William Goding
b. 29 October 1736, d. before 1791
William Goding|b. 29 Oct 1736\nd. bef. 1791|p3146.htm|William Goding|b. 24 Apr 1703\nd. 1757|p3154.htm|Martha Spooner|b. 6 Mar 1714/15\nd. 1 Jul 1749|p3155.htm|William Goding|b. 1669\nd. 13 Jan 1746/47|p3163.htm|Mary Pease|d. 5 Aug 1748|p3164.htm|Peter Spooner|b. say 1690|p3421.htm|Rebecca Coolidge|b. 20 Apr 1685\nd. bef. 12 Feb 1723/24|p3422.htm|
| Father* | William Goding1,2 b. 24 Apr 1703, d. 1757 |
| Mother* | Martha Spooner2,1 b. 6 Mar 1714/15, d. 1 Jul 1749 |
William Goding was born 29 October 1736 at Watertown, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.1,2 He married Sarah Stearns, daughter of Daniel Stearns and Mercy Grant, 20 April 1761 at Watertown.2,3 He died before 1791 when his wife is said to have married Benjamin Piper.4
From Watertown, he moved to Cambridge where his first two children were born, and in May 1765 settled in Newton, Massachusetts.
He enlisted in the French and Indian War at Boston, and entered service 28 Nov 1755 to 29 May 1756. He is recorded as serving on the Crown Point expedition, fifteen days travel expenses were allowed from Albany. His name also appears in a list of men belonging to Capt Thomas Cheever's company, from Watertown, as equipped with gun and receiving gun money, about 5 April 1758.
He also served early in the the Revolution as a private in Capt Joshua Reed's company, Colonel Varnum's regiment, enlisting 4 December 1775.2
A caution was entered in the Watertown records against the settlement of William Godding, Jr., wife Sarah, and children William and Sarah; also two other Godding children who appear to have been married: Elizabeth Phillips and Mary Melhyrs but otherwise unidentified. They all had come from Woburn in April, 1764.
He is said to have gone to Newton in May, 1765, but his last four children are recorded at Watertown, and he served in the opening days of the revolution in a unit from that town.5
From Watertown, he moved to Cambridge where his first two children were born, and in May 1765 settled in Newton, Massachusetts.
He enlisted in the French and Indian War at Boston, and entered service 28 Nov 1755 to 29 May 1756. He is recorded as serving on the Crown Point expedition, fifteen days travel expenses were allowed from Albany. His name also appears in a list of men belonging to Capt Thomas Cheever's company, from Watertown, as equipped with gun and receiving gun money, about 5 April 1758.
He also served early in the the Revolution as a private in Capt Joshua Reed's company, Colonel Varnum's regiment, enlisting 4 December 1775.2
A caution was entered in the Watertown records against the settlement of William Godding, Jr., wife Sarah, and children William and Sarah; also two other Godding children who appear to have been married: Elizabeth Phillips and Mary Melhyrs but otherwise unidentified. They all had come from Woburn in April, 1764.
He is said to have gone to Newton in May, 1765, but his last four children are recorded at Watertown, and he served in the opening days of the revolution in a unit from that town.5
Family | Sarah Stearns b. 1739 |
| Marriage* | He married Sarah Stearns, daughter of Daniel Stearns and Mercy Grant, 20 April 1761 at Watertown.2,3 |
| Children |
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Citations
- [S9] Henry Bond, Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, Including Waltham and Weston to Which is Appended the Early History of the Town, With Illustrations, Maps And Notes (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1860), 256-257. Hereafter cited as Bond's Watertown.
- [S93] Frederic Webster Goding, Genealogy of the Goding Family, (Richmond, Indiana: p.p., 1906), 13-21. Hereafter cited as Goding Genealogy.
- [S9] Bond, Bond's Watertown, 256, 463.
- [S720] Mrs. Harriet H. Robinson, "Nicholas Browne of Reading and Some of His Descendants," The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 44 (Oct 1890): 284. Hereafter cited as "Nicholas Browne."
- [S9] Bond, Bond's Watertown, 773.
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