1573 -
-
| Name |
Zachary Goodyear |
| Birth |
1573 |
London, England |
| Gender |
Male |
| Person ID |
I27562 |
FelsingFam |
| Last Modified |
21 Dec 2024 |
| Family |
Susanna Baxer |
| Marriage |
5 Jul 1596 |
St Michael Cornhill, London, England |
| Children |
| + | 1. Stephen Goodyear, b. Bef 26 Nov 1598, St Gregory By St Paul, London, England d. 7 May 1658, London, England (Age > 59 years) [Father: natural] [Mother: natural] |
|
| Family ID |
F8760 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
| Last Modified |
21 Dec 2024 |
-
| Event Map |
|
 | Birth - 1573 - London, England |
 |
|
-
| Notes |
- Biography from wikitree.com:
Zachary married Susanna Baxter on 5 Jul 1596, at St Michael Cornhill, London, England. [1][2]
Will: "Zacharye Goodyeare, citizen and vintner of London, 18 July 1613, proved 31 July 1613. To be buried in the parish church at St. Gregory near Paul's in London. To My loving mother ten pounds. To my cousin Mary Storye five pounds. the residue to my son Stephen Goodyere whom I make executor. I make, nominate and ordain my brothers John Partridge, scrivener, and Ralph Bowlton, merchant tailor, citizens of London, overseers.[3]
Source
↑ England Marriages, 1538-1973, online database, family search.org, accessed 7 May 2017, Zacharye Goodyeare and Suzanna Baxster, 05 Jul 1596; citing Saint Michael Cornhill,London,London,England, reference ; FHL microfilm 374503, 942 B4HA V. 7.
↑ Extracts from English Parish Registers. New England Historical and Genealogical Register. 61:189
↑ "English Ancestry of Stephen Goodyear, Deputy Governor of the New Haven Colony. TAG 57:1
Green, Scott Wesley. Further Information Regarding the English Origins of the Goodyear Family, Connecticut Ancestry (Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Stamford, Conn., May 2006) Vol. 48, No. 4, Page 157.
"Zachary Goodyear was probably born between 1570 and 1572, assuming he was 12-14 when apprenticed as a vintner to his Uncle Andrew Goodyear 31 March 1584, and 21-23 when made a freeman of the Vintners' Company of London 11 May 1593. He actively pursued the vintners' trade, taking on apprentices of his own on a regular basis over the years."
|
|