11,945 names…11,945 stories…11,945 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, November 16, 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
Relatives with birthdays on November 16
Hortense R. Collier Graham
Jody E. Mckinnon
Michael T. Mitchell
Sherri Maxson
Harold Morfey
Dorothy M. Walker Kruse
Samuel Washington
November 16, 1583: The young son of the late Duke of Lennox arrives from France, in Scotland, where he is received by James VI with the greatest kindness, and reinstated in all his family possessions. [1]
November 1615: Alyce Smythe (b. 1559 / d. November 1615).[2] Alyce Smythe5 [Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. 1559 in Kent co. England / d. November 1615) married Sir William Harris.
A. Children of Alyce Smythe and William Harris:
. i. William Harris (b. 1584)
. ii. Arthur Harris (b. 1585)
. iii. John Harris (b. 1586)
. iv. Thomas Harris (b. 1587)
. v. Alice Harris (b. 1590)
. vi. Mary Harris (b. 1592)
. vii. Frances Harris (b. 1594)
. viii. Elizabeth Harris (b. 1596)[3]
Friday November 16, 1753:—The next day set out and got to the big fork of said river, about ten miles there.[4]
November 16, 1758
Daniel McKinnon placed the following advertisement in the November 16 1758 Maryland Gazette:
"Whereas I've lately begun to keep School at London Town, I give Public Notice, That I will Teach Grammer at four Guineas per Annm and all Gentlemaen who may be pleased to favour me with their Custom, may depend upon being served with Condour and Fidelity by Their most Jumble Servant
Daniel M'Kinnon[5]
(Londontown is in All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel County and is located on the south shore of South River about halfway between the Chesapeake Bay and the head of the river.) [6]
Educational facilities in earlier days were very meagre, hence, the Rev. Daniel McKinnon had to rely upon his own ingenuity to supply missing needs. Mrs George Rogers, of Morgantown, West Virgina, has a valued relic, much faded and worn, a text book, prepared by the Rev. Daniel McKinnon, containing arithmetic tables, grammar rules, hymns, prayers, and quotations, in his own writing, for use in teaching his children.
Torrence documents only three female children born to the Rev. Daniel. It is our unproved contention that there were also sons, probably at least Joseph, Daniel, and Benjamin.[7]
November 16, 1770: (GW) Got within 13 Miles of the lower cross Creeks—13 Miles. [8]
November 16, 1770; Directing the canoe at the mouth of the creek I set out with Capt. Crawford on foot to take a view of the land.[9]
November 16, 1776: The Regiment V. Mirbach departed on March 1, 1776 from Melsungen. It embarked from Breznerlehe on May 12, 1776 and reached New York on August 14, 1776. The regiment was part of the Hessian First Division and took part in the following major engagements:Fort Washington (upper Manhattan, NY, November 16, 1776).
November 16, 1776: Hessian Lieutenant General Wilhelm von Knyphausen (1716-1800) and a force of 3,000 Hessian troops and 5,000 Redcoats lay siege to Fort Washington at the northern end and highest point of Manhattan Island. The main attack on Lt. Col. Moses Rawlings' position by the Hessian troops, commanded by General Von Knyphausen, was met with fierce resistance, but ultimately the entire garrison of Fort Washington was forced to surrender. Nearly 3,000 Patriots were taken prisoner, and valuable ammunition and supplies were lost to the Hessians. The British renamed the garrison Fort Knyphausen in recognition of his role.
Knyphausen went on to lead the Hessian troops in the Battles of White Plains, Fort Washington, Brandywine, Germantown, Springfield, and Monmouth. In 1779 and 1780, he commanded British-held New York City. When his superior in the Hessian leadership, General Leopold Philip de Heister, left for Germany, von Knyphausen took command of the German troops serving under Sir William Howe. [10]
November 16, 1776: On motion of Henry Northop, it was proven on open court to the satisfaction of the Court by the deposition of Captain Bedinger and a certificate from the Register of the Law Office at Richmond, Virginia line of the Army of the Revolution and was killed at the surrender of Fort Washington on the 16th day of Nov. 1776. (November 16, 1776) And it was further proven by the letter of Battle Harrison from Columbus, Ohio, and by the deposition of Crawford and Ann Springer that William Harrison who was killed in Crawford’s defeat was the eldest brother of Lt. Battle Harrison and that John Harrison now living is the eldest son of the said William Harrison, all of which is ordered to be certified.
Nathl. Pope Causin.
District of Columbia, Washington County, to wit:
I certify that the aforegoing is a true copy from the Original filed and recorded in the Office of the Register of Wills, for Washington County, agoresaid.
