited except in procuring their ruin and my own. And, in order that there may be no room for suspicion that the money of his Holiness is used for any other purpose, I beseech him to depute whomsoever may seem good to him, to keep an account of it for him, and to make the expenditure as the necessity shall require it, and not otherwise, without me or any of my people touching, on any occasion, one single penny of it, leaving the rest of this affair to his good judgment and wise provision, to resolve himself and me,
according to his pleasure, in the completion or dissolution of it. However, I wish you to tell him distinctly that, if he does not act otherwise, this will be the last importunity which I shall address to him, and that I shall adhere to my former determination of not removing my son out of Scotland, that I may not be pressed by it to secure him from the hands of his enemies and mine, or from any change on this side. I do not wish, if the answer to the above is unfavourable
to me, that you should make further application or entreaty in it. And for the future, if anything requires negotiation there, employ in it the Bishop of Ross rather than any one else, so as to give him no occasion of just displeasure, after having had such particular intimacy with my affairs, as whilst he was my ambassador in this kingdom, and send to him such as you know to be capable and trustworthy to assist in my service, as I am convinced that he will not refuse their con-
fidence.
I do not know whether you have been informed that the Pope considered the sum excessive which had been proposed to him by other parties ; but I did not speak to him of it except by way of talking, at first sight, on the information which he himself desired to have of what would be required for the recovery of my liberty and the removal of my son ; although it was not very far beyond the ideas of the late Cardinal of
Lorraine, who always offered me his duchy of Chevreuse.
Thank very heartily the cardinal and the Duke of Guise (communicating all that has passed in this matter) for the evidence which they have shewn to you of their good wûll towards me and my son, which I value much. But, knowing the forest which has been offered to you, I have not so little respect for them that I should wish to pledge it, or their
means, unless extreme necessity should force me to it, or that a very certain opportunity should present itself; contenting myself in the meantime with their credit and influence with the king, to whom by them you can make known the division of this council, so strongly biased that there is not a faction there that does not desire (whatever its condition may be) the ruin of the opposite party. And all together are in such terror and apprehension of the revolution of this kingdom,
that the people themselves, perceiving the movement which is made in many parts of this kingdom by halves put down, cry with a loud voice against the members of this government, so that the neighbouring princes ought now to have no doubt of anything here, where with little force they might give much annoyance, if matters permitted them to agree to it ; the disposition of all the Catholics and a great portion of the old heretics, in spite of the Puritans, being in such a
manner inclined thereto, that, with the tip of the finger, they
could be forced into the field.
You perhaps recollect that I formerly wrote to you of the understanding which they suspected to exist between the most Christian king and the King of Spain. I have seen a letter from their ambassador in the Low Countries, which bears that the King of Spain (without being able to sound his designs further, inasmuch as he communicates on the subject with the majority of his council less than ever) is beyond measure
irritated and displeased with the proceedings of the estates of
the Low Countries against his kingdom, and that, for the most part, all the peers of Flanders have a very bad opinion of the Queen of England, declining, at last, on the ground of inability, to endure more for her. This agrees with other information based on some letters of Don John of
Austria, which the rebels of the Low Countries have intercepted and sent hither, by which the said Don wrote to the King of Spain, his brother, that the peace of the Low Countries did not depend on his subjects, but on the common understanding which they had with this queen ; and that, at this time, he had no means of assuring himself of it, except by making war in his own country. For my part, I cannot see
it but through you and my said relations ; but if they should attempt anything here, contrary to the small prospect which I have of it, it would be very important for me to be promptly informed, that I might see to my affairs. For, in consequence of the apprehensions which they have of the storm, I know that they have already prepared to remove me from the custody of the Earl of Shrewsbury, and from this country, which they say is entirely devoted to me. Have your eye open on
it, and do not allow me to be surprised ; for, sooner than trust my life to the Earl of Huntingdon, or the Earl of Bedford, and such others of my enemies, I shall leave no stone unturned, believing that I endanger myself less, and find more security there.
