The shortened life of second son John Wood Jr.

John Wood Jr., born Dec. 11, 1830, was the third child and second son born to Quincy founder John Wood and his wife, Ann Streeter Wood.
Wood had married Ann M. Streeter of Salem, N.Y., daughter of Justice of the Peace Joshua Streeter in 1826, when Quincy was still a village.
The Woods' first child, a daughter, was named Ann after her mother; their first son, Daniel, was named after John Wood's father, as was the custom in naming patterns in the 19th century, and the second son, John, after his father. Joshua, born in 1837, was named after Ann's father.
The Woods had eight children between 1827 and 1842. After nearly 40 years of marriage, Ann Wood died in 1863. The couple had buried four of their last five children, Emily, Adah, Henry and James.
When John Jr. was 5 years old, the growing family moved into the newly built 14-room Greek Revival mansion on Wood's acreage at Twelfth and State streets.
The house's grandeur far exceeded any residence in Quincy in 1835, which was still dotted with log cabins.
As one of its first native born, young John would have experienced boyhood in a frontier town as it struggled and developed its infrastructure, civic framework and economy.
In 1849 when John was 18, he and his father, along with 17 other prominent citizens, traveled to California as the Gold Rush got underway.
The party left on Feb. 1, traveling by ship to the Panama isthmus, traversing the land and boarding the Pacific Mail Steamship Co. heading to San Francisco.
Until letters arrived from California relating early experiences, a rumor circulated locally that their steamship had wrecked in the Gulf of Mexico. The Western exploration was likely the first great adventure for John Jr. and another bold quest for his father, who led the party of adventurists. All but three returned within two years.
John Jr. was listed as living at home in the 1850 census and soon thereafter settled into married life. On Sept. 21, 1853, John Jr. married Josephine Skinner, the oldest daughter of Mrs. William Skinner of Quincy. Josephine and John had two daughters, Emma and Lucy, and a son, John III, was born in 1866.
Sometime in the early 1850s, Wood formed a partnership in a dry goods business with William S.M. Anderson.
Wood & Anderson was located on the corner of Fourth and Hampshire in what was referred to as the Long Low Store.
By the summer of 1854 the partnership dissolved by mutual consent.
A brief newspaper notice from Wood indicated that he sold his interest because of ill health. Though only 24, he was plagued by acute dyspepsia (indigestion), a chronic condition, the rest of his life.
William Anderson purchased Wood's interest and continued the business.
In 1855 John Wood Jr. entered the flour milling business. He joined Robert Bagby, an experienced miller, and George W. Burns, and started a business called Castle Mills. Bagby, Burns, and Wood was located between Hampshire and Vermont on Front Street.
The quality of the wheat grown here was known all over the country. Other wheat was brought by river from Minnesota and Wisconsin to be milled and shipped westward. It became one of the largest and most successful mills of the city, producing 20,000 barrels of flour in 1856.
When the Civil War broke out in April 1861, Wood enlisted in the Tenth Illinois Infantry, the three month regiment that went to Cairo, Ill., on April 22. Troops twice took part in reconnaissance movements.
In the summer of 1863 the milling business became Bagby & Wood when George Burns retired.
The mill operated another 10 years when sometime in 1873, Graves bought out Wood and the proprietors of Castle Mills became Bagby & Graves. Wood became a grain commissioner and regularly traveled the country as a salesman. His last affiliation was with L.C.A. Koening & Co. of St. Louis.
The Wood family met financial difficulties in the 1870s.
Court records on Feb. 21, 1870, indicate Wood was unable to meet his promissory note for his large home on the corner of Fifth and Cedar.
To help satisfy notes, lots nearby and in the John Wood Jr. addition were offered for public auction. The trustee's sale of Fifth and Cedar was recorded at the courthouse on Aug. 10, 1871.
The sale was finally slated for April 3, 1874. John Sr. was also experiencing financial straits.
In addition to other debt he had loaned his sons, Daniel and John, large sums of money. John Wood Sr. shared his concern to friend Orville Browning on March 6, 1873, as recorded in the Browning Diary.
A daughter of John Wood Jr., Emma Wood Gard, died in 1878. Wood's wife, Josephine, to whom he was devoted, died in 1883. He married her sister, Mary Skinner, on Jan. 6, 1885.
The city was profoundly shocked on Nov. 23, 1889, as the word spread that 59-year-old John Wood Jr. had committed suicide. The startling tragedy was chronicled in the newspapers as Wood's steps on his last day were recounted. He had purchased groceries at Twelfth and Hampshire at 9 a.m., gone to his office in the Newcomb Hotel and had a shave at 11 a.m.
After leaving his office around noon he walked to Woodland Cemetery on South Fifth Street.
Using the pistol he had taken from home, Wood ended his life by the graves of his father and first wife.
The funeral was at St. John's Cathedral on Nov. 25, 1889. By this time, the Quincy Daily Journal stated that family and friends recounted that the deceased had talked about self-destruction for some time.
His obituary in the Quincy Whig stated, "The generous, the pleasant son of the first settler of Quincy is no more, and he will be missed by many."
Iris Nelson is reference librarian and archivist at Quincy Public Library, a civic volunteer and member of the Lincoln-Douglas Debate Interpretive Center Advisory Board and other historical organizations. She is a local historian and author.





