Godbe was born in
Middlesex,
England, to Samuel Godbe, a music professor, and Sarah LaRiviere, a descendant of
French Huguenots. Godbe was one of at least five children, and his father died when he was eleven. Godbe's uncle Daniel Grant, an engineer, took him in and taught the boy elements of his trade. Godbe was attracted to
classics and travel literature, and by his early teens Godbe earned a living on the sea. By 1850, Godbe was an experienced sailor who had traveled
Western Europe, visited
Constantinople, and the shores of
Brazil and
Africa. Godbe then became bound to a captain who, after retiring from the sea, worked the
dock at
Kingston upon Hull. In Hull, Godbe encountered
Parley P. Pratt, an LDS missionary. By June 1850, Godbe was baptized, against the counsel of his immediate family. Like most converts, Godbe emigrated to the LDS Church's headquarters in
territorial Utah. As a seaman, he worked his way to
New York City, then purchased his way by ferry from
Albany to
Chicago in 1851. From there Godbe walked to Kanesville,
Iowa (now
Council Bluffs). Too late to join an immigrant company, Godbe traveled with merchant Thomas S. Williams, who was bringing goods west. Godbe arrived in
Salt Lake City the final week of October 1851. Godbe kept his ties with Williams and was offered employment by the successful merchant. In the early 1850s, Godbe was dispatched to
San Francisco, California, acting as Williams' agent and perhaps forming ties with
John M. Horner, a Mormon businessman in the city. In 1854, Godbe traveled east with Williams' express mail entrepreneur
Ben Holladay, returning with 22 wagons of merchandise to start his own sundry and drug store, supposedly the first between the
Missouri River and San Francisco. Godbe's business sense propelled him to be in the upper 5% of
Utah Territory income, with total assets of over $300,000 by 1870. == Formation of The Church of Zion ==