You will particularly thank my cousin, the Duke of Guise, for his remembrance of me, and, if he speaks to you again of the proposals which you have made for regaining my liberty, tell him that, besides the small prospect that there is of carrying them into elFect, I shall with difficulty be persuaded to change the condition in which I have lived since my viduity, not holding my liberty so dear, nor my own pleasure in such estimation, as the bringing back of this island to the Catholic Church, and the preservation of my rights for my son ; which
are the two points for which I desire to live, and am content to suffer the treatment which I receive in this captivity. . . .* [13]
Kemember to send me by the first opportunity 1500 crowns, as I have written to you, and assure Dolu from me, that, if he does not promptly make them forthcoming, whatever excuse he may bring forward, I shall keep my promise to him in revenge for his not keeping his to me. I do not find him the same at Paris as at Sheffield ; and, to look to it betimes, if I cannot hope from him assistance in my necessity but from
my own means, as I know you would willingly have informed me of it, I desire that you will procure for me some honest man of rank, and adequate to this charge, who can advance to me, on entering thereupon, some considerable sum, if I have need of it, and whom necessity cannot constrain to change, after the long patience which I have exercised in
regard to the said Dolu ; who, when here, being unable to give me satisfaction on many points which I asked at him concerning the management of my finances, was obliged, as a general excuse, to confess to me that he had not attended much to it, and had entrusted it to his deputy, both on account of his other duties, and some other occupations which he had had since the death of his wife. You see how I have been
served Î Cause a hundred crowns to be given to him who has drawn
up that account of my troubles whereof you write to me. But, although it was much to the purpose to cause it to be printed now, to contradict the wicked libels which are circulated here, that nevertheless nothing may be left to them to sting, you will send to me a copy, and until I return it to you, you shall cause it be translated into English, that it may at the same time be printed in both languages.
I shall conclude with one point which I require of you : it is that on all occasions when you write to me, especially when they shall be of importance, for want of your presence here to consult with you therein, you will write to me freely and fully your advice and counsel to assist me in coming to a more sound decision, as it is necessary. If it should happen, also, that they should forbid my letters and communications,
you can (under the pretext of sending me some books) write in the blanks between the lines (alum appears to me the best, or gall nuts) ; and, although such artifices are so hazardous and so common, they may serve me in extreme need, by the means and conveyance of the carrier of this place, who is not so closely watched, as among the other necessaries which he brings me, to be unable to deliver to me secretly whatever may be written to me in this manner, without he himself
perceives it : they may use for this cloth or white taffeta.
I forgot to say to you that you may get me much money from the Agnus Dei and chaplets which you have received from Rome for me ; and that out of the money from my casualties you can draw the sum of a thousand livres, to be, according as opportunities occur, distributed by you to
the poor, especially the English and Scotch, and to the necessitous monasteries, at your discretion.
Written at Sheffield, this 6th November,
Z.* [14]
November 6, 1612:
Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales (February 19, 1594 – November 6, 1612). Died, probably of typhoid fever, aged 18.[132] [15]
November 6, 1612 – March 27, 1625: Charles I of England: The Duke of Cornwall. [16]
November 6, 1752
[17]
[18]
November 6, 1771 Dined at Mrs. Dawsons and Spent the Evening at Mrs. Campbells. [19]
November 6, 1770: (GW) In about 5 Miles we came to Kiashutas Camp & there Halted.
November 6th, 1770: (GW)—We left our encampment a little after daylight, and after about five miles we came to Kiashmuta’s hunting camp, which was now removed to the mouth of the creek, noted October 29th, for having fallen timber at the mouth of it, in a bottom of good land. By the kindness and idle ceremony of the Indians, I was detained at Kiashuta’s camp all the remaining part of the day ; amid having a good deal of conversation with bin on the subject of land, he informed me that it was further from the mouth of the Great Kenhawa to the fall of the river, than it was between the two Kenhawa’s ; )that the bottom on the west side, which begins near the mouth of the Kenhawa, continues all the way to the falls without the interposition of hills, and widens as it goes, especially from a pretty large creek that comes in about ten or fifteen miles higher up than where we were; that in the fork there is a body of good land, and at a considerable distance above this, the river Corks again at an island, and there begins the reed, or cane to grow ; that the bottoms on the east side of the river are also very- good, but broken with hills; and that the river is easily passed with canoes to the falls, which cannot be less than one hundred miles, but further, it is not possible to go with them ; that there is but one ridge from thence to the settlements upon the river above, on which it is possible for a man to travel, the country between being so much broken with steep hills and precipices[20]
November 6, 1772 (GW) Took a Cold Cut at Southalls & went up to Col. Bassetts.[21]
November 6, 1772: (GW) Dined at Mrs. Amblers & Spent the Evening there also after setting a while with Cob. Bassett at Mrs. Dawsons.
