The Ithacan, 1946-05-03
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Goodridge Genealogy
THE Goodridge Genealogy A History of the Descendants of WILLIAM GOODRIDGE Who Came to America from Bury St. Edmunds, England, in 1636 and Settled in Watertown, Massachusetts With Some Inquiry into the History of the Family in England and the Origin of the Same BY EDWIN ALONZO GOODRIDGE, A.M., M.D. PRIVATELY PRINTED NEW YORK 1918 Revised and Edited, and Supervised in the Printing BY LYMAN HORACE WEEKS Author of "Prominent Families of New York," "Book of Bruce," "An Historical Digest of the Provincial Press," Etc,, Etc. Lenz & Riecker, Inc., Printers New York, N. Y. To THE MEMORY OF WILLIAM GOODRIDGE, ESQ., the American Pioneer of 1636, this book is reverently and affectionately dedicated. This work has been printed and published and is now offered to the Goodridge family and to all interested in American genealogy as a fitting memorial of its originator and compiler DR EDWIN ALONZO GOODRIDGE through whose tireless enthusiasm and loving labor its production has been made possible. THE GOODRIDGE GENEALOGY is privately printed and published in a special edition limited to 275 copies. CONTENTS PAGE DEDICATION 3 MEMORIAL 4 EXPLANATIONS 8 PREFACE 11 EDITORIAL NOTE 15 INTRODUCTION . 19 THE ANGLO-SAXON . 27 THE GOODRIDGE NAME . 29 THE FAMILY IN ENGLAND 41 GoDRic CASTLE 48 BURY ST. EDMUNDS 55 THE FAMILY IN AMERICA 59 WATERTOWN, MASS. 65 WILLIAM GooDRIDGE AND Hrs DESCENDANTS FrnsT GENERATION 71 SECOND GENERATION 77 THIRD GENERATION' 84 FOURTH GENERATION 92 FIFTH GENERATION 108 SIXTH GENERATION 137 SEVENTH GENERATION 183 EIGHTH GENERATION 244 NINTH GENERATION 279 ADDENDUM . 286 AUTHORITIES CONSULTED 289 INDEX ONE. -
IN the DRAFT Town Building, $200; Miscellaneous That All Enlisted Men Are Invited to Thursday Evening, in Honor of Mrs
J wmmim m ?jM$' :;V.*; m • • ••• - I t Notice to Reader:-—-When you mmu finish, reding this newspaper, place" a ^cent B^mp on tliiB libtice, hand? THE WBATHBlt. sameto any-postal employee and it •yfti*' toe'^lSc'ed' in the hands -of our soldiers ,;qr sailors at the front. No. 1' Partly cloudy and cooler. wfttppin'g^—no address. * »•\--'.t , .' •••. v- • •:,'; •:•'.'.'•: ::/• M r:: • •• :':. vv;y. :., ':• •; THE "PRESS" HAS A LAR6ER CIRCULATION IK THE TERRITORY'BETWEEN AND SPRIN6FIELD THAN ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER—IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN IT v.,v..;; •:• •-v«-; *v * •• « ESTABLISHED 1880 ?P:i' THOMPSOSTVILLE. CONK".. THURSDAY" SF.PTTC\rTn?.T? <? IQIV VOL. XXXVIII, No. 19 IiOCAi YOUNG MEN HAVE NARROW ESCAPE SOUTH END PLAYGROUND J- .'.vAiv * r-i . < 4 Sv~' ANNUAL DOLL DAY Riding to New Haven Labor Day' in mm Runabout They are Struck by CXX>K-GOODRICH£fe^®. Formal Closing to Take Place Sat- Touring Caiv- JAMES BOYCE. A pretty home wedding toiolt piace James Boyce, 73, a civil war vet , While on an automobile trip to last Monday evening at the home of A feature of the second annual « ^ALL CITIZENS SHOULD JOIN, New Haven Mpnday' to visit friends eran, died Thursday in Boston, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Cook of AMOUNT TO BE RAISED $150,497. doll day exercises at the South-end %•; §f|y''^' who are in the 103rd Infantry, WITH STAG AT CLUB HOUSE. where he had been attending the playground yesterday afternoon was Tarade Through Principal Streets* 301 Enfield street, when their G. A. R. convention. Mr. Boyce camping at the Yale field, Thomas youngest daughter, Miss Mabel Eliza Selectmen Have Complied With an exhibition of folk dancing by a Followed by Concert, Speeches, Connors, Charles Mills and Milton Excellent Dinner Prepared to the was a native of Thompsonville and class of girls under the direction of -fjf'' 1 ld Chapter 142 of the 1917 M ' -Theatre 'Party.—All Societies Young, three well known young beth Cook became the wife of Lester spent his early life here. -
