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RARE "Mayor of New York" Fernando Wood Hand Written Letter For Sale

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RARE "Mayor of New York" Fernando Wood Hand Written Letter:
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Up for sale a RARE! "Mayor of New York" Fernando Wood Hand Written Letter. 



ES-4694

Fernando Wood (June 14, 1812 –

February 14, 1881) was an American politician of the Democratic Party and

the 73rd and 75th mayor of New York City; he also served as a United 1863–1865, and 1867–1881) and as

Chairman of the Committee

on Ways and Means in both the 45th and 46th Congress

(1877–1881). A successful shipping merchant who became Grand Sachem of the political machine known as Tammany Hall,

Wood first served in Congress in 1841. In 1854 he was elected Mayor of New York

City. Reelected in 1860 after an electoral loss in 1857 by a narrow majority of

3,000 votes, Wood evinced support for the Confederate States during

the American Civil War,

suggesting to the New York City Council that

New York City secede from the U.S. and declare itself a free city in order to continue its profitable cotton

trade with the Confederacy. Wood's Democratic machine was concerned with

maintaining the revenues (which depended on Southern cotton) that fed the

system of patronage. Following his

service as mayor, Wood returned to the United States Congress. He

was one of the main opponents of the Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery. Wood, the son of Benjamin and Rebecca (Lehman)

Wood, and brother of United States Congressman Benjamin Wood was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His Spanish forename was chosen by his mother,

who found it in an English gothic novel written by George Walker, The Three Spaniards (London, 1800). His

parents were Quakers. The family moved to New York in 1821, where his

father opened a tobacconist store that failed. Shortly after, his father died.

Wood left school at age 13 and unsuccessfully attempted many occupations

throughout the eastern states. In the 1830s he attempted several failed

businesses in Manhattan. He first opened a wine and tobacco store which made

little profit. He then opened a ship chandler firm in 1835 which failed during the Panic of 1837. Finally, he opened a grocery and bar in 1838

which he was forced to close in 1840 because business was so poor.[1] At the age of 24, Wood became a member of

the Tammany Society and was chairman of the chief young men's

political organization in 1839. He helped to resolve the inner dispute between

the Loco-Focos and the conservative members of Tammany, won

approval of the Hall, which awarded him nomination as a candidate to U.S.

Congress, which he won in election.[1] He lost a subsequent election for U.S. Congress

and, afterward, reestablished his ship chandler business in the mid-1840s. This

business became successful and Wood gained additional wealth in a real estate

deal in 1848. William Tweed said of Wood, "I never yet went to get a

corner lot that I didn't find Wood had got in ahead of me." During the early years of the California Gold Rush, Wood and four other partners chartered a ship,

the John C. Cater, with goods and equipment to San Francisco. It

appeared as though the goods were sold at a profit. It was later discovered

that Wood obtained start-up capital from his brother-in-law, Edward E. Marvine,

via a fraudelent letter from California, and that Wood falsified many of the

documents. Marvine alleged that Wood cheated the investors of $20,000. Wood was

indicted by a grand jury, but the case was not initially brought to trial

because the court found that the statute of limitations expired a day before the

court was to rule on the matter. Eventually, the New York Supreme Court ordered Wood to pay Marvine $8,000. 

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