Among the expenses that GW recorded in his ledger under this date were 7s. 6d. for “seeing Wax work” and 1 is. 6d. for a “Puppit Shew” (Ledger B, 61).[22]
November 6, 1773: After gaining the Virginia council’s approval for the second allotment of land under the Proclamation of GW persuaded the governor and council to authorize warrants of survey on the “western waters” for those entitled to land under the Royal Proclamation of 1763 (Hening, 7:663—69). Under the second proclamation GW was entitled to 5,000 acres for his own service as colonel of the Virginia Regiment. In addition, he already had purchased shares entitling him to an additional 5,000 acres from other officers, and in 1774 he obtained the right to purchase 3,000 more acres through his purchase of a warrant of survey from a former captain in the 2d Virginia Regiment.
Crawford’s appearance today at Mount Vernon, allowing land discussions that were spread over a six-day period, was GW’s first opportunity to confer personally with his man in the field.
White Plains [New York], November 6, 1776.
Whilst we lay at the upper end of York [Manhattan] Island (or the heights of Harlem) How suddenly Landed from the best accts. we cd. get, about 16,000 Men above us, on a place called Frogs point on the East River, or Sound, this obliged Us, as his design was evidently to surround us, & cut of our Communication with the Country, thereby stopping all Supplies of Provisions (of which we were very scant) to remove our Camp and out Flank him, which we have done, & by degrees got strongly posted on advantageous Grounds at this place.
November 6, 1778:
6th The Army marched about twelve O Clock and descended a
steep hill and Crossed little Beaver Creek which is about four
perches wide The Situation of this place renders the passage
of an Army difficult as well as dangerous as the Army
ascended the hill on the other side an Alarm happened owing to
some of the Militia Imprudently fireing at Deer, the Army Arrived
at Camp N°3 4[23] with an hour of up Sun this is called Camp Pleasent.
situate on a small branch Branch (sic) of little Beaver Creek the
lines commanding all the hills around the camp a fine day and the
night warm for the season[24]
November 6, 1778: Winch, David, Lancaster Private, Wade's regt. for service at Rhode Island; Capt. Belknap's co, muster rolls dated North Kingston, November 6, and December 4, 1778; reported sick and absent on roll dated December 4, 1778.[25]
November 6, 1793
The British violate United States neutrality by ordering that any ship carrying French goods can be impounded.[26]
November 6, 1796: Catherine II, “whom the Boyars called The Great,” died. Many of her predecessors on the Russian throne had done all they could to keep Jews from living in the empire. Catherine’s aggressive foreign policy helped to lead to the dismemberment of Poland. With one fell swoop, Catherine undid all their efforts when she gained the Jews of a large part of Poland and Lithuania. Despite some early dabbling at enlightened treatment of her Jewish subjects, Catherine began the policies that would create the Pale of Settlement.[27]
November 6, 1811: Battle
180px-Battle_of_tippecanoe%2C_battlefield_map
magnify-clip
A map showing the layout of the battlefield.