LAPITOL Read and to Give
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1020. 19; aristocracy, and by a large number . NEW 'RICHELIEU' !did acts I'ilcer, Douglas, 'ere.' i:,;;s tra-h'- 1 of visitors, natiiriiig uvir .teei.oiifi distinguished especially and McKenna. the intern: o;' titrK.-- those to ationaliy pounds was consumed in' arner isros. belonging nations honored famed dance Others ilicluile state on Tha n kse in selection of the new cardinals. l.jhis iving and the Kenny and Kemanl in "Foolin.e tsi of agriculture lias esti- - Fri" Sat- - Around;" Rati and Ruinh le. 'Tin-i- nlate.l that a pproximately the same S TRANDTcday' ROOKIE POLICEMAN GETS A Kilo l''oois;" Sid I ...wis. "Tl' f'lnwn aiiioniH w ill be required for tiie I'rinee of Vaudeville;" and "I town Christ mas ho; M-- y. Relentless Crime Tracker Comes to America to South" a Old Version for Re- i southern festival, Hampden TWO BURGLARS IN STORE Ml mm am Solve Baffling Crime! me u MffM UM U Sun. lay tile Strand will MAY ABANDON B A i LIMAD vised Local Writer offer the famed liroadnay st by c. ss no .v a hii in the talk i. Four Mouths on Force Gives liuck-lr- y leia'ion that li;e pre iously 1.1th ( N I1J811 hair" with Conrad la. and b ..Pinm.-- t by tl:.- North- - I'ir.--t Chance io Proc Leila .Hy.uns in the leading roles. ". stern l'a. iiie railread of a section When Waller Hampden appears ' m V olticru-ip.- ( lin- - - k 1 k-- f 1 at Parsons' theater, Hartford, t'nlfps Inrtiafed. -
Shakespeare's Stage in America: The
ABSTRACT Title of Document: SHAKESPEARE’S STAGE IN AMERICA: THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE FOLGER ELIZABETHAN THEATRE Elizabeth Forte Alman, Doctor of Philosophy, 2013 Directed By: Franklin J. Hildy, School of Theatre, Dance and Performance Studies The Folger Shakespeare Library, a private research institution located in Washington, D.C., was founded by Henry and Emily Folger in 1932. The Folgers intended their memorial to William Shakespeare, a complex that includes a library, an exhibition hall and an Elizabethan-styled theatre, to promote research and the communication of that research to the citizenry. This study suggests the Folgers, influenced by the Elizabethan Revival movement, envisioned the Folger Elizabethan Theatre to be utilized as an important tool to extend the research function of the institution, a laboratory, of sorts, to further the type of performance research that William Poel, Nugent Monk, Harley Granville Barker, B. Iden Payne, and Ben Greet conducted in early modern production practices. Interestingly, however, performance research was not included as one of the Library’s activities at its founding. The author identifies and examines a number of myths of origin about Henry and Emily Folger, the Folger Shakespeare Library and the Folger Elizabethan Theatre, suggesting their promotion by Library officials and others has helped to obscure the Founders’ original intent for the Folger Elizabethan Theatre. Drawing on archival research this study attempts to re-contextualize the early history of the Folger Elizabethan Theatre with that of the Folger Shakespeare Library. SHAKESPEARE’S STAGE IN AMERICA: THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE FOLGER ELIZABETHAN THEATRE By Elizabeth Forte Alman Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2013 Advisory Committee: Professor Franklin J. -
Has Enfield Changed Her Political Faith?
