Bishop of Carlisle (1808-1827), physician and naturalist, who was born at Kimpton, Weyhill. He was educated at Christ Church College, Oxford at the same time as Joseph Banks and the two became lifelong friends and correspondents. Goodenough was a founder member of the Linnean Society with J.E. Smith, and the society's first Treasurer. That he took this position is, perhaps, surprising as he was scandalized by the publication of the Linnaean sexual system and in a letter to Smith wrote "to tell you that nothing could equal the gross prurience of Linnaeus's mind is perfectly needless". Vice president of Royal Society in 1820, the year Banks died he was still holding office as President after 42 years. Goodenough was buried in the north cloister of Westminster Abbey. Goodenough's botanical work is best known through his volumes on Carex but he also worked on algae, publishing an account of the British species of Fucus in 1779, and published on zoology. His herbarium was formerly at CLE, donated to K in 1880, though Lanjouw and Stafleu considered that there was still some material at Carlisle. Algal specimens were subsequently transferred from K to BM (c. 1961) under the Morton Agreement, and thus constitute part of the original Goodenough herbarium.