As Harrison's forces approached Prophetstown late on November 6, they were met by one of the Prophet's followers waving a white flag. He carried a message from Tenskwatawa, requesting a cease fire be put in place until the next day when the two sides could hold a peaceful meeting. Harrison agreed to a meeting, but was wary of the Prophet's overture believing that the negotiations would be futile. Harrison moved his army to a nearby hill near the confluence of the Wabash and Tippecanoe Rivers. There he camped his men in battle array, and kept sentinels on duty during the night.[14] The hill he encamped on was the site of a Catholic mission school built to educate the surrounding tribes. On the east side of the hill there was a shallow creek and the west side was a very steep embankment. Because of the nature of the position, Harrison did not order any temporary works to be created around the position as was ordinarily done by encamped armies.[15] The Yellow Jacket company, with Captain Spier Spencer in command, was posted on the southern end of the camp perimeter. The rest of the militia formed a rectangular formation along the edges of the bluff surrounding the camp. Colonel Davis Floyd commanded the militia units guarding the steep bluff on the eastern side of the formation. The regulars, commanded by Major Rodd, and the dragoons, commanded by Maj. Joseph Daviess and former congressman Captain Benjamin Parke, were kept behind the main line to serve as a reserve.[9][16]
The Prophet's followers were worried by the nearby army and feared an imminent attack. They had began to fortify the town, but the defenses were not yet completed. During the evening, the Prophet consulted with the spirits and decided that sending a party to murder Harrison in his tent was the best way to avoid a battle. He assured the warriors that he would cast spells that would prevent them from being harmed and confuse the Americans so they would not resist. The warriors then moved out and began to surround Harrison's army looking for a way to sneak into the camp.[16] Ben, an African-American wagon driver with the army had deserted during the expedition. He agreed to lead a small group of warriors through the line to Harrison's tent. During the late night hours he was captured by the camp sentries, taken back to the camp and bound. He was later convicted of treason but pardoned by Harrison.[15]
November 6, 1817: Princess Charlotte died after delivering a stillborn son. King George was left with twelve surviving children, and no surviving legitimate grandchildren.[46] Most of the unmarried royal dukes hurriedly sought out suitable brides and hastened to the altar, hoping to father the heir to the throne.[45]
Seeing little prospect of the Queen giving in and receiving her daughter-in-law, the Cumberlands moved to Germany in 1818. They had difficulty living within their means in Britain, and the cost of living was much lower in Germany.[47] [28]
November 6, 1834: The Jews of Austria were forbidden to have the first names of Christian saints.[29]
November 6, 1838: Richard Taylor, Conductor; Walter Scott Adair, Asst. Conductor; 897 left November 6, 1838 from Ooltewah Creek camp and 942 arrived March 24, 1839 at Woodall's place(55 deaths, 15 births). Missionary Rev. Daniel Butrick accompanied this detachment, and his daily journal has been published. [30]
November 6, 1839: Batteal HARRISON. Born on November 6, 1839 in Madison/Fayette County, Ohio. Batteal died in Range Township, Madison County, Ohio on January 19, 1890; he was 50.
On December 24, 1861 when Batteal was 22, he married Lydia Ann RODGERS, in Fayette County, Ohio. Born on January 17, 1841 in Ross County, Ohio. Lydia Ann died in Madison County, Ohio on February 7, 1922; she was 81.
They had one child:
70 i. Benjamin Rodgers (1869-1936)[31]
November 6, 1845: 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] [32]
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] [33]
According to Cecil Woodham-Smith, the rising wrath of Tories and landlords “all interest in Ireland was submerged.” The Tory Mayor of Liverpool she says refused to call a meeting for the relief of Irish distress, the Mansion House Committee in Dublin she continued, was accused of ‘deluding the public with a false alarm’, and the blight itself ‘was represented as the invention of agitators on the other side of the water’. The entanglement of the Irish famine with the repeal of the Corn Laws she says was a key misfortune for Ireland. The potato failure was eclipsed by the domestic issue of Corn Law repeal. The Irish famine she writes, would "slipped into the background."[13] [34]
100_1359[35]
November 6, 1860
Abraham Lincoln is elected 16th President of the United States.[36] The message of opportunity and defense of the Union represented by Lincoln and the recently created Republican Party resonated positively with many Jews. As President, Lincoln took action to make the Jews feel like “first class” citizens. In 1862 he signed an act of Congress that required Army chaplains to be Christian ministers. Now, Rabbis could officially serve in this position. Lincoln also rescinded General Grant’s notorious Order #10 that barred Jewish merchants from operating in the military theatre under his command. [37]
November 6, 1860: Dr. Milton Reader Hunter, William Harrison Goodlove’s brother in law, born March 14, 1817, on his fathers farm, Catawba, Clark County, Ohio; died 1884 in Pleasant Tsp., Clark County Ohio. He was the son of Jonathan Hunter and Mary Shaw. He married Nancy Jane Goodlove, William Harrison Goodlove’s sister, December 27, 1842 in Clark Co. Ohio by Reverend Reuben Miller. She was born January 16, 1826, in Moorefield Twp. Clark Co. Ohio. She was the daughter of Conrad Goodlove and Catherine “Katie” McKinnon. He married (2) Sarah Skillman, November 6, 1860 in Pleasant Twp. Clark County, Ohio. She was the daughter of D. C. Skillman. [38]
