Details:
Clerk to Bench of Magistrates at Wallis Plains. 4.7. 1823 - permission to proceed to Newcastle.
Source:
Colonial Secretary Returns of the Colony
Source:
History of Maitland
Details:
Appointed first schoolmaster
Place:
County of Northumberland, Parish of Morpeth
Source:
Index to map of the country bordering upon the River Hunter... by Henry Dangar (London : Joseph Cross, 1828). p3
Details:
Granted 500 acres of land. Annual quit rent 10s
Details:
Gill Simpson lodging with Goldingham
Details:
Drew up agreement between Samuel Clift and Joseph Hughes
Details:
Brother John, late of East Indian Co. at Madras, died on 7 April 1849 in Worcester aged 83
Place:
Newcastle. Allotment 72
Details:
Land Grant. 24 perches authorised by Sir Thomas Brisbane 25th August
Source:
Registers of Coroners' Inquests and Magisterial Inquiries (Ancestry)
Details:
Died from injuries received
Source:
Historical Records of Australia Series 1, Vol XVIII, p 566
Details:
In order to prosecute the present Inquiry, I have waited upon .Mr. Houston Mitchell, and having requested that Gentleman to afford me the names of those of his Prisoners, who were at Church on the 14th ultimo, and having examined them separately in their Master's presence, I have now the honor to hand you their Indi- vidual Statements. John Jones- States, on Sunday, the 14th ultimo, he was at Church with some of his fellow Prisoners: that the Parson appeared very angry and told them the Catholics were getting the upper hand, and that the Bible was going to be taken away from them, and that none of them, who were Protestants, were to go away after Church until they had written their names down. Jones further states that, after the service. Goldingham, the Clerk, brought a piece of paper, a pen and Ink into the Church, and the Parson went to the door, and asked the people as they went out to stop and put down their names. Jones and his fellow Prisoners were on the Steps going away, when the Parson said " Come and sign this my Men ; it will not do you any harm, but will get you schools, towards which I my- self have given five pounds." Jones then wrote his own name as well as those of some of his fellow Prisoners who could not write. The Parson and Clerk were then both standing at the Table, and they both knew them to be Prisoners ; the former had often spoken to them, and the latter knew them perfectly well. Jones did not see any Petition ; there was nothing on the Paper he signed but a few names. John Morgant states that he cannot write; that, after Church on Sunday, the 14th ultimo, he was coining home when the Parson called him back to write his name; the clerk also told them they were to go and put down their names. Morgan said he could not write, and Jones wrote his name for him. Hawes. Riley, and Turner* corroborate the above Statements, and. not being able to sign their own names, they asked Jones to write them for them. Walker § corroborates the statement of Jones, but wrote his own name; he did not know what he signed, but thought he was obliged to do as the Parson told him. and that they wanted to find out how many Protestants there were in the Colony.......Toomer states that he attends the Scotch Service, but that, on the afternoon of Sunday, the 14th ultimo, he saw Goldingham, who asked him to come into the English Church, as he had a Paper for him to sign. Toomer at first declined having anything to do with it, when Goldingham told him that all his fellow prisoners had signed in the morning, and that he need not be afraid of any harm befalling him, as Mr. Lethbridge, the Magistrate, had signed the Paper, and that the Parson had said that every one. who was ;i Protestant, was to put their name to it, Toomer never saw any Petition nor was he aware that he had signed one; he saw nothing on the paper but a few names, and he wrote his under them.
Source:
Ancestry.com. New South Wales and Tasmania, Australia Convict Musters. Class: HO 10; Piece: 20
Details:
Anthony Morrison per Martha assigned to Nathanial Goldingham
Source:
Maitland Marriage Register
Details:
Marriage of James Flood to Judith Fogerty. Witnesses Thomas Gunning and Nathaniel Goldingham. Service performed by Thomas Sharpe
Source:
Maitland Marriage Register
Details:
Marriage of Thomas Brabazon to Lucinda Sweeney, both from Maitland. Witnesses Thomas Westley and Nathanial Goldingham. Service performed by Archdeacon William Grant Broughton
Source:
Maitland Marriage Register p. 63
Details:
Marriage of James Moy aged 25 to Sophia Scadden aged 17, both from Pattersons Plains. Witnesses Nathaniel Goldingham of Maitland and Sarah Wormersley of Pattersons Plains
Source:
Maitland Marriage Register p. 83
Details:
Marriage of William Payne aged 30 to Bridget McEvoy aged 26. Witnesses Mary Wilson and Nathanial Goldingham
Source:
Maitland Marriage Register p 118
Details:
Marriage of Thomas McCann aged 26, to Anne O Neill aged 27. Witnesses Nathaniel Goldingham of Maitland and Eliza Moss of Maitland
Source:
Maitland Marriage Register p. 133
Details:
Marriage of Richard Lewis, free, age 30, arrived per Hindostan to Elizabeth Patterson aged 22 arrived per Burrell, both from Patrick Plains. Witnesses Nathaniel Goldingham and John Cooper of Maitland
Source:
Maitland Marriage Register p. 148
Details:
Marriage of John Redman, free of Maitland, widower, to Anne Macpherson, free, of Maitland, widow. Witnesses Nathanial Goldingham and Mary Ford both of Maitland
Details:
Signed letter thanking Captain Anley for his work as Police Magistrate
Surname:
Goldingham's grant
Details:
To be sold by auction - 500 acres adjoining Wallis Creek. Bounded on north by burial ground. Residence occupied by Rev. Rusden