there are too many Richards. I have a Master file that is absolutely correct of this Good- Penkeville line.
The ONE error is because of a profile which is RICHARD GOODE III- THAT is the error.
RICHARD GOODE III is actually the Brother of John Goode I-
As I told you, there are too many generations. Here is the Master file, you can see on section15 where there is a missing Richard, then the real Richard is the brother, a different line, I kept trying to correct this, someone kept reverting it back-
HERE IS THE FILE
John Goode Royal Descent (rootsweb.com)
John Goode Royal Descent
From The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants
1. William I the Lion, King of Scotland, d. 1214 m. Ermendarde
de Beaumont
2. (illegimate by a daughter of Richard Avenal) Isabel of Scotland
m. Robert de Ros, Magna Carta Surety
3. Sir William de Ros m. Lucy FitzPiers
4. Sir Robert de Ros m. Isabel d'Aubigny
5. William de Ros, 1st Baron Ros of Helmsley m. Maud Vaux
6. Agnes de Ros m. Pain de Tibetot, 1st Baron Tibetot
7. Ada de Tibetot (sister of the 2nd Baron Tibetot)
m. John de Mohun, 1st Baron Mohun
8. William de Mohun m. Maud Polyslinche
9. Margaret de Mohun m. Thomas Penkeville
10. John Penkeville m. Isabel Tragarrack
11. John Penkeville m. Isabel Raynward
12. Philip Penkeville m. Joan Hernance
13. Isabel Penkeville m. Richard Goode
14. Richard Goode m. Joan Downe
15. Richard Goode m. ?
16. John Goode of Va. m. (1) Frances Mackarness, (2) Anne Bennett.
Richard Goode, a brother of John, also immigrated to Va., but left no NDTPS
From The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants to the American Colonies
or the United States: Who Were Themselves Notable or Left Descendants
Notable in American History by Gary Boyd Roberts, Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc., 1993 Includes complete list of sources, and
questions including parentage of John Goode
Portion of Virginia Cousins
Appendix I
T H E F A M I L Y I N E N G L A N D
WITH NOTICES OF OFFSHOOTS NOT OF THE WHITBY STOCK.
------------------
"This," he says with unction, "is Sir Solomon Sculpin,
the founder of the family."
"Famous for what?" we ask respectfully.
"For founding the family."
"This," he says, pointing to a dame in hoops and
diamond stomacher, "this is Lady Sheba Sculpin."
"Ah, yes. Famous for what?" we inquire.
"For being the wife of Sir Solomon."
------------------
APPENDIX III
SOME ROYAL DEDUCTIONS.
"Nearly all of the great historic houses that were famous in
the middle ages and were allied to royalty have died out in the
male line." says a recent writer in the "Athenasenum," "but the
Herald's Visitations having very fully recorded the alliances of
their female descendants, a vast number of persons can be shown
to descend from the great families whose titles and surnames are
extinct, but who boasted of royal descent, and many are descended
from our early kings. The fact that in England there has never
been the same rigid separation of classes which has prevailed
upon the Continent has greatly facilitated the transmission of
the blood of our Norman and Angevine kings, through the nobility
and aristocracy to the masses."
It must not then be considered strange if at the close of
this chapter it be shown that our emigrant ancestor could claim
descent from some of the early kings of England. William the
Conqueror, if he were now alive, might, like Abraham, number his
seed like the stars of Heaven. (Genesis xv., 5). His
descendants, at the least calculation, number one hundred and
fifty million. On the other hand, if we trace back our ancestry,
twenty-seven generations, to the time of the Norman conquest, we
find that, if no allowance is made for crossing of different
lines of descent, each of us had over seventy-five million
ancestors. This is of course absurd, and only shows us that we
are lineal descendants of the majority, if not all, of the
Normans, Saxons and Celts in England in the eleventh century, and
that if we wish to know the history of or forefathers we need
only to study that of the English people.
At the same time. though few can trace back their ancestors
in every line of descent more than three generations, it is
interesting too know something of types picked out for us by
accident among those who carried about in their bodies parts of
our own components five, ten or fifteen generations ago.
I do not hesitate, therefore, to print another series of
deductions which I find in my genealogical portfolio.