November 6, 1861:Jefferson Davis is elected President of the “permanent” Government of the Confederacy, running unopposed, during the Civil War.[39]
November 6, 1863: Battle of Rogersville, TN.[40]
Sun. November 6, 1864:
in camp all day went to church at
night in martinsburg
(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[41]
November 6, 1888: Ancestor and Republican Benjamin Harrison defeated Grover Cleveland in his bid for re-election. Cleveland won the popular vote, but Harrison won in the Electoral College. In 1890, word reached the west, that Czar Alexander III was planning additional punitive measured aimed at making the lives of Russians Jews even more miserable. Harrison received a personally received a petition from a committee of prominent Americans (including the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court and leading Christian ministers) urging him to act on behalf of the Russian Jews. “The petitioners called for the first international conference "to consider the Israelite claim to Palestine as their ancient home, and to promote in any other just and proper way the alleviation of their suffering condition." Years before the first Zionist Congress, they were calling for a Jewish home in Palestine. Harrison instructed Secretary of State James G. Blaine to contact the U.S. Ambassador in Moscow and express United States’ displeasure with any measures aimed against the Jews. Despite the urging of Harrison and others, the Czar acted ordering the immediate removal of Jews from Moscow, St. Petersburg and Kiev, using violent force if necessary.[42]
1889
100_0995
In the past there were 60 million Bison roaming the prairies of the United States from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast. Bison feed mainly on grasses and migrate seasonally hundreds of kilometers in search of better feeding areas. In 1889 fewer than 1,000 animals remained. The Bison that are present today in the National Parks and preserved descended from those few.[43]
1889
[44]
[45]
1889: The Third Pandemic finally comes to an end.[46]
November 6, 1891: On board Convoy 50 was Leizer Gotlieb born November 6, 1891 from Russie, (Russia), and Charles Gottlieb, born May 13, 1898 from Fulda, Germany. [47]
November 6, 1910: More about Cephus Burch
Cephus married Gladys Marie Barbee (b. November 6, 1910 / d. May 31, 1982 in ID).[48]
November 1917: Alexander Fain Rowell (b. November 6, 1917 in AL / d. June 22, 1939 in AL).[49]
November 6, 1928: Republican Herbert Hoover from Iowa was elected president, beating the Democrat candidate Alfred E. Smith. Smith was a Catholic. [50] The great rallying cry of Klansmen, was anti-Catholicism. The Klan might play down racism but hatred of “Romanists” remained the prime element of its philosophy. The presidential campaign of 1928 demonstrated that while bigotry’s foremost purveyor, the Klan, was almost dead, bigotry was still very much alive. The showing of the Klan at national and state levels represented the last political gasps of a dying organization. After that year what was left of the once might secret fraternal order went to pieces.[51] In a strange quirk of history, the conservative Quaker from Iowa would appoint Benjamin Cardozo, a liberal Jew from New York, to the Supreme Court. Hoover viewed this as such an unremarkable act, that he covers it in one paragraph in his multi-volume autobiography.[52]
November 6, 1937: Mussolini gave Von Ribbentrop, the German Foreign Minister, his approval of Hitler's plans for Austria. "Let events (in Austria) take their natural course. He was giving his approval to the German annexation of Austria which would take place in 1938. The annexation would prove to be quite popular with most Austrians, a fact they tried to soft-peddle after the war. For the Jews of Austria, the Anschluss meant they were now under the control of the Nazis and their racial laws.[53]
November 6, 1938: First anti-Semitic attack over the radio in the U.S. was broadcast.[54]
November 6, 1941(16th of Cheshvan, 5702): This was the second of two successive days in which the Nazis took Rovno, Ukraine, 17,500 Jews to the forests at Rovno in the Ukraine and ordered them to dig five large pits. In the bitter cold they were ordered to strip and the all murdered over a two day period.[55]
November 6, 1941(16th of Cheshvan, 5702): The Nazis massacred 500 Jews of Kolomyya, Galicia and 15,000 Jews of Rowno, Poland.[56]
November 6, 1941
President Roosevelt announces that the United States will lend the Soviet Union $billion to finance the acquisition of military supplies.[57]
On November 6, 1941: al-Husseini arrived in Berlin, where he discussed the text of his declaration with Ernst von Weizsäcker and other German officials. In the final draft, which differed only marginally from al-Husseini's original proposal, the Axis powers declared their readiness to approve the elimination (Beseitigung) of the Jewish National Home in Palestine.[124][58]
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.[59]
November 6, 1942: One thousand Jews were deported to Birkenau from Drancy. Drancy was the the “transit camp in a Paris suburb from which 70,000 French Jews were shipped to death camps in the East. Drancy was run by the French police until the summer of 1943 when the SS took over.[60]
Convoy 42, November 6, 1942.
