Andrew Wood's family lands were at
Largo, Fife. The family are traditionally thought to be a branch of the Wood family from Bonnington or Bonnyton in Angus. Probably beginning his career as a merchant in
Leith, he was knighted by James III and married Elizabeth Lundie. According to tradition, Wood was given a grant of the lands of Largo around 1480, in return for the service of maintaining a ship to take the King and Queen on pilgrimages to the shrine and well of
Saint Adrian on the
Isle of May. It was believed that a visit to the shrine could help a woman become pregnant. James IV confirmed the royal gift of the lands of Largo in July 1488. On 18 May 1491, James IV gave permission for the building of a castle with iron gates or "
yetts" at Largo. Wood was keeper of
Dunbar Castle and superintended the rebuilding and repairs in 1497. As a reward for his services at Dunbar in defence against the English army and fleet, James IV gave him lands in 1504, and on 21 August 1513, James IV made his lands a free barony. A clause of this grant stipulates that Wood should be ready to ferry James IV and
Margaret Tudor to the Isle of May. The Latin clause from the 1513 charter reads "in peregrinationem nobiscum et cum carissima consorte nostra et successoribus nostris ad insulam de Mayo cum ad hoc requisiti fuerint", which can be translated as "to travel with us and with our dearest wife and our successors to the Isle of May whenever they shall be required for this purpose". His heir was Andrew Wood. Another son,
John Wood was assassinated in 1570. Andrew Wood is the subject of the
historical novel The Admiral by
Nigel Tranter. ==Naval career==