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William Wood (banker, born 1808)

William Wood was a Scottish-American banker.

Early life
Wood was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on October 21, 1808. His father was a prominent Glasgow merchant and banker who could trace his lineage back to Admiral Sir Andrew Wood, a hero of the British Navy. At age 7, he went to William Angus' Grammar School in St. Mungo for two years, followed by the Glasgow Grammar School and Dr. Duncan's School at Ruthwell. In October 1821, he entered The Glasgow Academy until age sixteen, when he matriculated at the University of St Andrews, where he took the second and third mathematical prizes. After St Andrews, he attended the University of Glasgow where he took the highest prize in Natural Philosophy. ==Career==
Career
Shortly after his graduation, he began working in the family mercantile business J. & R. Dennistoun & Company. On November 3, 1828, he came to the United States for the firm, remaining only a short time before he returned to Scotland. In 1830, he returned to New York on Hibernia, married there, and returned to Glasgow, where he stayed until 1832 when he relocated to Liverpool to manage the branch of the business there. While in Liverpool, "in conjunction with Richard Cobden, he canvassed South Lancashire in the interests of the senior partner of Brown Brothers, the eminent banking house, who was about to seek the votes of that constituency for election to Parliament." In June 1870, he was appointed to the commission to expand Broadway to succeed Alexander Turney Stewart who retired. Wood served on the Board of Education until April 4, 1873 "when the Reform Party legislated him out of office." He was reappointed by Mayor William H. Wickham as a Commissioner of Education and eventually became President of the Board, serving almost twenty years where he was instrumental in the establishment of the Normal College for the training of teachers. Social and club life Wood was a member of the Century Association and served as an elder of the Collegiate Dutch Reformed Church, although a member of the Congregational Church. In December 1828, he was elected a member of the Saint Andrew's Society of the State of New York and served as president of the society from 1865 to 1867. ==Personal life==
Personal life
, . On September 15, 1830, he was married to Harriet Amelia Kane (1810–1846), daughter of John Kane and Maria (née Codwise) Kane. • John Walter Wood (1831–1905), who married Sabina Redmond (1836–1905), sister of Goold H. Redmond and Annie Redmond Cross. • Charlotte Matilda Wood (b. 1832), who married the Rev. Edward Bell, Vicar of Wakefield. • Elizabeth Dennistoun Wood (1836–1909), who married her second cousin, Thomas Leiper Kane, son of John Kintzing Kane, a United States District Court judge (his father was a first cousin of her mother). • Harriet Maria Wood (1838–1904), who died unmarried. • William Wood Jr. (1841–1867) • Helen Kane Wood (1843–1919), who married George Burghall Watts Jr. After his first wife's death giving birth to their seventh child, he remarried to Margaret Lawrence (1823–1871), the daughter of James Van Horne Lawrence and Emily Augusta (née Kane) Lawrence. Together, they were the parents of four children, • Dennistoun Wood (d. 1904), who married Edith Phillips, daughter of Howard C. Phillips, on January 2, 1875. • Chalmers Wood (1856–1924), who married Ellen Appleton Smith, daughter of John Cotton Smith. • Henry Duncan Wood, who married Ellen E. Pulsifer, daughter of William H. Pulsifer of St. Louis, Missouri, on April 24, 1878. After a funeral at the Collegiate Reformed Church, he was buried at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. ==References==
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