Convoy 42 included 478 men, 504 women, and 16 undetermined. Among them were 221 children under 18, half (113) of whom were under 12. Some were from the Paris region; the others were taken in the provinces during the mid-October roundups (see Convoy 40).[61]
On Convoy 42 was Syra Gotlib was born March 13, 1896 in Dzindow, Poland. .[62]
There were 18 sublists, reflecting the different areas people were taken from.
1. Drancy 1—90 names.
2. Drancy 2—54 names.
3. Drancy 3—13 names.
4. Poitiers—200 names. They were among the 617 Jews arrested in mid-October by the SiPo-SD commando of Poitiers (XXVc-253). The ones here were transferred to Drancy and deported with this convoy. There were families, children, and old people.
5. Haute-Saone—8 names. Seven of the
people were German; all were elderly.
6. Angers –45 names. They were mainly Poles and were among the 296 people arrested in Angers in mid-October.
7. Angouleme—55 names. Among them were several children.
8. Alencon—16 names.
9. Le Creusot—25 names. Children without parents.
10. Dijon—13 names, from amonmg the 122 Jews arrested in Dijon in mid-October.
11. Chalon-sur=-Saone—8 names.
12. Le Mans—62 names. This group contained Poles and French.
13. Melun—52 names.
14. Merignac—69 names.
15. Nancy—142 names. In mid-October, 234 people had been interned in Ecrouves. This group, mainly French and Polish, was transferred to Drancy for deportation.
16. Rouen—28 names, for the most part Romanian. Some were small children.
17. Rivesaltes—94 names, mainly Germans, Austrians, and Poles.
18. Last minute departures; 16 names.
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.[63]
November 6, 1942(26th of Cheshvan, 5703): The Nazis executed 12,000 Jews from Minsk.[64]
November 6, 1942: Her appearance in Pearl Harbor on November 6 reportedly caused one Admiral to declare "If Enterprise is ready to fight, so am I." She had returned to a new war. The desperate defensive battles of 1942, fought by a handful of carriers against staggering odds, were past, as the U.S. Navy prepared to embark on the most sustained naval offensive in history. Enterprise and Saratoga, the only surviving veterans of 1942, now joined over a dozen new flattops, including six new Essex-class fleet carriers. [65]
Uncle Howard Snell was on board the Enterprise.
November 6, 1943: Five weeks after escaping from a work detail at the Babi Yar, Ukraine, mass-murder site, about 14 Jews and Soviet POWs come out of hiding to greet the Red Army as it liberates Kiev, Ukraine.[66]
November 6-9, 1943: Jews are arrested in Florence, Milan, and Venice.[67]
November 6, 1944(20th of Cheshvan, 5705): Hungary's Arrow Cross murders 19 Jews in Budapest and drives close to 30,000 toward the old Austrian border.[68]
November 6, 1963 Henry Cabot Lodge sends what will be the last of his private
cables to JFK concerning Vietnam. “Eyes only. Now that the revolution has occurred, I assume you
will not want my weekly reports . . . I believe prospects of victory are much improved, provided the
generals stay united . . . There is no doubt that the coup was a Vietnamese and a popular affair, which we
could neither manage nor stop after it got started and which we could only have influenced with great
difficulty.”
Felipe Vidal Santiago, Cuban revolutionist, is in Dallas Texas today through the 11th,
during which time he meets with wealthy Dallas oil men. (Vidal has been linked by some researchers
as helping to stage the shooting at Gen. Edwin Walker. The link is through A white black-and-white
Chevrolet.)
(Switzerland) Pfc. Eugene B. Dinkin, who has warned RFK about an impending
assassination attempt on JFK, appears in the press room of United Nations Office in Geneva
today and tells reporters he is being persecuted. He also tells his story to the editor of the Geneva
Diplomat. (The CIA later confirms this in a letter to the Warren Commission. This letter does NOT
appear in the Warren Commission Report.) Army reports show that he voluntarily returns to his
unit in Metz, France on or about November 11, 1963. He is immediately placed under arrest.