This pedigree was prepared as a diversion one afternoon in
the British Museum, when weary of long continued scanning of
manuscript records, I resolved, in a somewhat venturesome mood, to
follow Guullim and some of the early pedigree-writers as far as
they might lead into the arcana of family tradition. These lists
of names, taken from old works on heraldry, are reproduced here
rather as souvenirs of a "book-worm's enjoyment" in rummaging
than with the intimation that they possess value as historical
statements of fact. I may say, however, that the deduction in
the Scotch line going back as it does seventy generations and
twenty-two centuries, almost as many years before the English
settled England, as have passed since the Norman occupation of
the same region, appears to me to be a kind of powerful aid to
the imagination in the effort to appreciate certain kinds of
historical facts. Unworthy of credance as it may be, it
doubtless, like all traditionary history, contains here and there
a kernal of truth, and like the other pedigrees here given, even
if it be not exactly accurate, is unquestionably "something like
the truth." I only regret that I could not have found the famous
Scotch pedigree which was said to be preserved by Noah among the
ship's papers of the Ark. It could not be more than twice as
long as this:
DESCENT FROM THE SCOTCH KINGS.
Sixty generations, beginning and ending, as follows)
1. Ferchar, or Ferodach, a | 59. Philip of Penkevill
prince of Scots in | and Rosorropw, d. 1562
Ireland. | 60. Isabell Penkevill m.
2. Fergus lived in 390 B. C. | Richard Goode of
3. Mamus, 261 B.C. | Whitley.
DESCENT FROM THE SAXON KINGS
1. Cedric, the Saxon, crown- | 17. Eadmund Ironside,
| d. 1017
ed A.D. 532, 3d King of | 18. Edward, d. 1057.
England | 19. Margaret, d. 1093,
2. Cenrie. | m. Malcoolm I,
3.-9. ? | King of Scots
9. or 10. Ecberht, King of | (See No. 44 of
Essex, 802-837 | preceding list.
DESCENT FROM THE DUKES OF THE NORMANS
1. Rollo the Dane, 911-927 | 25. Isabell Penkevill
2. William, Longa-Spatha, | m. Richard Goode,
927-943 | No. 60 of first list.
DESCENT FROM THE KINGS OF GERMANY AND FRANCE
1. Pepin, the Old, Mayor | 34. Philip Penkevill
of Austrasia, d. 639 | 35. Isabell Penkevill
2. Doda d. 640 | m. Richard Goode,
3. Pepin d'Heristal, d. 714. | No. 60 of first list.
DESCENT FROM THE KINGS OF VIRGINIA
"Whitby" was, as we have seen, in immediate proximity to one
of the principal residences of Powhatan, and came into possession
of the Goodes within forty years of his death, in 1618. Col.
John Bolling, of "Cobbs," great-grandson of Pocahontas, was a
contemporary and near neighbor of John Goode of "Whitby," and
"Oropax," the burial place of Powhatan, was very close to
"Winepeck," the plantation of Samuel Goode, No. 32, his eldest
son. It is not strange, therefore, the the blood of the two
families should have mingled in later generations, and I find
about 400 of the people namesd in the book may claim descent from
"The Nonparella of Virginia." Judge Robertson's recently
published "Pocahontas and her Descendants" embraces only seven
generations and omits some of the lines of descent included in
this book. The following "key" is intended to extend and amplify
certain portions of Judge Robertson's tables:
POWHATAN or Wahunsonacook, "the mighty Weroance who ruled over
Attanougkomouck or Virginia," b. 1530-60, d. 1618.
POCAHONTAS, "The Nonparella of Virginia," also known as Matoaca
(White Feather) and "The Lady Rebecca," b. 1595, d. 1616, m. John
Rolfe.
Lieut. Thomas Rolfe, b. 1615, m. Jane Poythress.
Jane Rolfe, b. 1655-56, d. 1676, m. Col. Robert Bolling,
(1646-1709.)
Col. John Bolling, of "Cobbs," m. Mary Kennon.
* * *
Sarah (b. 1748), m. John Tazewell.
(Her granddaughter did not marry Hon. W. O. Goode, No. 241, as
stated in "Pocahontas."
* * *
VIRGINIA COUSINS BIBLIOGRAPHY
PRINCIPLE WORKS OF REFERENCE
John Smith's Works, edited by Arber.
Brock's notes in "Collections of Hist. Society."
MS., i-vi.
"The Bolling Memoirs," edited by Wayne.
Slaughter's "Bristol Parish."
Browning's "Americans of Royal Descent."
"The Carter Tree."
Campbell's "History of Virginia."
De Bow's "Review."
Wheeler's, "Eminent North Carolinians."
Slaughter's "Randolph Fairfax."
Foote's "Sketches of Virginia."
Slaughter's "Josua Fry."
Goode's "Virginia Cousins."
Gregg's "Old Cheraws."