Witness my hand and seal of office, this 29th day of October in the year 1845. (October 29, 1845) Ed. N. Roach, Register.[11]
Broadsword of the Black Watch
Broadsword of the Black Watch [12]
November 16, 1776
2,900 Americans stood against a massive force of more than 30 regiments, including the renowned Black Watch and Coldstream Guards, Welsh Fusileers, and Hessians, supported by Light Dragoons and Royal Artillery. Lt. Battaile Harrison was killed on the second day of the assault, November 16, 1776, when Fort Washington was overrun.[13]
November 16, 1776
Thursday, November 17, 2005 (4)
A view of the Attack against Ft. Washington, and Rebel Redoubts near New York on the 16th of November, 1776.[1] [14]
November 16, 1776
Thursday, November 17, 2005 (6)
November 16, 1776
2,900 Americans stood against a massive force of more than 30 regiments, including the renowned Black Watch and Coldstream Guards, Welsh Fusileers, and Hessians, supported by Light Dragoons and Royal Artillery. Lt. Battaile Harrison was killed on the second day of the assault, November 16, 1776, when Fort Washington was overrun. [1]
Lt. Battaile Harrison, was the compilers 6th great granduncle.[15]
Battle Harrison (Lawrence, Andrew,2 Andrew1), was doubtless christened Battaile, the family name, but as it was pronounced Battle he probably adopted this manner of spelling. He is listed a Lieutenant Battle Harrison, of Rawling ‘s Maryland and Virginia Rifle Regiment killed at Fort Washington, November 16, 1776.f The Muster Roll of Captain Hugh Stephenson’s Company of Riflemen of 1775-76, included Battle Harrison as a private In the battle of Fort Washington, Lieutenent Battle Harrison was the only officer killed, November 16, 1776. Lieutenant Battle Harrison commanded William Brady‘s Company of Riflemen at the Battle of King’s Bridge, or Fort Washington, November 16, 1776. The Harrison’s were prominent landowners in Berkeley County, Virginia, before the Revolutionary War. [1][2][16]
November 16, 1776
The British take over 2,000 prisoners after capturing Fort Washington on Manhattan Island.[17]
DEPOSITION OF JOHN HARRISON: November 16, 1776: Know all men by these presents that I, John Harrison, of Fayette County and State of Pennsylvania, do hereby constitue and appoint Henry ?Northrup. of Washington City my true and lawfull attorney with power of substitution for me and in my name to prepare papers and collect proof and vouchers necessary to enable me to obtain a warrant from the United States for two hundred acrews of bounty land in right of ther services of my Uncle Battle Harrison, as a Lieuteneant who fell in battle at the surrender of Fort Washington on the 16th day of November 1776 being at that time a Lieutenant of Col. Stephenson's Rifle Regiment of the Army of the Revolution and a part of the quota of that Regiment assigned to Virginia.; And to prosecute the same and cause it to be done before the Secretary of War for two hundred acres only. And if to ask, demand and recieve from the said Secretary of War of the united States such Warrant for two hundred acres of land and no more and deposite the said warrant when so received with the Secretary of the Treasury or the United States of the Commissioner of the General Land Office for...
• Signed, John Harrison (his mark)[1][18]
FROM THE DELAWARES
[Rev. David Zeisberger to General Hand. 3NN81-84—
Transcript.]
COOKING,[19] November 16, 1777.
Dr. SIR—As Capt. White Eyes is going to the fort, I will not omit to acquaint you how matters are here now with us. Since my last we have been quiet, & not any warriors have passed by here except a small party of Mohickons & now 8 days ago, 14 Wyandotts & two white men with them who came from Detroit; & as much as we know went to Weelunk [Wheeling], John Montour being in their company.
Some time ago, as we heard, 50 Frenchmen came over the Lake to Cuyahoga[20], & gave the Delawares and Muncys who live there the tomahawk, & desired them to go with them to Ligonier.[21] Capt. Pipe not being at home, they consented, & 40 men went with the French, but Pipe met them on the road, reproved the French for deceiving his people in his absence, & told them that they were only servants, & had no power to hand the tomahawk to them: Nobody could force him neither to take it—whereupon the greater part of the Indians turned back.
Capt. John Kilibuck & Pipe are gone to Detroit— upon what business Capt. White Eyes can tell you better. They did not desire me to write for them, so I suppose they did not approve of what you proposed to them.
The Shawanese—Cornstalk’s people, perhaps, will move from their place & come to Cuchachunk this winter. They lately sent messengers who consulted with the chiefs here about that matter; & as no messengers from hence are on their way thither, we shall soon hear what they are resolved to do.
Of the Mingoes we have heard nothing since the Half King [22]was here; & it seems as if they were tired of going to war, or rather frightened. We heard that after their last ret’1. they went over the Lake & asked the Wyandott Chief’s counsel & advice what they should do, because the Virginians would soon be upon them. The Wyandot Chief answered them, that they had begun the war, & had always encouraged others to go to war; they had now brought it to pass what they always had wished for; he therefore could give them no other advice than to be strong & fight as men.
Capt. White Eyes intends to stay at the fort two or three days, & wish you would let him return again as soon as possible, for none of the Counsellors are at home to do business, if any thing should happen; but if occasion should require to detain him longer, please to let the people here know of it that they may not be uneasy about him, for some apprehend because the Cornstalk is taken fast at the Kanhawa, White Eyes may be served so too: If he therefore stays out above the time he has appointed them, they will surely think so. The letter Gen’. Hand had sent to me last, the messenger lost. I suppose you will by this time have some news from before—if you can favor me with any you will much oblige Sir, Your Hble. Servt.
D. ZEISBERGER[23]
November 16, 1777: Now the warships that lay at Mud Island used their crews to clear from the river the chevaux-de-frise that had hindered the passage on the Delaware to Philadelphia. However, this could not be accomplished before the capture of Fort Red Bank.[24][25]
November 16, 1777: Now the warships that lay at Mud Island used their crews to clear from the river the chevaux-de-frise that had hindered the passage on the Delaware to Philadelphia. However, this could not be accomplished before the capture of Fort Red Bank.[26][27]
November 16, 1778
16th The army march.d About 10°Qock and arrived at Camp
N°ll23[28] by an hour and an half of up Sun. distant from the Former
Six miles and 42 Perches, from Fort M'Intosh Sixty Two miles
an half and Eight perches. Situate on the east Branch of a Creek
call.d [ ] creek About an half mile Above the mouth a fording,
a beautiful prospect and a very good Situation for defence being
Sarounded with plains descending from the Encampment on either
Side[29]
November 16, 1778:
Head Quarters [Camp] N° 10 16th November 1778
Parole Orangeburgh C :Sign Oliver
Every person without Exception is positively forbid to Buy Or sell
Or have Any kind Of Barter Or Dealing whatsoever with An
Indian Or Indians, without the Generals Special leave in Writing
275
And any Officer Soldier Or Other person who Buys A single
Article Or Articles hereafter if ever so trifeling Contrary to this
Order Shall forefit such Article with whatever he Give for it. And
Three months pay Besides Such Other punishment as a Court
Martial shall inflict for Breach of Orders. And every person Privie
to such purchase Who does not inform AGainst the offender Shall
forefit One months pay besides Other punishment And One half
of the Value of Any Article or Articles so purchased of the Indians
Shall belong to the informer This Order is to be read repetedly
Before Every Company in the Army And to the Staff that no
person plead Ignorance
Officers of the Day Coll° Morrow and
Major Scott[30]
November 16, 1780: In a letter dated Wissenstein, November 16, 1780, from His Serene Highness, to Lieutenant Colonel Graf, which was received today, Captains Hessenmueller….promoted to major. [31](Possible connection to Gottlob in baptism) JG
Baptismal and marriage records of Christ Lutheran Church and Trinity Lutheran Church in New York City, read before I found Cöster’s identification of Franz as a Catholic, failed to find any record for Franz Gottlob.[1][32]
1781 Yorktown100_0883
Yorktown Reenactment, Yorktown Victory Center, 7/27/2008 Photo JG
1781 Yorktown
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Nice stand of corn at the Yorktown Reenactment. Yorktown Victory Center, Yorktown, VA. Photo Jeff Goodlove 2008
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Tobacco being grown at Yorktown. Yorktown reenactment, Yorktown Victory Center, Yorktown, VA. Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 2008
1781 Yorktown Reenactment
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Yorktown Reenactment. Yorktown Victory Center, Yorktown, VA.
