John Venimore Godwin

John Venimore Godwin was an early photographer and Mayor of Bradford in 1865-1866.

John Venimore Godwin was an early photographer

Life

Godwin was born on 23 December 1814 in Dartmouth. He was the son of the Reverend Benjamin Godwin and his wife, Elizabeth. His father was the Baptist minister in Dartmouth, but he shortly moved to Great Missenden.[1]

Godwin married Rachel and they had ten children. They lived in the 1847 rebuilt Micklefield House in Rawdon before moving to Crowtrees House.[2] Godwin also owned the nearby Crow Trees Inn.[3] He died at his home in Crowtrees on 20 January 1898 aged 83.[4]

Legacy

John asked his father in 1832 when they were living in Oxford to write about his life. Over the next 18 years his father wrote over fifty letters which he gave to his son on his son's birthday 23 December 1855. These letters provided him and historians with an insight into the Baptists and the abolitionists.[1]

Business people in Yorkshire were concerned by the competition created by the French woollen industry. In 1876 the Chambers of Commerce nominated Godwin and Henry Illingworth to investigate the French. Illingworth took the lead and he went on to chair Bradford Chamber of Commerce.[5]

Godwin was elected Mayor of Bradford in 1865 taking over from Charles Semon.[6]

Legacy

The A6181 (Godwin Street) in Bradford is named after John Venimore Godwin.[3] Godwin's son John A. Godwin was the first Lord Mayor of Bradford in 1907.[6]

gollark: What of an *actual* iron dome?
gollark: What? That's $106500 a child. They could probably rent each an individual apartment somewhere for that much.
gollark: When I attempted to be involved in the democratic process™ by complaining to my local politician about a thing their government had done, I got no useful response out of it. I don't think it's worth the time.
gollark: You seem to be able to actually remain motivated to study interesting maths and such. I get distracted from anything like that *very* easily and can only really do it in very small chunks.
gollark: This is also irrelevant because a micronation doing this could just not tax it.

References

  1. Hancock, N P (1991). "The life and work of the Reverend Benjamin Godwin: a Baptist response to the Oxford Movement". MPhil University of Nottingham. Archived from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  2. A History of Rawdon
  3. John Venimore Godwin Archived 2014-08-12 at the Wayback Machine, Aireborough Historical Society, retrieved 29 July 2014
  4. "The Father of Bradford". Lancaster Daily Post (3517). 21 January 1898. p. 4. Retrieved 24 February 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. Papers of Henry Illingworth on the French woollen textile industry, 1876-1877, retrieved July 2014
  6. List of Mayors Archived 2011-06-15 at the Wayback Machine, Bradford.gov.uk, retrieved July 2014
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