Hardesty's Encyclopedia.
Meade's "Old Churches and Families of Virginia."
Paxton's "Marshall Family."
Wheeler's "History of North Carolina."
New England Historic Genealogical Register.
Thomas's "History of Old Kent, Md."
Page's "Page Family."
Peyton's "History of Augusta Co., Va."
Robertson's "Pocahontas and Her Descendants."
Richmond Standard, Vols. ii-iv., edited by Brock.
Southern Literary Messsenger.
Slaughter's "St. Mark's Parish."
Campbell's "Spottswood Papers."
"The Sullivan Memorial."
Neill's "Terra Mariae."
Neill's "Virginia Caoloorum."
Neill's "Virginia Company of London."
Neill's "Virginia Vetusta."
Watkin's "Watkins Genealogy."
Welle's "Washington Family."
Welle's "American Family Antiquity."
VIRGINIA COUSINS INDEX
ALPHABETICAL INDEX
WITH WHICH IS INCORPORATED A KEY
TO SOUTHERN GENEALOGY, AND A LIST OF VIRGINIA
FAMILIES USING COATS OF ARMS IN THE COLONIAL PERIOD.
(not included)
---------------
"I for my part venerate the inventor of indexes, and I know
not to whom to yeild the preference, either to Hippocrates, who
was the first great anatomiser of the human body, or to that
unknown laborour in literature who first laid open the nerves and
arteries of a book."-- ISAAC DISRAELI.
----------------
The references in brackets folowing each surname are
intended to serve as a key to all printed pedigrees of Southern
families embracing three generations or more....
The figures in this index, unless preceeded by the letter
"p," refer to the entry numbers of the individual, and not to the
pages....
The list of families, about two hundred in all, claiming the
right in colonial days to use arms, has been revised and extended
by Mr. Brock.
[The index, as you will note from the abbreviated
information, above, is much more than just that-- indexing much
beyond the contents of the book. It is is available in the
original book. The index covers many, if not all, of the
"Principal Works of Reference," which precedes this page. Ed.]
("Index" not included.)
T H E E D I T O R' S L I N E O F D E S C E N T
1. Richard Gode (1), whose son was:
2. William Gode (2) (living about 1390), whose son was:
3. William Gode (3) (died after 1415), whose son was:
4. William Gode (4), whose son was:
5. Walter Gode (5), whose son was:
6. William Goode (or Gode) (6) (b. between 1470-1520) m.
Milicent, their son was:
7. Walter Goode 7) (b. between 1500-1510) m. about 1540
Joan Whitson; their son was:
8. Richard Goode (8) m. 1558-9 Isabell Penkevill; their
son was:
9. Richard Goode (12) (b. 1560 d. after 1620) m. Joan
Downe; their son was:
10. Richard Goode (21) (b. between 1580-1600 d. between
1620-1650), whose son was:
11. John Goode (26), the immigrant (b. between 1620-1630
d. 1709) m. 1st between 1650-1660 Martha Mackarness
(d. before 1708); their son was:
12. Samuel Goode (32) (b. between 1655-1658) m. before
1716 Martha Jones; their son was:
13. William Goode (48) (b. c. 1700 d. 1763) m. Phoebe
(Pheby) Goode; their son was:*
14. Edmund Goode (79) (b. between 1730-1758 d. 1812) m.
1791 Sarah Branch (b. 1714 d. after 1839);
their son was:**
15. John Goode (188) (1796-1876) m. 1824 Anne M. Leftwich
(1804-1868); their son was:
16. Hon. John Goode (536) (1829-1909) m. 1855 Sallie Urquhart;
their son was:
17. Richard Urquhart Goode (1273) (1858-1903) m. 1889
Sophie Jackson Parks (1860-1947); their
daughter was:
18. Sophie Parks Goode (1890-1976) m. 1916 Calvert
Walke Tazewell (1888-1962); their childen were:
19. Calvert Walke Tazewell (1917- )
John Parks Tazewell (1920- )
Sophie Goode Tazewell (1924- )
* The name, Phoebe Goode, suggests further intermarriage of
related Goodes, and possible multiple lines of descent. In spite
of the detailed information in G. Brown Goode's book, no comment
is made on this.