Photo Jeff Goodlove 2008
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Yorktown Victory Center, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 2008
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Yorktown Victory Center, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 2008.
1781
Three-quarters of a mile from Yorktown, on Temple Farm, is the’ old Moore house, where the papers for the surrender of Cornwallis were drawn up and signed. Part of this house is very old indeed, and was the residence of Colonel George Ludlow, one of the regicide judges. Furthermore, the house stands on the site of one built more than a century before the Revolution, the home of Captain Nicholas Martiait, ancestor of Washington and Nelson, prominent in the first “rebellion against tyranny” in Virginia, when, in 1634, the colonists deposed from office the unpopular Governor, Sir John Harvey, and shipped him out of the country. Captain Martiau died in 1657. Here lived Lucy Smith, granddaughter of Lawrence Smith. . . . Lucy married Augustine Moore, said to have been a grandson of Governor Spottswood. Temple Farm was chosen, by the Royal Governor of Virginia, as a residence, probably on account of the beauty of its situation.[33]
Lucy Smith is the compilers 1st cousin, 9 times removed.
On Temple Farm, Yorktown, Virginia, Home of the Royal Governor Spottswood. In this house the articles of agreement between the Americans and the English were drawn in 1781. [34]
1781
Here is a little history from Berks County, PA. On the east side
of Reading I came across a historical marker. It is just west of
Schwartzwald Hill, where Schwartzwald UCC and Lutheran Churches are.
The marker reads
HESSIAN CAMP
After Burgoyne’s surrender, 1777, German mercenaries, mostly Hessian, were held prisoners at various places until the end of the war. Those brought to Reading, 1781, were encamped until 1783
in huts on the hillside a quarter—mile to the north.
Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission 1948
The closest road that winds up the hill is Hessian Road (what else).
About 1/4 mile up the road it splits. Most of the houses on a
side road are built in the style of the German A er
(exposed wooden beams)[35]
1781
At the time of the American Revolution, the Landgrave was living with his second wife. He was about sixty years old, and seems to have become comparatively steady in his habits. He was a good man of business. His troops, drilled on the Prussian system, and recruited in a measure among his own subjects by conscription, were good soldiers. His army in 1781 numbered twenty-two thousand, while the population of his territories was little above three hundred thousand souls; but many foreigners were enticed into the service, and a few of the regiments were not kept permanently under the banners, but spent the larger part of the year disbanded, and met only for a few weeks of drill ("Briefe eines Reisenden.") Frederick took a personal interest in his army, and corresponded with his officers in America, making the hand and eye of the master usefully felt. He took pains with the internal affairs of his country, leaving, indeed, a full treasury at his death. He founded schools and museums, and, like all his family, loved costly buildings. When he sent twelve thousand men to America he diminished the taxes of his remaining subjects, and though these were sad and down-trodden, though they mourned their sons and brothers sent to fight in a strange quarrel beyond the sea, we may linger for a moment regretfully over Frederick of Hesse-Cassel, for he dealt in good wares, he showed some personal dignity, and he was one of the least disreputable of the princes who sent mercenaries to America. [36]
1781
1781 Colonel William Crawford resigns his position in the Army. He sat as Justice for Youghiogheny Co., VA.
November 16, 1824: Andrew Jackson attended a ball at Lexington, Kentucky. [37]
1824
Theopolis McKinnon voted for Adams in 1824.[38]
1824
By 1824, the Democratic-Republican Party had become the only functioning national party. Its Presidential candidates had been chosen by an informal Congressional nominating caucus, but this had become unpopular. In 1824, most of the Democratic-Republicans in Congress boycotted the caucus. Those who attended backed Treasury Secretary William H. Crawford for President and Albert Gallatin for Vice President. A Pennsylvanian convention nominated Andrew Jackson (1st cousin 8 times removed) for President a month later, stating that the irregular caucus ignored the "voice of the people" and was a
"vain hope that the American people might be thus deceived into a belief that he [Crawford] was the regular democratic candidate." Gallatin criticized Jackson as "an honest man and the idol of the worshippers of military glory, but from incapacity, military habits, and habitual disregard of laws and constitutional provisions, altogether unfit for the office."[17]
180px-Andrew_Jackson_statue_County_Courthouse_KC_Missouri
magnify-clip
Statue of Jackson as General in front of Jackson County Courthouse in Kansas City, Missouri
Besides Jackson and Crawford, Secretary of State John Quincy Adams and House Speaker Henry Clay were also candidates. Jackson received the most popular votes (but not a majority, and four states had no popular ballot). The Electoral votes were split four ways, with Jackson having a plurality. Since no candidate received a majority, the election was decided by the House of Representatives, which chose Adams. Jackson denounced this result as a "corrupt bargain" because Clay gave his support to Adams. Later Adams appointed Clay as Secretary of State. Jackson's defeat burnished his political credentials; however, many voters believed the "man of the people" had been robbed by the "corrupt aristocrats of the East."[39]
In 1824 Joseph Vance (2ND cousin 7 times removed) Won his third term by an overwhelming vote of 4,342 to 16 for his opponent. From then on into the thirties he rarely had an opposing candidate in his district.
