Profile
William Nicholas Goodman
Bristol orphan. Atlantic crossing. Utah. St. David. The Goodman story in Arizona begins here.
Focus
Original Arizona Pioneer (1882)
English convert who crossed the Atlantic (1862)
Settler of St. David, Arizona
Progenitor of the Goodman family in Arizona
The first Goodman in Arizona
Everything that follows in this family history — the pharmacy counter in Mesa, the five mayoral terms, the hospital in Chandler, the OB/GYN practice, the marriage in Hamburg — traces back to a carpenter from Bristol with bad lungs and nine children. [S7]
An orphan in Bristol
William was born in 1842, the son of Thomas Goodman and Maria (Mary). His mother died in 1854, when he was twelve. His father died three years later. By fifteen, William and his three siblings were orphans in mid-Victorian England — a country that offered working-class children without parents very little in the way of prospects. [S7]
But he had converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1851, at the age of nine, and the church offered something England did not: a way out. [S7]
Forty-two days at sea (1862)
On May 14, 1862, William and his younger brother Nathaniel boarded the William Tapscott in Liverpool. The voyage took forty-two days. They arrived in New York on June 25, traveled by rail and steamboat to Florence, Nebraska, then joined a wagon company for the overland journey to the Salt Lake Valley, arriving in October 1862. [S7]
Marriage and twenty years in Utah
In 1864, William married Margarett Ann Taylor. Together they would have nine children. The Taylor family was established in the Mormon community, and the marriage connected William to a network of families who would later settle Arizona together. [S7]
The last journey (1882)
After two decades in Utah, William’s lungs were failing. He needed warmer, drier air — the same need that would later drive thousands of tuberculosis patients to Arizona. In the fall of 1882, he loaded his wife and children into a wagon and headed south. [S7]
They stopped first in Mesa, then continued to St. David in the San Pedro River Valley. The pull was family: Margarett’s sister Maria had already settled there with her husband Joseph McRae. St. David had been founded in 1877 by Mormon settlers under Philemon Merrill. By 1882 it was a tight-knit farming community where families helped each other survive through seasons of flood and drought. [S7]
Adobe and mesquite
Near the St. David cemetery, William and his sons built a homestead. They molded adobe bricks by hand, cut mesquite for fuel and fencing, dug irrigation ditches, and planted wheat and barley in desert soil. The work was relentless: sun, dust, a river that flooded unpredictably, and lungs that were not getting better. [S7]
Death at forty-three
William Nicholas Goodman died on March 8, 1885 — three years after arriving in Arizona. He was forty-three. He was buried in the Saint David Cemetery in Cochise County. [S7]
His death could have ended the Goodman story in Arizona. It did not. Margarett and the children stayed, married into other local families, and established their own farms. William’s son George Edward Goodman married Roxsana Othelia Reed. They had eight children. The eldest was George Nicholas Goodman — the future five-term mayor of Mesa and founder of Apache Drug. [S7] [S12]
The line of descent
William Nicholas Goodman (1842–1885) → George Edward Goodman (son) → George Nicholas Goodman (1895–1959) — Mesa mayor → Dr. Clifford James Goodman Sr. (1921–1962) — Chandler physician → Dr. Clifford James Goodman Jr. (1943–2022) — MomDoc founder