** Sarah Branch was daughter of Elizabeth Goode and
great-granddaughter of Robert Goode, son of John Goode of Whitby,
the immigrant (9th generation, above); second line of descent
from this John Goode, as follows:
10. John Goode, the immigrant (b. between 1620-1630)
m. 2nd Anne Bennet (d. before 1708); the son of
wife number one OR number two was (probably the
lst wife):
9. Robert Goode (b. about 1690 d. 1764) m. Elizabeth
Curd (d. 1766); their son was:
8. Robert Goode (1711-1760) m. 1737 Mary Turpin
(1720-1765); their daughter was:
7. Elizabeth Goode (b. 1738) m. ..... Branch; their
daughter was:
6. Sarah Branch (1714-after 1839) m. 1791 Edmund Goode
(b. between 1750-1758 d. 1812); their son was:
5. John Goode (1796-1876) (see 5th generation, above)
(The number preceeding name indicates generation number; the
number in parenthesis followiwng the name, is the identification
assigned by George Brown Goode.)
VIRGINIA COUSINS AUTHOR'S BIOGRAPHIES
BIOGRAPHIES OF THE AUTHOR
GOODE, GEORGE BROWN (1851-96), ichthyologist, born New Albany,
Ind. Graduated at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. (1870),
joined U. S. Fish Commission as assistant (1871), and became U.
S. Commissioner of Fisheries (1887-88). Appointed (1878)
assistant director of National Museum; from 1887, assistant
secretary of Smithsonian Institution, In charge of fishery
division of 10th U.S. Census (1879-80). Wrote "Catalogue of the
Fishes of the Bermudas" (1876); "American Fishes" (1888); and
"The Natural and Economical History of the American Menhaden."
Prepared "The Fisheries and Fishery Industries of te United
States" (1884-87).
Biog.: S.P. Langley (1897); D.S. Jordan, "Leading Men of
Science" (1910); "Biog. Memoirs Nat. Acad. Sci.," vol. 4 (1902)
American Biographies by Wheeler Preston. NY: Harper (Gale, 1974)
GOODE, GEORGE BROWN, naturalist, govt. ofcl.; b. New Albany,
Ind., Feb. 13, 1851; s. Francis Collier and Sarah (Crane) G.;
grad. Wesleyan U., Middletown, Conn., 1879; m. Sarah Lamson Ford
Judd, 4 children. Moved to N.Y., 1857; in charge Orange Judd
Mus. Natural History, 1871-77; mem. staff Smithsonian Instn.,
1873, asst. sec., 1887; employed in Atlantic Coast explorations
of Fish Commn.; U.S. commr. fish, 1887-88; supervised Smithsonian
exhibits at Phila. Centennial Expn., 1876; U.S. commr. at
fisheries exbns., Berlin, Germany, 1880, London, Eng., 1883;
conducted survey Am. fisheries for 10th census, 1880. Author:
Catalogue of the Fishes of the Bermudas, 1876; Oceanic Icthyology
(added 156 new species of fish from Atlantic), 1895; An Account
of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895, and The Smithsonian
Institution 1846-96, 1897 (best known hist. treatises); Virginia
Cousins (his own family record), 1887; The Game Fishes of North
America; American Fishes, 1888; The Beginnings of American
Science; The Origin of the Scientific and Educational
Institutions of the United States, 1890; The Museums of the
Future, 1891. Died Washington, D.C., Sept. 6, 1896.
("Who Was Who," Historical Volume, p. 278)
Virginia Cousins
Goode Scrapbook
Goode Home Page
Royal Ancestry of Virginia Tazewells
Ad
RootsWeb is funded and supported by
Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community.
Learn more.
About Us | Contact Us | Copyright | Report Inappropriate Material
Corporate Information | Privacy | Terms and Conditions | CCPA Notice at Collection
Karen Jean Tanner
Today at 4:47 AM
Report | Delete
HERE IS THAT WEBSITE,
I CAN ASSURE YOU THIS IS CORRECT WITH THE EXCEPTION OF "15" which is the 3rd Richard III out of place.
https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~tazewell/genealogy/gde-royl.html
Erica Howton C
Today at 4:57 AM
Report
I believe Geni matches.
John Goode Royal Descent From The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants
13. Isabel Penkeville m. Richard Goode
Isabel Goode (Penkeville) & Richard Goode, Gent., of Whitstone
14. Richard Goode m. Joan Downe
Richard ‘of Whitstone’ Goode, II & Joan Goode (Downe)
15. Richard Goode m. ?
Richard Goode, Ill & wife of Richard Goode
16. John Goode of Va. m. (1) Frances Mackarness, (2) Anne Bennett.
John Goode, l, ‘the immigrant’ & Frances Martha Goode (Mackarness) & Anne Goode (Bennett)
Richard Goode, a brother of John, also immigrated to Va., but left no NDTPS
Richard Goode, IV