Background
Goodricke was the son of Sir Henry Goodricke of Ribston Hall, Yorkshire and his wife Jane Savile, daughter of Sir John Savile, of Methley, (1545–1607), Baron of the Exchequer.
Goodricke was the son of Sir Henry Goodricke of Ribston Hall, Yorkshire and his wife Jane Savile, daughter of Sir John Savile, of Methley, (1545–1607), Baron of the Exchequer.
He supported the Royalist cause in the English Civil War. Though he is said to have been born in 1617 he was baptised at Street Mary"s York on 31 August 1620. He matriculated at Jesus College, Cambridge in 1633.
After then studying at Aberdeen, he then travelled in France in the later 1630s.
Goodricke succeeded his father on 22 July 1641, and was created a baronet on 14 August 1641. During the Civil Wars he supported the king and suffered in the Royal cause.
He was imprisoned at Manchester and later in the Tower of London and was fined £1,508, (or £1,200, with £40 a year) on 23 November 1646. Goodricke married firstly Katharine Norcliffe, daughter of Stephen Norcliffe, of York, at Trinity, Micklegate, York, on 7 October 1641.
Cavalier Parliament]
In 1661, Goodricke was elected Member of Parliament for Yorkshire in the Cavalier Parliament and sat until his death in 1670.