Susi, If your still interested? Let me start by saying this "on my way to the Whitewater Library I drove on Godfrey Rd in Lima township" There is road named after the Godfrey family. Did you know that? I have some of the GODFREY cemetery records for Oak Grove Cemetery, Whitewater, Wisconsin; as well GODFREY burials in these: North Johnstown Cemetery, Richmond Cemetery. The Hillside Cemetery and St. Patrick's Calvary Cemetery, Whitewater, Wisconsin. Oak Grove Cemetery is a "locked" cemetery when I checked it out. It is next to Washington Elementary school. Guess they have to keep the kids out. I do have the lay out of the a numerical plots. There are eight Godfrey surname burials in Oak Grove Cemetery. You were interested in James there is one listing. James GODFREY son of Thomas, stone has no date. buried in lot #9-12, from sources: cemetery records, and from the cemetery. Note: of other surnames related are: Armstrong, Comstock, Kyle, Vance. There is a a James GODFREY buried in the Hillside Cemetery, Whitewater, Wisconsin. He is the son of James and Mary (ADDIE) GODFREY. He was born on 4-20-1869 died 7-03-1952, burial lot #12-739, source: Whitewater Register Newpaper. If you need more burial information please be specific as you can be with names, dates if you have them, location if you know this. I also have another source to contact for Godfrey information. One last point on my way to the Whitewater library I was sadden by the fact of the new road that is going thru the land, a bypass, has caused the razing of a old homestead of an early settler of Whitewater, John M. Clark, he owned this 800 arce farm in which my direct ancestor: James MANOGUE, his brother, John MONOGUE, and a third man either a brother or a cousin Dennis (Daniel) MONOGUE all are enumerated on the 1860 Federal Census shown living with Mr. Clark's family. This homestead is the Goessling place today. In Mr. Clark's bio it stated that this was the most fertile land in the area. The soil is still rich and black. The earth movers where all over the front yard, the house was gone, the barn was gone, the outbuilding gone. Everyone is tearing down the barns in this area for the wood, to make furniture. Barn one day table and chairs the next. I'm sitting on the door that used to swing in the wind by the old horse barn. That's what happen to the barns of Wisconsin. Farmers are not able to make that great of a living today. That farm work is too hard. We have it so easy is these United States. We have our forefathers to thanks, but I'm afraid they won't hear us with all of that road noise to come. Marge Sierzega