In his third term he was made chairman of the committee on military affairs and chairman of the board of visitors of the Military Academy at West Point. He also was instrumental in securing the passage of bills for granting subsidies to the Ohio and the Miami canals. Active in the antislavery movement in these years, Vance allied himself with John Quincy Adams in opposing the so called Gag resolution and in advocating the right of petition. He was defeated for reelection in 1834 in a close race with Samuel Mason.[40]
November 16, 1826: Elizabeth (Betty) HARRISON. Born in 1776 in Amherst County, Virginia. Elizabeth (Betty) died after 1816; she was 40.
Elizabeth (Betty) first married William TINSLEY\TOWNSLEY.
They had one child:
i. Isaac. Isaac died about June 24, 1824 in Amherst County, Virginia.
On November 16, 1826 when Elizabeth (Betty) was 50, she second married David LEBRICK [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999].
40. Elizabeth HARRISON. [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999] Born in 1776 in Amherst County, Virginia. [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999] Elizabeth died after 1816; she was 40. [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999]
Elizabeth first married William TINSLEY [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999].
They had one child:
i. Isaac [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999]. Isaac died about June 24, 1824 in Amherst County, Virginia. [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999]
On November 16, 1826 when Elizabeth was 50, she second married David LEBRICK [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999]. [1, Date of Import: May 30, 1999][41]
November 16, 1829
Isabel, the youngest daughter of Moses Crawford, Sr., was single and living at home when the will was made on November 16, 1829, and when she received her share from the settlement, dated November 5, 1830, she was married to George Tong and living in Hancock County, Ohio. The marriage record of this couple has not beren found.This is according to the abstract belonging to the present owner and Vol. 15, page 46, in the Recorder's Office at Lancaster, Ohio.
Six children were born to this union; are provided in the records in Wyandot County, Ohio at Upper Sandusky. They may not be given in the proper succession; Rebecca, Milton, Leander, Winfield, Rachel and Hosea. They were reared in HaNCOCK cOUNTY AND wYANDOT cOUNTY.
George Tong and his wife, Isabel Crawford Tong, are buried in St. Paul cemetery south of Vanlye, Ohio. (See family records for dayte of birth and death).[42]
November 16, 1831:
Carl Philipp Gottfried von[1] Clausewitz
Clausewitz.jpg
in Prussian service, 1999 painting based on an 1830 original by Karl Wilhelm Wach
Born
(1780-06-01)June 1, 1780
Burg bei Magdeburg, Prussia
Died
November 16, 1831(1831-11-16) (aged 51)
Breslau, Prussia
Allegiance
Kingdom of PrussiaPrussia
(1792–1808, 1813–1831)
RussiaRussian Empire
(1812–1813)
Years of service
1792–1831
Rank
Major-General
Unit
Russian-German Legion
III Corps
Commands held
Kriegsakademie
Battles/wars
Siege of Mainz
Napoleonic Wars
Carl Philipp Gottfried von Clausewitz[1] (play /ˈklaʊzəvɪts/; June 1, 1780 – November 16, 1831[2]) was a Prussian soldier and military theorist who stressed the moral (in modern terms, "psychological") and political aspects of war. His most notable work, Vom Kriege (On War), was unfinished at his death.
Clausewitz espoused a romantic conception of warfare, though he also had at least one foot planted firmly in the more rationalist ideas of the European Enlightenment. His thinking is often described as Hegelian because of his references to dialectical thinking but, although he probably knew Hegel, Clausewitz's dialectic is quite different and there is little reason to consider him a disciple. He stressed the dialectical interaction of diverse factors, noting how unexpected developments unfolding under the "fog of war" (i.e., in the face of incomplete, dubious, and often completely erroneous information and high levels of fear, doubt, and excitement) call for rapid decisions by alert commanders. He saw history as a vital check on erudite abstractions that did not accord with experience. In contrast to Antoine-Henri Jomini, he argued that war could not be quantified or reduced to mapwork, geometry, and graphs. Clausewitz had many aphorisms, of which the most famous is that "War is the continuation of Politik by other means" (Politik being variously translated as 'policy' or 'politics,' terms with very different implications), a description that has won wide acceptance.[3]
Name
Von Clausewitz's Christian names are sometimes given in non-German sources as "Carl Philipp Gottlieb" or "Carl Maria", because of reliance on mistaken source material, conflation with his wife's name, Marie, or mistaken assumptions about German orthography. He spelled his own given name with a "C" in order to identify with the classical Western tradition; writers who wrongly use "Karl" are seeking to emphasize his German identity. "Carl Philipp Gottfried" appears on Clausewitz's tombstone and thus is most likely to be correct. [43]
November 16, 1861: Edith Ogden Harrison
Birth:
November 16, 1861
Death:
May 22, 1955
http://www.findagrave.com/icons2/trans.gif
Family links:
Spouse:
Carter Henry Harrison (1860 - 1953)*
*Calculated relationship
Burial:
Graceland Cemetery
Chicago
Cook County
Illinois, USA
Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?]
Created by: Doug the bug
Record added: Oct 22, 2007
Find A Grave Memorial# 22375046
Edith Ogden Harrison
Added by: Saratoga
Edith Ogden Harrison
Added by: Sammy Boyd
Edith Ogden Harrison
Added by: Medina Cooper
[44]
November 16, 1861: Edith Ogden Harrison
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9a/Edith_Ogden_Harrison01.JPG/230px-Edith_Ogden_Harrison01.JPG
http://bits.wikimedia.org/static-1.23wmf4/skins/common/images/magnify-clip.png
New York Public Library
Edith Ogden Harrison (November 16, 1862 – May 22, 1955) was a well-known and prolific author of children's books and fairy tales in the early decades of the twentieth century. She was also the wife of Carter Harrison, Jr., five-term mayor of Chicago.