^•f-.-.'.v.",•'.'•• 'v.? %:tvy'JC'''r'ii\-.;£ i v-! T , > 1 '-• •' ";V •^'''•-''\''*i-^ "*V; '-^'- -'jw^v-''^-'T -i' V-"-" v i J A -Home Town Paper • For •' THE PRESS An Institution Which Works ^Home"' 'Town •; u,., • •••••• '%, g# For Community Ad - Folks. _v .> ; :' '" ' J3*ST"1::-':J * ;S¥I ' •" - vancement. /,:^wi5®IS''THE c8fty*r®w!3pXflO CONN. •V - :1 '. >. «HU3fc;" -•>. '•' i -i The "Press" Covers More Than Twenty-Two Suburban Districts, Combining a Population of Over Thirty Thousand Between Hartford & Springfield '?-.: :>"S..,A• -! -i ' w;£'5^v • •? I FORTY-FOURTH YEAR— NO. 24. THOMPSONVILLE, CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1923 PRICE $2.00 A YEAR—SINGLE COPY 5c SSfCV- LOAN ASSOCIATION FL Familiar^ HAS ENFIELD CHANGED From the East COMMISSIONER I sfcp KY5 SUCCESSFUL' ANIELSON, our neighbor to NNE" from the "east" the extreme east, is "A1who so unsparingly crit COMES MONDAY D "all fcet up" over a "White icises one of our local IN PAST 6 MONTHS Way System" with every in trolley conductors in the col TO INSPECT ROADS dication of being able to go HER POLITICAL FAITH? umns of the "Union" for his through with it, with the usual "impatience, bad temper and Dividend Is Increased to difficulties of course. Inciden lack of manners, does not, we Less Than Half the tally they are, to quote the The Result of the Town Election Leaves A Singular Situation That must ungallantly set down, get $ 5ya* At Meeting Mon- press account, "criticising the the same focus as we do on this Amount Requested for |day Night—Many Re- school board very harshly." Raises A Question As To the Actual Political Status of Both Parties gentleman at alL Not agree From the extensive account of ing with "Anne" we are fully State Aid Roads By " quests for Construc the incident the board is* be —Republican Control Seems Uncertain—Democrats Complacent Over in accord with the "Union's" ing right properly lambasted, splendid defense of conductors the Town Is Available tion Loans. -
Copyright by Fred Robert Nadis 2002
Copyright by Fred Robert Nadis 2002 The Dissertation Committee for Fred Robert Nadis Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Wonder Shows: Science, Religion and Magic on the American Stage, 1845-2001 Committee: ________________________________ Jeffrey Meikle, Supervisor ________________________________ Linda Henderson ________________________________ Bruce Hunt ________________________________ Robert Abzug ________________________________ Janet Davis Wonder Shows: Science, Religion and Magic on the American Stage, 1845-2001 by Fred Robert Nadis, M.A. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin May, 2002 PREFACE One of my more powerful childhood memories concerns a visit to Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry. Besides being impressed by the neo- classical building next to the lake and all the stone ladies holding up the roof on their heads, I recall a science demonstration that a young acne-afflicted woman in a smock offered in a small anteroom, possibly the gift shop. Among other tricks she placed a rose in a vial of liquid nitrogen, removed it, and struck it with a hammer—it then shattered as if made of stone or plaster. This unexpected and beautiful event evoked a sense of wonder in me. I was fascinated, both by the completely unexpected shattering of the rose, and that a young woman could control such strange cosmic forces. Her explanation of this and her many other demonstrations remain vague; but I now realize this was the first performance I had witnessed of what in this work I am calling a "wonder show." It did not make a scientist of me, as may have been the intention, but it did instill a proper sense of awe and appreciation for the possibilities technology and showmanship could provide.