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Fernando Wood
Fernando Wood (June 14, 1812 – February 13, 1881) was an American Democratic Party politician, merchant, and real estate investor who served as the 74th and 76th mayor of New York City. He also represented the city for several terms in the United States House of Representatives.
After rapidly rising through Tammany Hall, Wood served a single term in the U.S. House before returning to private life and building a fortune in real estate speculation and maritime shipping.
He was elected mayor for the first time in 1854 and served three non-consecutive terms. His mayoralty was marked by an almost dictatorial vision of the office and political corruption in the city's appointed offices, including the New York City police force. His political appointments and his advocacy for unilateral reform of the city charter to strengthen his power and grant the city home rule brought him into direct conflict with the Republican state legislature, leading to a charter revision that prematurely ended his second term in office and resulted in his arrest. He returned to the mayor's office for a final term in 1860.
After leaving the mayor's office, Wood was elected to several more terms in the House of Representatives, where he served for sixteen years. In his final two terms in that office, he served as chairman of the powerful House Committee on Ways and Means.
Throughout his career, Wood expressed political sympathies for the Southern United States, including during the American Civil War. He was a member of the Copperhead faction, which opposed the war and called for an immediate peace settlement with the Confederacy. He once suggested to the New York City Council that the city should declare itself an independent city-state, as the "Free City of Tri-insula," in order to continue its profitable cotton trade with the Confederacy. In the House, he was a vocal opponent of President Abraham Lincoln and one of the main opponents of the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery in the United States.
Fernando Wood was born in Philadelphia on June 14, 1812. His Spanish forename was chosen by his mother, who found it in The Three Spaniards, an English gothic novel written by George Walker.
His father, Benjamin Wood, was a speculator in dry goods who was bankrupted by the Panic of 1819. His mother, Rebecca (née Lehman) Wood, was the daughter of a recent German immigrant from Hamburg who had been wounded at the Battle of Yorktown.
Fernando had six siblings: four brothers and two sisters. His brother, named Benjamin Wood after their father, also served in the U.S. Congress. Throughout Fernando Wood's career, Benjamin was his sole trusted ally. As a partner in Wood, Eddy & Company, Benjamin owned and operated southern lotteries in New York City, a lucrative quasi-legal industry that his brother protected as mayor. Benjamin later also managed the affairs of Mozart Hall, the Democratic faction founded in 1859 by Fernando after the brothers lost control of Tammany Hall.
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Fernando Wood
Fernando Wood (June 14, 1812 – February 13, 1881) was an American Democratic Party politician, merchant, and real estate investor who served as the 74th and 76th mayor of New York City. He also represented the city for several terms in the United States House of Representatives.
After rapidly rising through Tammany Hall, Wood served a single term in the U.S. House before returning to private life and building a fortune in real estate speculation and maritime shipping.
He was elected mayor for the first time in 1854 and served three non-consecutive terms. His mayoralty was marked by an almost dictatorial vision of the office and political corruption in the city's appointed offices, including the New York City police force. His political appointments and his advocacy for unilateral reform of the city charter to strengthen his power and grant the city home rule brought him into direct conflict with the Republican state legislature, leading to a charter revision that prematurely ended his second term in office and resulted in his arrest. He returned to the mayor's office for a final term in 1860.
After leaving the mayor's office, Wood was elected to several more terms in the House of Representatives, where he served for sixteen years. In his final two terms in that office, he served as chairman of the powerful House Committee on Ways and Means.
Throughout his career, Wood expressed political sympathies for the Southern United States, including during the American Civil War. He was a member of the Copperhead faction, which opposed the war and called for an immediate peace settlement with the Confederacy. He once suggested to the New York City Council that the city should declare itself an independent city-state, as the "Free City of Tri-insula," in order to continue its profitable cotton trade with the Confederacy. In the House, he was a vocal opponent of President Abraham Lincoln and one of the main opponents of the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery in the United States.
Fernando Wood was born in Philadelphia on June 14, 1812. His Spanish forename was chosen by his mother, who found it in The Three Spaniards, an English gothic novel written by George Walker.
His father, Benjamin Wood, was a speculator in dry goods who was bankrupted by the Panic of 1819. His mother, Rebecca (née Lehman) Wood, was the daughter of a recent German immigrant from Hamburg who had been wounded at the Battle of Yorktown.
Fernando had six siblings: four brothers and two sisters. His brother, named Benjamin Wood after their father, also served in the U.S. Congress. Throughout Fernando Wood's career, Benjamin was his sole trusted ally. As a partner in Wood, Eddy & Company, Benjamin owned and operated southern lotteries in New York City, a lucrative quasi-legal industry that his brother protected as mayor. Benjamin later also managed the affairs of Mozart Hall, the Democratic faction founded in 1859 by Fernando after the brothers lost control of Tammany Hall.
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