Edith Ogden was born to Robert N. Ogden, Jr. and Sarah L Beattie,[1] and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana; she was a "belle of cultured, aristocratic habits who acquitted herself well in the parlors of the Potter Palmers and Marshall Fields" and other Chicago notables.[2] She married Carter Harrison on December 14, 1887. Their first child died in infancy in 1889; they had two surviving children, Carter Henry Harrison V, born June 28, 1891, and Edith Ogden Harrison II, born January 21, 1896. (Their son was the fifth of that name because his father was, formally, Carter Henry Harrison IV. He was known in his political career as "Junior" because his father, Carter Henry Harrison III, had preceded him in office and had been one of Chicago's most famous mayors.[3] Confusion arises when "Junior" is erroneously referred to as "Carter Harrison II.") The couple celebrated the fiftieth wedding anniversary of an apparently happy marriage in 1937.
In the first phase of her literary career, Edith O. Harrison concentrated on children's literature; later she wrote travel books and autobiographical works. Her early book Prince Silverwings was adapted by family acquaintance L. Frank Baum for a dramatization that never made it to the stage.[4] (All Chicago theaters were closed after the Iroquois Theater fire on December 30, 1903 caused 570 fatalities.) In the process, influences from Harrison's book appear to have found their way into Baum's works.[5]
She did not abandon her theatrical ambitions: over a number of years Harrison and Baum tried to establish a children's theater in Chicago. They were still working on the project as late as 1915, but without success.[6]
Harrison's 1912 novel The Lady of the Snows was made into a film of the same title in 1915. [1]
Works of Edith Ogden Harrison
•Prince Silverwings and Other Fairy Tales, 1902
•The Star Fairies, 1903
•The Moon Princess, 1905
•The Flaming Sword, 1908
•Ladder of Moonlight, 1909
•The Mocking-bird, 1909
•Pole Star, 1909
•Princess Sayrane, 1910
•The Glittering Festival, 1911
•The Lady of the Snows, 1912
•The Enchanted House, 1913 (illustrated by Frederick Richardson)
•Clemencia's Crisis, 1915
•Below the Equator, 1918
•Lands of the Sun: Impressions of a Visit to Tropical Lands, 1925
•Grey Moss, 1929
•The Scarlet Riders, 1930
•Strange to Say: Recollections of Persons and Events in New Orleans and Chicago, 1949.[45]
[46]
November 16, 1862: Burt, John M.(6th cousin 5x removed)- private March 4, 1862. Died of acute diarrhoea in C.S.A. Hospital at Dalton, Ga. November 20, 1862. Company " H "41st. Georgia Infantry Regiment CARROLL COUNTY, GEORGIA , WOOL HAT BOYS. [47] John M. Burt, Jr.12 [Mary Smith11 , Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. abt. 1829 in GA / d. November 16, 1862 in Dalton, GA) married Mary Emily Barrow (b. abt. 1830 / d. October 11, 1914 in Cullman, AL) on August 4, 1850 in Carroll Co. GA.[48]
Wed. November 16[49], 1864
A nice day in camp all quiet wrote
a letter to MR Hunter & one to Salie Wins?
(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[50]
November 16, 1892: Oscar Sherman was born October 28, 1871 and married Margie Jenkins on November 16, 1892, at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Jenkins. To this union were born a son, Ralph, December 14, 1893, and a daughter, Rachel, born March 1, 1896. [51] Married at the residence of the bride’s parents, Mr. J. L. Jenkins, Wednesday, November 16th, 1892, Oscar S. Goodlove and Miss Margie Jenkins, the reverend D. D. Mitchell officiating. Best wishes to the bride and groom from their friends.[52]
Novwmber 16, 1896: Mary Jane Duncan. Born on December 19, 1881 in Mitchell County, Kansas. Mary Jane died in Hennessey, Oklahoma on August 20, 1933; she was 51. Buried in Hennessey, Oklahoma, Oak Grove Cemetery.
On November 16, 1896 when Mary Jane was 14, she married Patrick O’HERN, in Kingfisher County, Oklahoma.[53]
November 16, 1941: Tokyo cables Japanese ambassador Kichisaburo Nomura in Washington: "Fate of the Empire hangs by a sheer thread ... please fight harder!" [54]
November 16, 1942: Enterprise had shared in sinking sixteen ships and damaging eight more. The carrier returned to Nouméa on November 16, to complete her repairs.[55]
November 16, 1943: The keel was laid for the SS George Walker Crawford, a liberty ship built by the J.A. Jones Construction Company in Brunswick, Georgia honoring Crawford for his service to the state of Georgia. [56]
November 16, 1962 Vice President Lyndon Johnson sends a get-well card to J. Edgar
Hoover, who is now in George Washington University hospital. The nature of Hoover’s illness
remains unknown to this day. Some researchers speculate that Hoover undergoes a
prostatectomy. He remains out of his office for most of the month.
At 7:00 AM today, the largest amphibious landing since World War II begins as part of
an exercise at Onslow Beach, North Carolina. The two-day exercise, a full-scale rehearsal for an
invasion of Cuba, includes six Marine battalion landing teams, four by assault boats and two by
helicopter assault carriers. [57]
November 16, 1963 Dallas reports that the motorcade is definitely on.
THE MOTORCADE ROUTE IS ANNOUNCED PUBLICLY.
The turn in front of the Depository building is NOT mentioned.
At the Sports Drome Rifle Range in Dallas, “Oswald” is observed by several witnesses
firing a 6.5 mm Italian rifle with a four-power scope with remarkable accuracy. He takes all shell
casings with him when he leaves the range. The witnesses have seen the same rifleman at the
range once before firing the same rifle. Witnesses will recall that this man returns to the range on
Nov. 20th and 21st.
LHO reportedly makes a second attempt to get his driver’s license today.
Hubert Morrow, the manager of Allright Parking Systems at the Southland Hotel in
downtown Dallas recalls that a man, identifying himself as Oswald, inquires about a job as a
parking attendant. When Morrow at first writes the man’s name down as “Lee Harvey Osborn,”
the applicant corrects it to “Oswald.” According to Morrow, the man asks how high the
Southland building is and whether it commands a good view of Dallas. The real Oswald is
reportedly in Irving.
This weekend, Nov. 16 - 17, David Ferrie is once more at Churchill Farms outside New
Orleans with Carlos Marcello. In the three weeks prior to the JFK assassination, Ferrie
reportedly has deposited more than seven thousand dollars in the bank. The whereabouts of Lee
Harvey Oswald on this weekend remain unknown.
