b. 1833-09-28
               
               d. 1916
               
               
                  
                  Reverend John Booth Good was born on 
28 September 1833 in Wrawby, Lincolnshire. From early in his career Good was a missionary for the S.P.G
                     -- the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts -- continuing this
                     line of work in 
British Columbia, specifically in 
Nanaimo, 
Yale, and 
Lytton. Good was first educated at Lincolnshire and then later at St. Augustine's College,
                     Canterbury where he studied medicine, mathematics, science, and theology. Along with his education at St. Augustine's, he was likewise educated at a diocesan
                     teacher's training college at Lincoln; and by 
1850, at the age of 17, Good was offered a teaching position at Halton-Holgate, Lincolnshire. In 
1854, after his graduation at St. Augustine's, he accepted a position with the S.P.G to
                     do missionary service in 
British Columbia.
By the time of Good's leave to 
British Columbia, the 
BC diocese was in the process of formation; temporarily sending Good to 
Nova Scotia -- he left England on 
25 January 1857. During his time in 
Nova Scotia, Good was ordained by Bishop Burney and spent the next three years doing missionary
                     service. In 
January of 1860, Good returned to England where he married Sarah Ann Watson; later traveling together
                     to 
British Columbia, landing in 
Victoria in 
April 1861. In 
September 1862, 
Vicar George Hills appointed Good to 
Nanaimo, here he helped in the construction of what would become a chapel and school for
                     Indigneous peoples; the first task that Good oversaw was to convince the pupils' need
                     for 
cleanliness.
Good later moved from 
Nanaimo to 
Yale, and then to 
Lytton in 
1866 where he was charged with the “care” of 8000 Indigenous people from 72 different
                     villages, while simultaneously becoming fluent in Indigenous language, which led to transcription
                     and transliteration of liturgy. Good spent 16 years laboring in 
Lytton until he was appointed in 
1882 as 
priest-in-charge
 of his former parish in 
Nanaimo. For another 17 years, Good worked in 
Nanaimo until he was forced from his position in 
1899 due to the development of parish life and Good's inability to comply with the new
                     style and subside with his traditional view of conducting parish life. In his entire missionary career, Good spent nearly 40 years in the service of the
                     Anglican church in 
British Columbia until his death in 
1916.
                     
                     
                        - 1. Good to Fortescue, 4 December 1861, 11327, CO 60/9, 342.
- 2. J. B. Kerr, Biographical Dictionary of well-known British Columbians: with a historical sketch, (1890), 254.
- 3. F. A. Peake, John Booth Good in British Columbia: The Trials and Tribulations of the Church, 1861-99, The Pacific Northwest Quarterly, vol. 75, no. 2 (April 1984): 71.
- 4. Ibid., 72.
- 5. Ibid.
- 6. Ibid.
- 7. Ibid.
- 8. Ibid., 73.
- 9. Kerr, Biographical Dictionary, 254.
- 10. Peake, John booth Good in British Columbia, 74.
- 11. Ibid., 77.
- 12. Ibid.
- 13. Ibid., 70.