Difference between revisions of "John Goodman (b.ca.1637)"

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{{SemBioLongInfoBoxThree
 
{{SemBioLongInfoBoxThree
|Person=John Goodman
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|Person=John Goodman (b.ca.1637)
 
|First name=John
 
|First name=John
 
|Last name=Goodman
 
|Last name=Goodman
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|Res town=London
 
|Res town=London
 
|Res country=England
 
|Res country=England
|Birth year=1636
+
|Birth year=1637
|Deposition start page(s)=HCA 13/70 f.402r Annotate, HCA 13/70 f.425r Annotate,
+
|First deposition age=18
|Deposition date(s)=Jul 25 1655, Jun 19 1656, 1667
+
|Deposition start page(s)=HCA 13/70 f.404r Annotate,
 +
|Deposition date(s)=Jul 25 1655
 
|Has infobox completed=Yes
 
|Has infobox completed=Yes
 
|Has synthesis completed=No
 
|Has synthesis completed=No
 
|Has HCA evidence completed=No
 
|Has HCA evidence completed=No
 
|Has source comment completed=No
 
|Has source comment completed=No
 +
|Type of ship=Shore based trade
 +
|Role in Silver Ship litigation=None
 
}}
 
}}
 
==Biographical synthesis==
 
==Biographical synthesis==
John Goodman (b.ca. 1635-1637; d.?). Winecooper.
+
John Goodman (b.ca. 1637; d.?). Winecooper.
  
Resident in the parish of Saint Mary Hill in 1655 and in the parish of Saint Catherine Coleman in 1667.
+
Resident in the parish of Saint Mary Hill in 1655.
 +
 
 +
A second winecooper, also named John Goodman, was resident in the parish of Saint Catherine Coleman in 1656 and 1658. This second John Goodman was thirty-two years of age in 1656 and thirty-four years of age in 1658, whereas the John Goodman of Saint Mary at Hill was eighteen in 1655. The signatures of the two John Goodmans are also clearly different.
  
 
==Evidence from High Court of Admiralty==
 
==Evidence from High Court of Admiralty==
Eighteen year old John Goodman deposed on July 25th 1655 in the High Court of Admiralty. He was examined in the case of "Travers against Pomeroy and against lighter of about 200 tunns whereof the sayd Pomroy is owner and against any other".<ref>[[HCA 13/70 f.402r Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.402r]]</ref>  
+
Eighteen year old John Goodman deposed on July 25th 1655 in the High Court of Admiralty.<ref>[[HCA 13/70 f.404r Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.404r]]</ref> He was examined in the case of "Travers against Pomeroy and against lighter of about 200 tunns whereof the sayd Pomroy is owner and against any other".<ref>[[HCA 13/70 f.402r Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.402r]]</ref>  
  
 
Goodman stated that Canary wine belonging to Gyles Travers was unloaded in January 1655 from the ship the ''John and Mary'' (Master: William Webber). The wine was put into a lighter (Master: Thomas Taylor) and carried to Buttolphs Wharf, where the lighter was moored safely and securely all night. The next morning another lighter, with a burthen of eighty tons (Master: one Pomeroy), was moored to a ship at Buttolphs Wharf. This lighter allegedly veered into Taylor's lighter, despite being warned, sunk the lighter's boat and then ran foul of the lighter, breaking her hawser and casting her adrift. As a consequence, one pipe of wine worth £30 was staved in and "utterly lost".<ref>[[HCA 13/70 f.404v Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.404v]]</ref>
 
Goodman stated that Canary wine belonging to Gyles Travers was unloaded in January 1655 from the ship the ''John and Mary'' (Master: William Webber). The wine was put into a lighter (Master: Thomas Taylor) and carried to Buttolphs Wharf, where the lighter was moored safely and securely all night. The next morning another lighter, with a burthen of eighty tons (Master: one Pomeroy), was moored to a ship at Buttolphs Wharf. This lighter allegedly veered into Taylor's lighter, despite being warned, sunk the lighter's boat and then ran foul of the lighter, breaking her hawser and casting her adrift. As a consequence, one pipe of wine worth £30 was staved in and "utterly lost".<ref>[[HCA 13/70 f.404v Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.404v]]</ref>
 
A year later, on June 19th 1656, but giving his age as twenty-one, John Goodman deposed again in the High Court of Admiralty.<ref>[[HCA 13/70 f.425r Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.425r]]</ref> He was examined on an allegation in the case of "The Lord Protector against the shipp the ''Saint Paul'' and her lading and against Captaine Philips".
 