JFK is in Florida for the weekend. Today, JFK and Torbert Macdonald join Lyndon
Johnson at Cape Canaveral to watch a Polaris missile firing. Returning to Palm Beach the next
day, JFK bets his chum that the Chicago Bears will defeat the Green Bay Packers and collects his
money after they watch the victory on television. That evening, they screen the new film of
Henry Fielding’s bawdy classic Tom Jones. As JFK returns to Washington aboard Air force One,
he summons George Smathers to his cabin and says: “Damn it! I hate to go to Texas. Johnson’s got
it all fouled up. God, I wish you could think of some way of getting me out of going ... Look how screwed
up it’s going to be.” [NOTE: Mary Jo Kopechne, who will eventually die in Ted Kennedy’s car, is one of
George Smathers’ secretaries.] Senator George Smathers brings up newspaper stories speculating
that JFK is considering dropping Lyndon Johnson as his running mate. JFK replies to Smathers:
“Can you see me now in a terrible fight with Lyndon Johnson, which means I’ll blow the South? You
know, I love this job, I love every second of it . . . Smathers, you just haven’t got any sense, and if Lyndon
thinks that, he ought to think about it. I don’t want to get licked. I really don’t care whether Lyndon gets
licked, but I don’t want to get licked and he’s going to be my Vice President because he helps me!”
A gunshot in Dealey Plaza is reported to the Dallas Police approximately one week before
the JFK assassination. Mrs. Joe Baily Blackwell, of Dallas, and her sister are approaching the
Triple Underpass when they are shot at and a bullet lodges in their car. The police will be unable
to determine the source of the shot.
In their book, Oswald Talked, researchers Ray & Mary La Fontaine maintain that this is
the day [Saturday] that LHO (FBI informant) provides the Bureau with his last known
preassassination report. The story of this interview is reported in a Dallas Morning News articled
headlined “Oswald Interviewed by FBI on Nov. 16.” This account, by DMN staff writer James
Ewell, will appear on Sunday, November 24 - the same day that Jack Ruby will shoot LHO in the
basement of the Dallas police station. The article begins with the following:
“Lee Harvey Oswald, charged with murdering President Kennedy, was
interviewed by the FBI here [Dallas] six days before the Friday assassination.
But word of the interview with the former defector to Russia was not conveyed
to the U.S. Secret Serv ice and Dallas police, reliable sources told The Dallas
News Saturday. An FBI agent referred all inquiries to Agent-in-Charge Gordon
Shanklin, who could not be immediately reached for comment.”
Ewell will eventually reveal that his “reliable sources” were DPD chief Jesse E. Curry and his
police intelligence unit. OT
JFK is in NYC where he gives a speech to the Catholic Youth Organization. AOT
Dallas press reports that the motorcade is definitely on. The motorcade route is also
listed. “If he [JFK] stays on schedule he would pass through the downtown area about noon.”
AOT[58]
SINFONIETTA BEL CANTO presents Opera with 3 performances: Nov15, 16 & 22 & a NEW added location.
The Sinfonietta Bel Canto presents its “Rossini Robbery” opera concert on 3 days: Saturday, November 15, 8:00 pm, Sunday, November 16, 3:00 pm, and Saturday, November 22, 8:00 pm. November 15 and 16 performances at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 5211 Carpenter St., Downers Grove IL (1 blk W of Main St near downtown Downers Grove, corner of Grove & Carpenter); NEW added location--November 22 at Salem United Methodist Church , 115 W. Lincoln Ave, Barringon IL . Ticket $ listed below. Non-reserved seating; handicapped accessible. Featured artist(s): see below. Works by Rossini & others (see below). For more information: www.SinfoniettaBelCanto.org or please call 630-384-5007.
Conducted by Dan Pasquale D’Andrea of Downers Grove, the Sinfonietta Bel Canto’s (SBC’s) “Rossini Robbery” concert features Gioachino Rossini’s 1 act comic opera L’occasione fa il ladro (1812). With typical Rossini humor, a baggage mixup results in an attempt to steal another’s fiancée. The opera will be sung in Italian--with English sur-titles--and semi-staged with orchestra accompaniment. The opera performance will feature local singers, including (alphabetically; PR pics also available):
Roxann Ferguson, Chicago
Jeffery Lee Goodlove, tenor, Elgin
David Hartley, bass-baritone, Lake in the Hills (Nov 15/22)
Sarah Heitman, mezzo-soprano, Barrington
Mark Miner, tenor, Hinsdale
Randolph Montijo, bass-baritone, Des Plaines (Nov 16 only)
Henry Michael Odum, bass-baritone, Berwyn
Nov 15/16 performances include Sinfonia di Caccia in D major, A20/1:18 (18th c.) by Antonio Rosetti (175-1791) a rarely performed gem that displays the classical era charm of Mozart. The Nov 22 concert replaces Rosetti with Mendelssohn’s Wer nur den Gott cantata featuring the Salem United Methodist Church Choir.
Below is information on the SBC’s 2014-15 concert series. More information can also be found at the SBC website: www.sinfoniettabelcanto.org or call 630-384-5007; the SBC is also on Facebook. For Tickets: by SBC www via PayPal, or by mail via Sinfonietta Bel Canto, P.O. Box 272, Downers Grove IL 60515.