In the early evening, LHO visits the public library where he borrows The Shark and the
Sardines by Juan Jose Arevalo, left-wing former president of Guatemala, a book highly critical of
the United States’ economic and political record in Latin America. NOTE: during early 1964, someone
will anonymously return the book to the library. AOT[69]
November 6, 1978: In Iran, the Shah broadcast to the nation on radio and television to announce he had appointed a military government. It was headed by General Gholam Reza Azhari, Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces since 1971. In a later broadcast General Azhari called on religious leaders to cooperated with him to restore order and security and to combat corruption’In Paris Ayatollah Khomeini declared the only solution was the abdication of the Shah and the establishment of an Islamic Republic. He called on the army to disobey orders to confront the rioters.[70]
November 6, 2011: LeClere History (This Copy given to me by Jim LeClere, November 6, 2011).
George Frederick LeClere was born in Dampier Outré France January 14, 1817. He was a son of George F. and Catherine (Belea) LeClere, who had eleven children. He was a grandson of Joseph LeClere who used to stretch himself to be tall enough to get into the picked cavalry regiment which was the personal body guard of Napoleon
Later on in Austria this regiment was sent ahead on a mission and was cut off from the main army and practically annihilated. He was left on the battle field in two feet of snow with twenty sword and sabre cuts on his head. He was practically scalped.
He watched a man walking among the fallen soldiers with a club killing wounded soldiers as he gathered watches, jewelry and money. He was getting pretty close to him when three Austrian women appeared and picked on him as one whose life might be saved.
He was nursed back to health, but was never well after that. He was a home guard or policeman in Paris for the remainder of his military career, which was during high day of France.
Napoleon would send men into the streets of Paris with a horse cart load of bright pennies which they shoveled off and allowed folks to scramble for.
George Frederick LeClere immigrated with his parents to America in 1828 and settled in Mexico Oswego Co. New York. They settled in heavy timber, some which they cut, piled up and burnt using the ashes as fertilizer, as the soil was thin and rocky, then used the cleared off land to raise crops on.
On April 23 1841 he was married to Miss Louise Katherine Laude, a native of France (Semondaus Doubs France)
They began farming in Oswego Co. New York, where they lived until 1840 when they came to Iowa and settled on a Mineral reserve, an 80 acre farm 8 miles south of Dubuque.
They traveled from New York by the way of the canal and over the Great Lakes to Chicago, which was then swamp. Their emigrant wagons and oxen were put on shore. There were 18 in the party, which helped each other get through the swamp, with wooden poles prying their heavy wagons up as oxen pulled.
By good management and thrift he continued to add to his land until he became the owner of over 1800 acres of land. He accumulated a considerable fortune a goodly portion of which he presented to his children several years before his death.
They moved to Monticello Iowa in 1878. His wife died June 1st, 1897 and was buried in the French Cemetery near Dubuque Iowa. After her death he made his home with his children. He died October 24th 1904 and was buried in the French Cemetery near Dubuque Iowa.
To this union eight children were born. Names are in the following history.
For example to trace use Charles F. LeClere No.I, find Charles F. LeClere with (I) under that you will find all of his children. Take his oldest child No. ( or any other, turn to (9) and find all of Henry C. LeClere’s children etc.
You will find some of the history not filled, but I have tried to find all of the information I could. From year to year you will have to add on yourself.
Mrs. M.J. Cass Sec.
Monticello, Iowa.
August 1st. 1956.
Compiled by Mrs. Lulu Howie Cass, Monticello Iowa
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] Thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com
[2] http://www.livescience.com/16318-photos-early-christian-rome-catacombs-artifacts.html
[3] The Ten Lost Tribes, A World History, Zvi Ben-Dor Benite, page 71.
[4] Thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com
[5] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1534
[6] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_I_of_England
[7] * Anne of Lorraine, widow of René de Nassau -Chalon, Prince of Orange, and daughter of Antony, Duke of Lorraine, by Renée
de Bourbon ; born July 25, 1522 ; became second wife of Philip
de Croy, first Duke of Arschot, July 9, 1548 ; died in 1568, and
was interred in the church of the Cordeliers at Diest.
[8] [Cotemporary copy — Library of Besançon^ Memoirs of
Granvelle^ vol. xvi. fol. 234.]
[9] * De Montmorency.
[10] •f Anne, eldest daughter of Maximilian II, who was then talked
of in marriage with Charles IX, and who subsequently, in 1570,
married Philip II of Spain.