 
Goodman stated that he was employed by Captaine Isaac Phillips as a winecooper to assist in the unlading of wines from the ''Saint Paul'' and their transport to warehouses. Shortly after the wines were placed in the warehouses, the Commissioners for Prize Goods placed locks on the warehouse doors, prventing Phillips from accessing the goods. The wines were kept locked up for two months in considerable heat and were thus damaged. According to Goodman, wines, which on arrival were worth £14 or £15 per tunne were eventually worth no more than the customs due on them.<ref>[[HCA 13/70 f.425r Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.425r]]</ref>
 
 
Goodman deposed once more in the Admiralty Court in 1667. He described himself as John Goodman of Saint Catherine Coleman Fenchurch Street, winecooper and thirty years of age. He stated that he was present at the unlading of wines and vinegar from the ship the ''Godslieve'' at Easter 1667 at the request of Mr Peter Gerrard, who was agent for the owners of the ship and goods in question. The ship, whilst being unloaded, "lay at the chaynes neere Saviours docke Southwarke". He reported seeing seventy-three tons of wine "most of them decayed".<ref>P1100440</ref>
 
  
 
==Comment on sources==
 
==Comment on sources==

Latest revision as of 21:10, November 6, 2016



John Goodman (b.ca.1637)
Person John Goodman (b.ca.1637)
Title
First name John
Middle name(s)
Last name Goodman
Suffix
Spouse of
Widow of
Occupation Winecooper
Secondary shorebased occupation
Mariner occupation
Associated with ship(s)
Training Not apprentice
Is apprentice of
Was apprentice of
Had apprentice(s)
Citizen Unknown
Literacy Signature
Has opening text John Goodman
Has signoff text John goodman
Signoff image (Invalid transcription image)
Language skills English language
Has interpreter
Birth street
Birth parish
Birth town
Birth county
Birth province
Birth country
Res street
Res parish Saint Mary at Hill
Res town London
Res county
Res province
Res country England
Birth year 1637
Marriage year
Death year
Probate date
First deposition age 18
Primary sources
Act book start page(s)
Personal answer start page(s)
Allegation start page(s)
Interrogatories page(s)
Deposition start page(s) HCA 13/70 f.404r Annotate
Chancery start page(s)
Letter start page(s)
Miscellaneous start page(s)
Act book date(s)
Personal answer date(s)
Allegation date(s)
Interrogatories date(s)
Deposition date(s) Jul 25 1655
How complete is this biography?
Has infobox completed Yes
Has synthesis completed No
Has HCA evidence completed No
Has source comment completed No
Ship classification
Type of ship Shore based trade
Silver Ship litigation in 1650s
Role in Silver Ship litigation None


Biographical synthesis

John Goodman (b.ca. 1637; d.?). Winecooper.

Resident in the parish of Saint Mary Hill in 1655.

A second winecooper, also named John Goodman, was resident in the parish of Saint Catherine Coleman in 1656 and 1658. This second John Goodman was thirty-two years of age in 1656 and thirty-four years of age in 1658, whereas the John Goodman of Saint Mary at Hill was eighteen in 1655. The signatures of the two John Goodmans are also clearly different.

Evidence from High Court of Admiralty

Eighteen year old John Goodman deposed on July 25th 1655 in the High Court of Admiralty.[1] He was examined in the case of "Travers against Pomeroy and against lighter of about 200 tunns whereof the sayd Pomroy is owner and against any other".[2]

Goodman stated that Canary wine belonging to Gyles Travers was unloaded in January 1655 from the ship the John and Mary (Master: William Webber). The wine was put into a lighter (Master: Thomas Taylor) and carried to Buttolphs Wharf, where the lighter was moored safely and securely all night. The next morning another lighter, with a burthen of eighty tons (Master: one Pomeroy), was moored to a ship at Buttolphs Wharf. This lighter allegedly veered into Taylor's lighter, despite being warned, sunk the lighter's boat and then ran foul of the lighter, breaking her hawser and casting her adrift. As a consequence, one pipe of wine worth £30 was staved in and "utterly lost".[3]

Comment on sources

"(no.) 34
Poste masters yarde (Postmaster's Yard)...
marcht Randall Knipe 7 (hearths)
Custu(m) h(o)use(e) George Strowde 6 (hearths)
pewterer John Cable 3x
1 melting place 1 (hearth)
mach' Arther Dentrie 6 (hearths)
carpen' Henrie Roberttes 2 (hearths)
wine co' John Goodman 4 x
transletter John Egge 3 (hearths)

pike yard..."[4]
  1. HCA 13/70 f.404r
  2. HCA 13/70 f.402r
  3. HCA 13/70 f.404v
  4. Lady Day 1666 Hearth Tax Return, p.681, viewed 12/08/2016)