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John Goode (abt. 1738 - 1790)

Rev. John Goode
Born about in Henrico, Virginiamap
Ancestors ancestors
Son of and [mother unknown]
Brother of
Husband of — married [date unknown] in Skinquarter, Chesterfield, Virginia Colonymap
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 52 in Skinquarter, Chesterfield, Virginia, USAmap
Problems/Questions
Profile last modified | Created 4 Jan 2015
This page has been accessed 1,196 times.

Biography

U.S. Southern Colonies Project logo
John Goode was a Virginia colonist.
  • Children:
  1. William Goode, b. 25 Oct 1761 d. 27 Sep 1845
  2. Anne, b. 16 Feb 1765 d. 18 Sep 1830, married David Ford
  3. John, b. 22 Jan 1766
  4. Robert, b. 22 Jan 1766
  5. Margaret, b. 12 Jul 1770, married Jesse Butler
  6. Benjamin, b. 03 Mar 1771 d. 10 Jul 1830
  7. Joseph, b. 04 Apr 1776
  8. Elizabeth, b. 09 Jun 1778 d. 20 Aug 1821, married Williamson H. Pitman
  9. Mackarness, b. 09 Mar 1779
  10. Rev. Edmond, b. 27 Feb 1780
  11. Tarpley, b. 12 May 1780 d. 21 Jan 1814
  12. Mary "Polly", b. 10 Jan 1782, married Towns Binns 29 Nov 1838
  13. Susanna, b. 01 Dec 1784, married Benjamin Farmer
  14. Sarah, b. 30 Sep 1786, married Rev. Boswell Traylor [1]

The dates conflict in a few places.

Burial

FindAGrave.com memorial #38068864 in Skinquarter Baptist Church Cemetery, Skinquarter, Chesterfield County, Virginia, USA

Reverend John GOODE was born 12 Mar 1738 in Henrico, Virginia.

He passed away 12 Jun 1790 in Skinquarter, Chesterfield, Virginia, United States. Rev. John Goode of Skinquarter Church.

John Goode (1738-1790) [. . .] was born in Virginia Colony and lived there all of his life. After a long and emotional inner struggle, he became convinced that he must become a Baptist and then a Baptist preacher. He was baptized and then ordained by pioneer Baptist preacher William Hickman (1747-1830/34), who baptized Goode into the membership of Skinquarter Baptist Church in Chesterfield County VA, where Goode was later made the pastor. (The Skinquarter Section of Chesterfield County, Virginia, was so named a century earlier, as the "quarter" where native peoples gathered to skin their animals after a hunt. William Hickman was the founding pastor, in 1778, of the Skinquarter Baptist Church. Goode must have been baptized in 1778 or '79; he was ordained June 18, 1780. )

Forty years after his death, John Goode was a figure of potent recall in the mind of the aged William Hickman. On reaching ancient years in 1829, Hickman wrote a remarkable memoir, which he titled "A Short Account of My life and travels, by William Hickman For more than Fifty years; a professed Servant Of Jesus Christ. To which is added a narrative of the rise and progress of religion in the early settlement of Kentucky: giving an account of the difficulties - we had to remember." [. . .]

Of John Goode, Hickman wrote in 1829,

"There was a fast published by Congress during the war, to be observed throughout America; I think it was the 23rd of April, 1777. I appointed a meeting on that day at a neighbor's house, and there came out a large number of people; I think my text was in Joshua, ‘Neither will I be with these any more, unless you put away the accused thing from among you,' It was in an orchard; the house could not hold half of the people; I did not think I had spoke with more liberty than common. At the close of the discourse there came up a heavy rain; I led the people to the house, singing ‘Lord, what a wretched land this is' etc, the hymn being long, all that could crowd in the house did so. Some went in the out houses. I finished the song in the house and spent some time in exhorting from it, and then the meeting broke. There was a middled aged man of the name of John Goode in the yard who applied to Col. Hankins to write his will. The Col. said to him, ‘What is the Matter? John, you're not sick?' The reply was, ‘I shall die.' Col. Hankins laughed him out of it. He wont home, slain by the Sword of the Spirit, his conviction was sharp and severe. He told us afterwards he neither eat, drank nor slept for three days and nights, till the Lord spoke peace to his wounded spirit. . . .

