, an eminent classical teacher, the son of John Goad, of Bishopsgate-
, an eminent classical teacher, the son of
John Goad, of Bishopsgate- street, was born there Feb.
15, 1615. He was educated at Merchant Taylors’ school,
and elected thence a scholar of St. John’s college, Oxford,
in 1632. He afterwards received his master’s degree, became fellow of his college, and took orders. In 1643 he
was made vicar of St. Giles’s, Oxford, and continued to
perform his parochial duties, although at the risk of his
life, during the siege of the city by the parliamentary
forces. In June 1646 he was presented by the university
to the vicarage of Yarnton, and the year following was
created B. D. When the loyalists were turned out by the
parliamentary commissioners, Mr. Goad shared their fate;
and although Dr. Cheyuel, who was one of the parliamentary visitors, gave him an invitation to return to his
college, he refused it upon the terms offered. Yet he appears to have been so far connived at, as to be able to
keep his living at Yarnton until the restoration. He also
taught at Tunbridge school until July 1661, when he was
made head master of Merchant Taylors’ school. Over this
seminary he presided for nearly twenty years, with great
success and approbation, and trained for the college many
youths who did honour to their teacher and to their country; but in 1681 a suspicion was entertained that he inclined towards popery; and it was said that the comment
whicli he made on the Church Catechism savoured strongly
of popish tenets. Some particular passages having been
selected from it, and laid before the grand jury of London,
they on March 4 of the above year, presented a complaint
to the Merchant Taylors’ company, respecting the catechism taught in their school. After he had been heard in
his own defence, it was decided that he was “popishly
and erroneously affected,
” and immediately was discharged
from his office; but such was their sense of his past services,
that they voted him a gratuity of 70l. It soon appeared
that the court of the company had not been deceived in
their opinion of his principles. After being dismissed, he
taught a school in Piccadilly, and in 1686, the reign of James
II. openly professed himself a Roman catholic which,
Wood says, he had long been covertly. He died Oct. 28,
1689, and was buried in the church of Great St. Helen’s,
Bishopsgate-street, his memory being honoured by various
elegies. He published, besides some single sermons, 1.
“Genealogicon Latin um,
” a small dictionary for the use
of Merchant Taylors’ school, 8vo, 1676, second edit. 2.
“Declamation, whether Monarchy be the best form of
government
” printed at the end of Richards’s “English
Orator,
” Astro-Meteorologica, or aphorisms and discourses of the Bodies Celestial, their natures
and influences, &c.
” History of the
Air,
” and Dr. Mead’s book * c De Imperio Solis etJLuna.“4.
” Autodidactica, or a practical vocabulary, &c.“1690,
8vo. After his death was published
” Astro-meteorologia
sana, &c." 1690, 4to.