Sir John Dineley Goodere, 2nd Baronet

Sir John Dineley Goodere, 2nd Baronet (c. 1680 – 1741) of Burhope/Burghope House in the parish of Wellington[1] Herefordshire, was a British aristocrat and murder victim.

Arms of Goodere: Gules, a fess between two chevrons vair

Early life

He was born John Goodere in about 1680, the second son, and eventual heir, of Sir Edward Goodere, 1st Baronet. His mother, Helen née Dineley, was the granddaughter of Lewis Watson, 1st Baron Rockingham.

Career

He embarked on a career at sea in the merchant navy, and was a volunteer on HMS Diamond in 1708. In that year, or shortly after, he inherited the Charlton, Worcestershire, estate of his maternal ancestors, and took their name of Dineley, instead of that of Goodere.

Personal life

In or before 1720, he married Mary Lawford, but he divorced her "for adultery with Sir John Jasson" and she married a printer called William Rayner or Raynes.

Murder and aftermath

Sir John had long been on bad terms with his younger brother Samuel, and on 17 January 1741 he was strangled at his brother's direction on his brother's ship HMS Ruby off Bristol.

On behalf of an alleged surviving son, his divorced wife set up a fraudulent claim (as his widow), which failed. His brother, and his two accomplices, were hanged for murder on 15 April 1741. The baronetcy was inherited by Samuel's eldest son Edward.

gollark: I read a very convincing and well-evidenced reddit post a while ago saying that weightlifting was very good for your health and that sort of thing probably last year, and have done absolutely nothing about it.
gollark: I think I've been handling the whole quarantine situation decently, as it's *basically* a really long school holiday for me anyway. Apart from getting basically no exercise, but I kind of do that anyway.
gollark: Makes sense. If demand for coronavirus drops, production should decrease too.
gollark: The plague isn't as contagious, though, is it?
gollark: But you do need to make tradeoffs between "still have a functioning economy" and "stop spread".

References

  1. Kelly's Directory, 1858
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.