Sinfonietta Bel Canto’s 2014-15 “A 5th Season”
--Unless listed otherwise, concerts are at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 5211 Carpenter St, Downers Grove, IL
--tickets at the door: $20 adult; $17 senior (60+); $7 student (21/under); Free--children under 7 (with parent)
--advance individual tickets get a $2 discount: order via SBC www or P.O.Box 272, Downers Grove, IL 60515
--flex season pass (4 flex tickets, for any of the SBC 4 “regular” concerts): $55 adult; $44 senior; $15 student (offered thru Nov 16)
--For more info on tickets, dates, locations, and repertoire: www.sinfoniettabelcanto.org or 630-384-5007
1. “Fall Concerto Special” *Two Performances with a NEW added location*
September 27, Saturday 8 pm at NEW added location: Christ Lutheran Church, Rt 83 & 55th St, Clarendon Hills IL 60514
September 28, Sunday 3 pm at Immanuel Lutheran Church, 5211 Carpenter St, Downers Grove, IL
Concertos by Handel with organist Elizabeth Waldon & Vivaldi with string soloists, and Klughardt Symphony #3
2. OPERA: “Rossini Robbery” *Two Performances * [See also below “Special/Holiday Events” for NEW location]
Two Performances: November 15, 2014 Saturday 8 pm & November 16 Sunday 3 pm (at Immanuel)
Rossini--L’occasione fa il ladro (1 act comic opera; 1812) & Rosetti--Sinfonia di Caccia in D major (18th c.)
3. OPERA: "Strudel & Torte" *Two Performances*
Two Performances: March 21, 2015 Saturday 8 pm & March 22, Sunday 3 pm
Mendelssohn--Die Heimkehr aus der Fremde, (1 act comic opera, 1829) & Faure--Pelléas et Mélisande Suite, op. 80 (1898)
4. April 26, 2015 Sunday 3 pm "The ‘SBC Voice’ Competition Finalists”
Schubert--Symphony #8, B minor, “Unfinished”, D.759 (1822)
“SBC Voice” finalists: up to 8 singers will perform for $ awards, with audience voting for “Audience Favorite!
Special/Holiday Events (Separate ticket $ for these events; SBC season/individual tickets are NOT applicable):
A. OPERA: “Rossini Robbery”, Sat, Nov 22, 8 pm, Salem United Methodist Ch, Barringon IL $20/17/7
B. “Family Christmas Concert” Sat, Dec 6, 2014 7:30 pm, St. Peter’s Cath. Church, Itasca $10 adults, $5 students
C. “New Year’s Benefit" Th, 3 pm, Jan 1, 2015, includes conc w/ballroom dancers, singers, & catered dinner: $40/$35
D: St. Odilo Concert: Sun, Jan 25, 3 pm: Choir & Orchestra; St. Odilo Cath. Church, 2244 East, Berwyn IL
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt
[2] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.
[3] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.
[4] Christopher Gist’s Journal: In Search of Turkey Foot Road, page 68.
[5] (Maryland State Archives, The Maryland Gazette Thursday March 23 1759, No. 725.)
[6] (http://washburnhill.freehomepage.com/custom3.html)
[7] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Pg 224.6
[8] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 113.)
[9] (From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford, by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, page 113.)
[10] http://www.artfact.com/auction-lot/gironcourt,-charles-auguste-de-1756-1811-.-plan-1-c-d625fbe0d4
[11] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 452.23
[12] http://historicalartprints.com./hap/cmd?CMD=BROWSE&parent=17&catid=24
[13] Ref. 31.6 Conrad and Caty, 2003 Author Unknown.
[14] [1] Captain Thomas Davies, Royal Artillery. It shows the landing by British and German troops on the Harlem River. In the background on the right are the Hudson River, the Jersey Palisades, and HMS Pearl. I. N. Phelps Stokes Collection. The New York Public Library, Astor, Nenox and Tilden Foundations
[15] [1] Ref. 31.6 Conrad and Caty, 2003 Author Unknown.
[16] [1] Heitman’s Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army.
[2] Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 329
[17] On This Day in America by John Wagman.
[18] 1] Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 452.22
[19] A mistranscription of the Indian term for Coshocton, which the German Moravians spelled in several different forms. It was the chief town of the Delawares during the Revolutionary period. See Rev. Upper Ohio, p. 46, note
73.—ED.
[20] The early Indian history of Cuyahoga River is obscure. Some of the Six Nations seem to have removed thither at an early date, and probably occupied the village denominated on Evans’s and Hutchins’s maps as “Cuyahoga Town.” It would seem likewise to have been the site of an Ottawa village and a French trading house; and may have been the “Rivière Blanche,” so frequently mentioned in the reports of the French officials, 1742-53. See Charles A. Hanna, Wilderness Trail (New York, 1911), i, pp. 315-339. George Croghan had a trading house in the vicinity in 1747, which seems to have been abandoned by 1750 for one on the Muskingum. During the French and Indian War there was an entire readjustment of Indian villages, but the Cuyahoga town is still shown on later maps. It would seem, however, to have been the abode of Delawares rather than of Mingo, and the inference from this letter is that it was the headquarters of Captain Pipe before his removal in 1778 to the Sandusky region. The Indians reported in the autumn of 1777 that the British were building a storehouse at Cuyahoga to supply the neighboring Indians with goods; but during the later years of the Revolution the region seems to have virtually been deserted. in the late autumn of 1782, Maj. Isaac Craig was ordered out from Fort Pitt on a reconnoissance to the mouth of the Cuyahoga, to discover if the British were there building a post. He reported on his return that there was no sign of occupancy—Washington Irving Correspondence, pp. 137-139; Draper MSS., iNNiii, 4SIo. In 1786 the Moravian Indians lived for a short time at the old Ottawa village, on the east side of the stream, just north of Tinker’s Creek, in Independence township; but the following spring they removed to Sandusky Bay. The preceding year, by the Treaty of Fort Mcintosh, the Cuyahoga had been made the dividing line between white and Indian territory. With the exception of an occasional wandering trader, this locality appears to have been unvisited thereafter until the settlement (in 1796) of the Western Reserve—ED.
