. The Goodridge genealogy : a history of the descendants of William Goodridge who came to America from Bury St. Edmunds, England, in 1636 and settled in Watertown, Massachusetts with some inquiry into the history of the family in England and the origin of the same . or of , 1580; Thomas Goodridge, mayor of St. Albans, 1613;Thomas Goodridge, assistant of the borough of St. Albans,1606. Others of early date were Thomas Goodricke, rectorof Hogely, Lincolnshire; Sir John Goodryke, knight, Hun-tingdon; Thomas Goodryke, parish of Bowden, Maj.; AnnieGoodrycke, prioress of Greenfield, Lincoln
. The Goodridge genealogy : a history of the descendants of William Goodridge who came to America from Bury St. Edmunds, England, in 1636 and settled in Watertown, Massachusetts with some inquiry into the history of the family in England and the origin of the same . or of , 1580; Thomas Goodridge, mayor of St. Albans, 1613;Thomas Goodridge, assistant of the borough of St. Albans,1606. Others of early date were Thomas Goodricke, rectorof Hogely, Lincolnshire; Sir John Goodryke, knight, Hun-tingdon; Thomas Goodryke, parish of Bowden, Maj.; AnnieGoodrycke, prioress of Greenfield, Lincolnshire; Henry Good-rich, rector of Xorthfield, Kent; John Goodereych, preben-dary of Hudson, Staffordshire; John Goodridge, vicar ofClewdon, Somersetshire; William Goodrich, rector of , Outerficld, London ; Richard Goodrich, commissionerof the poor, parish of St. Nicholas, Gloucestershire; In the middle centuries of English history that branchof the family existing under the name of Goodridge becamespecially interesting to its descendants when one Goodridgewas knighted, probably by Richard Coeur-de-Lion. 1190-91,for service in the crusades. The grant to Goodridge (Char-lew, ) was: argent, on a fesse gules, between three lions passant-. Coat of Akms Gofxlriiijre of Totncs,Dtrvon-liire THE FAMILY IN EXGLAXD 45 guardant, sable, a flcur-de-Iis between two crescents of thefield. Another coat of arms—j:^ranted to Nicholas Goodridgeof Totness, Devonshire and Doncaster, Yorkshire, by KingJames I. in 1610—was: argent, a fesse sable; in chief, three crosses-crossletfitchee of the second. Crest, a song thrush proper. In this connection it is interesting to note as somethingvery significant that several of the old Goodricke familieshad arms almost identical with those granted to the Good-ridges of Gloucestershire. Goodrick of Isle of Ely andStanmore, County Middlesex, had: argent, on a fesse gules,between two lions passant guardant, sable, a fleur-de-lis be-twee
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booki, booksubjectgoodrichfamily