... i have put a 1 ohm resistor on all 4 power tubes but now i think i need only 2 1 ohm resistors. 1 on each pair of tubes that are fed together. is this correct? ...
You
can do that, and know the total current for each side of the push-pull output stage. However,
if it were my amp I'd put a 1Ω resistor for each output tube.
Pretend you see 1 tube out of the 4 redplating. You measure tube current to see if there is a problem, but you have but a single 1Ω resistor for each side of the output stage (2 tubes feed a single resistor). Both sides measure 80mV, which implies 80mA of current through the 1Ω resistor.
You wouldn't know that one the side without the redplating tube that each tube is passing 40mA (for 80mA total), while the other side has one tube passing 70mA and the other passing 10mA. In other words, both sides would look like they're doing the same thing when they're not.
So having a resistor per output tube gives you more opportunity for troubleshooting and more information.
... when i test 1 tube in this amp would it read at same ma as a 2 tube amp or will the ma be double? ...
If you had a single 1Ω resistor for a pair of tubes, then the measured current would be double that for a single tube. If you calculated 70% dissipation at 450v for a quartet of 6L6GC's under this scenario, you'd expect 46mA per tube (because 30w/450v = ~66mA, and 70% of 66mA = ~46mA). If the tubes pass exactly the same current through the shared 1Ω resistor, you'd measure 46mA * 2 = 92mA, which would show as 92mV across the 1Ω resistor.
You'll see you have no way to know how the individual tubes split up that total current that you measured.
... i ran my feedback wire from the speaker jack to my now not in use polarity switch so it goes to the feedback resistor as normal or switched in other position no feedback. will this hurt the amp? ...
It will not hurt the amp. Keep the feedback wire well clear of anything else except where it connects to the switch and the feedback resistor on the board; too close to high impedance, low-level circuits and you could get oscillation. However, I think you'll be fine with what you described.