Hello again Jack
I forgot to mention in my previous post that John's occupation of carpenter was given in the baptisms of James and William. I know this family look promising but I do have some reservations about them - especially after finding Rebecca GOODWIN in Little Marlow in 1841. If she is the right person, why wasn't her husband with her if he didn't die until 1844? I know that lots of men were away from home in the 1841 census as this was taken in June at the time of the hay harvest (this being the reason subsequent census were taken in late March/early April), but it would be unusual for a married woman to be working in a live-in position. A widow might do this, leaving the child in the care of a relative.
I think we can be fairly certain that Rebecca's maiden name was PLUMRIDGE but we still don't know whether her husband was named John or George - or even John George. As well as the High Wycombe family there were also GOODWINs in the parish of Datchet which is adjacent to Eton where Charles George was baptised. This family used the christian name George. Datchet is also close to the borders of Berkshire, Surrey and Middlesex and a marriage could have taken place in any of these counties - as well as London.
I've said my piece so on to Fingest and Stokenchurch. Fingest, although close to the border with Oxfordshire, has always been in Bucks and still is. Stokenchurch was in Oxfordshire until 1896 when it was transferred to Bucks. It was a chapelry of Aston Rowant, Oxfordshire until 1844 although it did have its own registers from 1707. Cadmore End is a relatively new parish. It was created in 1852 from parts of Fingest, Stokenchurch and Lewknor (the Uphill part also known as Ackhampstead).
Finally, Dee-jay asked if anyone had tried the Wycombe Union to see if Charles George had been apprenticed by them. Sadly very few records have survived from this Union. There is a register of baptisms commencing in 1853 (much too late), and minute books 1836-39, 1854-56, 1881-87 and 1903-30. Although apprenticeships are sometimes recorded in the Minute Books those that survive from this Union are either too early or too late to be of use.
Orpheus