"A remarkable circumstance took place with John Goode, above alluded to; as I went out with my little boys to drop corn, on the roadside, there came a man riding up; he called to me, and when I went up to him the first word he said to me was, to tell how a person felt when he was converted; but instead of my telling him he immediately told me; he got so warm he scarcely would sit on his saddle. I invited him to the house, he said he came on purpose--his soul was alive. He told me I need not mention baptism to him, he said blessed be God, he was baptized with the Holy Ghost, and fire, he needed no more. I told him to search the scripture, and that would teach him his duty. . .

"This was on Saturday morning the Sunday week I had an appointment at Muse school house, a few miles beyond his house. I asked him if he would go with me if I would come by and take breakfast with him, he said he would with pleasure. When I went, he was sitting on his porch with a Bible in his hand; he commenced by telling me I need not say anything about baptism, his Holy Ghost and fire baptism would do for him. I spoke to him as above, for his cup appeared to be running over; I appointed meeting that evening at his house.

"After meeting closed in the day at the school house (it was the first time I had been at that place and there being a large congregation) I missed Mr. Goode till the people were nearly all gone; at last he came out of the woods. I asked where he had been all the time. He told me Mr. Branch, one of his rich neighbors, a church warder, had taken him out to give him some good advice, and it was to take care of the Baptists, for they preach damnable doctrines, and that they will not rest till they dip you. . . . .

"Baptists in those days could be told in any company--they loved one another. The Church was called Skinquarter, and increased, from its origin. Many other circumstances too tedious to mention and great many valuable things have slipt my memory. This Church raised three ministers, James and Josiah Rucks and John Goode, the same mentioned previously, who was baptized with the Holy Ghost and fire. He stood out a long time at last, having received a lashing of conscience, nothing would do but he must be baptized in water, and afterwards he was very zealous for that mode of immersion. . . .

"To return to Chesterfield again, Satan took the advantage of the three preachers alluded to above, and sewed seeds of discord among two of them . . . ."

John Goode's wife was Sarah Brown (1745-1812), daughter of George Brown (?-1805/07) and ______ Robertson (?-?), daughter of George Robertson (?-abt 1795.)

John Goode was the son of Benjamin Goode (circa 1700-aft. 1764) of Henrico County, Virginia Colony. Benjamin's mother was Susanna _________ (?-?) and his father was John Goode (1680-aft. 1752), who lived on Four Mile Creek, Henrico County. This John, grandfather of our subject, was the son of Margaret ______ (?-b/f 1679) and immigrant Edward Goode (1647-aft 1708). Born in England, Edward immigrated in 1667 and lived on Four Mile Creek.

This brief biography of John Goode has been taken from Volume II of a book of family history entitled ALL OF THE ABOVE II, by Richard Baldwin Cook. For additional information, visit the contributor profile, #47181028. John and Sarah Brown Goode are Richard's 4th great grandparents.

Children:

  • William Goode (1761–1845)
  • Susanna Goode Farmer (1783–1864)

Sources

  1. Virginia Cousins, p. 52
  • Daughters of the American Revolution, DAR Genealogical Research Databases, database online, (http://www.dar.org/ : accessed March 29th, 2015), "Record of John Goode", Ancestor # A046326.
  • Goode, G. Brown 1851-1896. (1887). Virginia Cousins: a study of the ancestry and posterity of John Goode of Whitby, a Virginia colonist of the seventeenth century, with notes upon related families, a key to southern genealogy and a history of the English surname Gode, Goad, Goode or Good from 1148 to 1887. Richmond, Va.: J. W. Randolph & English. Online copy at HathiTrust.org, pages 52, 53.
  • Taylor, James Barnett. Lives of Virginia Baptist Ministers. Richmond: Yale & Wyatt, 1837. 241, 2nd edition.
  • U.S., Civil War Pension Index: General Index to Pension Files, 1861-1934. Author: National Archives and Records Administration. Publisher: Ancestry.com Operations Inc. Publisher Date: 2000. Publisher Location: Provo, UT, USA. Name: John C Goode. Widow: Sarah A Goode. Roll number T288_179. Comments: Coranavgher A. J., Gdn. Service: Kentucky Cav.
  • familysearch.org # L44M-K42




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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with John by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with John:

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Goode-1310 and Goode-847 appear to represent the same person because: Same name, nearly same birth date/location, same death location/date. Link to same FindAGrave memorial.
posted by Jason Klehr