[21] Fort Ligonier was built during Forbes’s campaign in 1758, on the site of a well-known Indian town, probably of Shawnee origin, on Loyalhanna Creek, just west of Laurel Hill. While the advance of the army was encamped there, the enemy attacked them, after having inflicted (Sept. 14, 1758) a severe defeat upon Grant’s skirmish line that had penetrated to the neighborhood of Fort Duquesne. The attack upon Ligonier was repulsed, and was the last battle between French and British in this section. A garrison was maintained at this point until after Pontiac’s War, when Fort Ligonier was besieged, and relieved with much difficulty. About 1765 the permanent garrison was withdrawn, and in 1766 Capt. Harry Gordon reported that the fort was much shattered and rotting away. He also mentions some inhabitants clustered about the fort. More would come, he says, if right of possession was secured—Hanna, Wilderness Trail, ii, p. 40. In 1769 a land-office was opened at Ligonier and settlers flocked in rapidly. The land on which the fort stood was patented to Gen. Arthur St. Clair. The ravages of the Revolution did not reach the Ligonier Valley until the summer of 1777, when Col. Archibald Lochry set about establishing a stockade fort at Ligonier, probably on the site of the former British fort. This was officially known as Fort Preservation, but ordinarily received the well-known appellation of Fort Ligonier. From this date until the close of the Revolution, Ligonier Valley was constantly exposed to the Indian ravages. Nov. 7, 1777, it was reported that all of the settlers had fled to a distance forty-two miles from Ligonier—Frontier Forts, ii, p. 245. The party to whom allusion is made in this letter is doubtless the one that attacked Fort Wallace: see ante. Palmer’s Fort, in Ligonier Valley, was likewise attacked and eleven persons killed and scalped, among whom was Ensign Woods; Penna. Archives, v, p. 741.—ED.
[22] In his Narrative, pp. 160, 161, Heckewelder describes a visit of Half King (for whom see Rev. Upper Ohio, p. g,, note 24) to the Delaware towns in August, 1777. The Wyandot having sent to the Delawares the war-belt, which the latter had refused, next dispatched thither their head-chief and a deputation of 200 warriors. The Delawares, especially the Christian Moravian Indians, were much alarmed at their approach; but all ended well, for the Half King made a covenant with the Christian Indians and acknowledged their chiefs as “Fathers”. He likewise agreed to leave the Delawares in peace, and permit them to retain their much-prized neutrality. ED.
[23] Draper Series, Volume III Frontier Defense on the Upper Ohio, 1777-1778 by Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL. D. and Louise Phelps Kellogg, Ph. D. Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison pgs. 164-168
[24] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html
[25] The Battle for Fort Mercer: The Americans Abandon the Fort and the Crown’s Forces March In
Text below extracted from A Hessian Diary of the American Revolution, Döhla, 1990:56, 59-61.
[26] http://jerseyman-historynowandthen.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html
[27] The Battle for Fort Mercer: The Americans Abandon the Fort and the Crown’s Forces March In
Text below extracted from A Hessian Diary of the American Revolution, Döhla, 1990:56, 59-61.
[28] 23 This camp, No. 11, was evidently at the mouth of Bear Creek, which Bouquet's
journalist calls "another small river, which they crossed about fifty perches
(rods) above where it empties into the said branch of Muskingham (Sandy
Crfcek). Here a high ridge on the right, and the creek close on the left,
form a narrow defile about seventy perches long." Smith, London ed., 12-13;
Parkman ed., SO; Bouquet's Orderly Book, WPHM, XLII,196-197, note 46.
The defile and the camp site are now covered by the backwater from the
dam, the breast of which closes this narrow defile
[29] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal
[30] AN ORDERLY BOOK OF MCINTOSH's EXPEDITION, 1778 11Robert McCready's Journal
[31] Journal of a Hessian Grenadier Battalion, Translated by Bruce E. Burgoyne
[32] [1] Family History Library microfilm 1901794 and 1901795. JF
[33] .*tHistoric Houses of Early America, by Elsie Lathrop, published by Tudor”. Publishing Co., p. 82.
[34] (Photo in Torrence book) Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence
[35] Bob Bensing rbensing@nuc.net AMREV-HESSIANS-L Archives
[36] The Hessians by Edward Lowell
[37] The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume V, 1821-1824
[38] Theopolis McKinnon, August 6, 1880, London, Ohio. History of Clark County, page 384.
[39] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson
[40] The Ohio Historical Society, S. Winifred Smith, ohiohistory.org/onlinedoc/ohgovernment….
[41] Harrisonj
[42] From River Clyde by Emahiser page 213.
[43] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_von_Clausewitz
[44] http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=22375046
[45] References[edit]
1. Jump up ^ Wheeler, William Ogden, Lawrence Van Alstyne, and Charles Burr Ogden. 1907. The Ogden family in America, Elizabethtown branch, and their English ancestry; John Ogden, the Pilgrim, and his descendants, 1640-1906. Philadelphia: Printed for private circulation by J.B. Lippincott Co. pp 468-70
2. Jump up ^ Edward R. Kantowicz, "Carter Harrison II: The Politics of Balance," in The Mayors: The Chicago Political Tradition, ed. by Paul Michael Green and Melvin G. Holli, Carbondale, IL, Southern Illinois University Press, 2005; p. 20.
3. Jump up ^ Erik Larsen, The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair That Changed America, New York, Crown, 2003.
4. Jump up ^ Michael Patrick Hearn, David L. Greene, and Peter E. Hanff, "The Faltering Flight of Prince Silverwings," The Baum Bugle, Vol. 18 No. 2 (Autumn 1974), pp. 4-10.
5. Jump up ^ Katharine Rogers, L. Frank Baum, Creator of Oz: A Biography, New York, St. Martin's Press, 2002; pp. 102-3.
6. Jump up ^ L. Frank Baum, The Annotated Wizard of Oz, Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Michael Patrick Hearn; revised edition, New York, W. W. Norton, 2000; Introduction, pp. lxix-lxx.
[46] Wikipedia
[47] http://www.oocities.org/athens/Agora/9743/41stcoh.htm
[48] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe
[49] November 16, 1864. The Union Army, commanded by Gerneral William T. Sherman, begins a march to the sea from Atlanta in order to cut the Confederacy in two. (On this Day in America by John Wagman.
[50] Annotated by Jeffery Lee Goodlove
[51] Winton Goodlove:A History of Central City Ia and the Surrounding Area Book ll 1999
[52] Winton Goodlove papers.
[53] Harrisonj
[54] http://www.cv6.org/1941/btlord1/btlord1.htm
[55] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Enterprise_(CV-6)
[56] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Crawford
[57] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf
[58] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf
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