In 1911, Wood declared his candidacy for one of two seats in Maricopa County in the state senate. He was one of four Democrats to run in the primary. He received the most number of votes in the Democrat primary in October, getting 1,201 to the runner-up,
H. A. Davis', 961. He and Davis both won in the general election in December. Wood served on numerous committees in the senate: Rules; Finance; Judiciary; Appropriate; Banking and Insurance; Public Service Corporations; Suffrage and Elections; Education and Public Institutions; and Counties and County Affairs. He sponsored a bill signed into law which created a state home for the destitute, homeless, depraved women and abandoned children, and established a funding appropriation for it. During the legislative term, he broke ranks with Davis, feeling that there should be a new election in November 1912. He also believed the members of the first legislature should serve only a single year, rather than three. Davis filed suit, and eventually the state supreme court ruled in Davis' favor, and the members of the first legislature served for three years. Wood was considered a skilled speaker and the best parliamentarian in either house of the legislature. In the second session of the legislature, Wood authored a bill which created a state reclamation program. The bill included the creation of a reclamation commission, a reclamation fund, and the issuance of $20,000,000 in bonds to fund the project. In 1913 and early 1914 there was talk of Wood running for state treasurer in the 1914 election; however, in August 1914, Wood was appointed as the U.S. Postmaster for Phoenix by
Woodrow Wilson, at the recommendation of
Congressman Hayden. ==References==