[11] LETTERS OF MARY STUART, QUEEN OF SCOTLAND, SELECTED FROM THE '' RECUEIL DES LETTRES DE MARIE STUART," OF PRINCE ALEXANDER LABANOEF.
http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt
[12] \Gotemporary Decipher. — State Paper Office, London ; Mary
Queen of Scots, vol. x.]
[13] * We omit here a long passage, which is a verbal repetition of a
great portion of the despatch of 31st August. (See p. 383 of the
fourth volume of the *' Recueil des Lettres de Marie Stuart," by
Prince Labauolf.)
[14] * This letter denotes the signature of the Queen of Scotland.
[15] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_of_Denmark
[16] wikipedia
[17] In Search of the Turkey Foot Road.
[18] In Search of the Turkey Foot Road: From Fort Cumberland to the North Fork of the Youghiogheny, Lannie Dietle, Michael NcKenzie, Appendix 0069.
[19] On this date GW and James Mercer appeared before the council to argue in favor of the petition presented two days earlier. The councillors allotted 170,000 acres to the officers and men of the Virginia Regiment. The remaining 30,000 acres, after being used to satisfy the claims of any more private soldiers who might apply, were to “be divided among those who have hitherto born the whole Expense, & who in all Probability must continue to do so till the full Quantity is surveyed” (Va. ExecJls., 6:438—41). The council’s answer to the petition did not please GW, but he remained determined to pursue the business regardless of the difficulties and expense involved.
[20] [Here, for the want of the legibility of the MSS. Journal, a hiatus of ten days.]
[21] On this day GW appeared before the council and presented a plan that he had devised for apportioning the 127,899 acres of veterans’ bounty lands already surveyed. Although the council had set the quantity of each claimant’s land the previous year, there remained the more complex problem of giving everyone equal quality of land. The council accepted GW’s solution to the problem, authorizing the issuance of patents for the land according to his plan. But before the council rose, GW promised that if objections about the equity of distributions were raised at a meeting of veterans scheduled for Fredericksburg on November 23 or “any Reasonable time after,” he would “give up all his Interest” in the 20,147 acres allotted as his share “and submit to such Regulations” as the council might think proper (Va. Exec.Jls., 6:513—14).
[22] George Washington’s Diaries, An Abridgement, Dorothy Twohig, Editor 1999
[23] 4 Since the Journal does not state the distance of this day's march, by computation
from the previous day's and next day's distances, we find the march
of the 6th to have been 4*/2 miles 56 perches, or 18J4 miles 24 perches from
Fort Mclntosh. This was far short of Bouquet's next camp, and must have
been on the hillside just east of the village of Clarkson, Middleton Township,
Columbiana County, Ohio
[24] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal
[25] Ancestry.com. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, 17 Vols. [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 1998. Original data: Secretary of the Commonwealth. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution. Vol. I-XVII. Boston, MA, USA: Wright and Potter Printing Co., 1896.
[26] On This Day in America by John WAgman.
[27] Thisdayinjewishhistory,com
[28] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Augustus_I_of_Hanover
[29] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[30] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_trail_of_tears
[31] Harrisonj
[32] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_the_Great_Famine
[33] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_the_Great_Famine
[34] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_the_Great_Famine
[35] Capital at Raleigh, North Carolina, 2008. Photo by Jeff Goodlove
[36] On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[37] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[38] (Asbury Cemetery Gravestone, Conrad Goodlove Family Bible, The Brothers Crawford, Vol I by Allen W. Scholl)
[38] (State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012.)
[39] On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[40] State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012
[41] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove
[42] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[43]The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 12/27/2009
[44] Art Museum, Austin Texas, February 11, 2012
[45] Art Museum in Austin, TX. February 11, 2012
[46] http://www.twoop.com/medicine/archives/2005/10/bubonic_plague.html
[47] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 399.
[48] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.
[49] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.
[50] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[51] The Ku Klux Klan in the Southwest, Charles C. Alexander, 1965, page 240-241.
[52] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[53] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[54] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[55] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[56] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[57] On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[58] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini#World_War_I
[59] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 328-328.
[60] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[61] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 336.
[62] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 339
[63] Memorial to the Jews Deported from France, 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld, page 336-337.
[64] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[65] http://www.cv6.org/1943/1943.htm
[66] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[67] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1778.
[68] Thisdayinjewishhistory.com
[69] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf
[70] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 503
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