The brigade's attempted offensive in Lopera, comments the historian R. Dan Richardson, "received a
baptism of fire [which] turned into a thorough debacle". Including Wood, eight Irishmen were to die as a result of the fighting. Of these, six of these—including Wood—had crossed the
Pyrenees with Ryan. Wood was either killed outright on Boxing Day (26 December), as
The Worker reported or died five days later in
Andújar Hospital following injuries sustained during the battle. He had been gone from Ireland 18 days. He was buried in Andújar Cemetery. On 15 February
Joseph Walshe, Secretary of the
Irish Free State's Foreign Affairs Department wrote to the Irish
Plenipotentiary in Spain,
Leopold H. Kerney, advising him that Wood had "secretly" joined Ryan's group and departed for Spain on 11 December 1936. Kerney was requested to contact the republican Spanish Government Authorities and seek Wood's return on account of his being a
legal minor still. Kerney was unable to establish Wood's movements, however. News of his death did not reach Ireland until 1937, and early reports were confused. In his autobiography, the
political commissar of the column
Michael O'Riordan, reported that on 21 January, Ryan wrote that Wood had been wounded but did not list him among the dead. On 6 February, Ryan wrote to the
Irish Communist Party's paper,
The Worker, that Wood had been "slightly wounded and [was] progressing favourably". It was believed Wood was suffering from
shell shock as the result of an air raid, but alive. However, ten days later, the
Irish Democrat carried an obituary with a message from Ryan. In it, they state that Ryan wrote to Wood's parents and said he was wounded above the left knee and required hospital treatment. He was carried off the field by the English communist and historian
Ralph Winston Fox and ex-
British soldier and
Auxiliary George Nathan, but after being collected by
stretcher bearers, he was hit again, this time in the head. Throughout this, he remained conscious, said Ryan, before dying on 29 December. Ryan suggested the late arrival of news was the result of a local confusion with the surname 'Wools', which was the name of a Dutch volunteer in the same hospital at the time. ==In culture==