The story of John Wood's parents

The scent of forsythia and lilac blooms, their stems and sprigs snipped early that morning, wafted through the small home of the parents of Katherine Krauss in Palatine, N.Y. They were the last blooms of the season -- and as much ornamentation for the day's events as the Krausses' austere Reformed German Church tradition would admit.
On this day, May 24, 1792, Katherine would wed Dr. Daniel Wood, who had been a resident of Canajoharie and Palatine, N.Y., since the end of the Revolutionary War. The ceremony would be a subdued affair in the norm of the region's immigrants, who were from "Rhenish Palatinate" on the southwestern side of today's Germany for which Palatine was named. Their son John, born six years later, would be the founder of Quincy and Adams County.
The betrothed were anything but traditional. Wood had not been married. At 41, he was more than twice the age of his 18-year-old bride, Katy, a nickname that seemed to accentuate their differences. At least, Wood brought a favorable pedigree to the marriage. He was a physician, surgeon and propertied patriot.
At the beginning of the American Revolution, Dr. Wood joined the Orange County, N.Y., Militia. In March 1777, he was appointed a lieutenant -- and quickly promoted to captain -- to serve as surgeon in Col. William Malcolm's Continental Regiment, whose second-in-command was Lt. Col. Aaron Burr.
At the time of the Wood-Krauss wedding, Burr, a charismatic and ambitious New York politician, was a U.S. senator. Eight years later, he came within an electoral vote of becoming the third president of the United States. With the Electoral College vote tied at 70, however, the 1800 presidential election was thrown into the U.S. House of Representatives. There, the dominance of slave-state congressmen elected Virginian Thomas Jefferson president. Burr was relegated to the vice presidency.
In March 1778, Capt. Wood was ordered to Valley Forge, where Gen. George Washington's broken army was wintering. Wood treated soldiers for frostbite and diseases that for 2,500 of them were as deadly as the one-ounce lead balls of British muskets. Aware that Wood and his hospital service colleagues had saved many more men, however, Washington wrote a personal commendation to Dr. Wood, acknowledging "with deep appreciation the splendid care he gave to wounded and sick soldiers."
Wood resigned his commission in 1779. The sword he carried in the Revolutionary War is in the collection of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
Wood relocated to Palatine, where he met Katherine Krauss, later Americanized as Catherine Crouse. She accepted Wood's proposal of marriage. The Rev. John Henry Dysslip, pastor of St. John's German Reform Church, eight miles up the Mohawk River, performed the nuptials in an unadorned ceremony at the Krauss home.
As an honorably discharged military veteran, Wood was granted patents for three parcels of federal and state bounty land totaling 1,800 acres in New York. He and his wife moved to Sempronius Township, approximately 100 miles east of Palatine, where they settled on one of the grants of 600 acres. From their home, Wood built up his medical practice. Moravia historians recorded that he took the most complicated cases. But for reasons unknown, he had made a decision never to take money from his patients. Instead, he bartered for his services. If Catherine had lived in austere conditions in Palatine, her husband's business practices made them even more severe in Sempronius. Coin or script seldom passed through a family purse or pocket.
The couple's first child, Clarissa, was born May 31, 1796, and son John was born Dec. 20, 1798.
Whether it was their age difference, financial condition, loneliness, or some other reason, Catherine Wood abandoned her husband and two children in 1803. The couple's son John was 5 years old. The 1810 Federal Census showed Clarissa and John living with their father. Shortly afterward, however, Daniel sent them to live with his nephew -- and John's cousin, James Wood, on his Florida, N.Y., farm.
Estranged from her family, Catherine returned to Palatine and for the next 10 years cohabited with one John Weaver. Whether she had any desire to see Dr. Wood again, Weaver's will indicates that he forbade her from ever doing so.
The relationship of Catherine Wood and Weaver was one of more than convenience and survival. Over the decade of their cohabitation, Catherine bore Weaver three daughters. She was pregnant with their fourth when Weaver died in March 1813. The arrangement gave John Wood four stepsisters, although there is no record that he ever acknowledged them -- or his mother. In the years ahead, Wood made no effort to correct the stories of his Quincy friends and historians that his mother Catherine died when he was five years old.
Even after his death, Weaver sought to control Catherine's relationship with Dr. Wood. In his will, dated Feb. 27, 1813, Weaver left his estate to his only son by his earlier marriage, John Weaver Jr., and bequeathed to each of his daughters "begotten upon the body of Caty Wood with whom I have cohabited and still continue to cohabit the sum of eighty dollars" when they reached 21 years of age. His unborn child would receive $100 when 21.
Weaver was prepared to arrange for Catherine's support, but only if she met the stern conditions he laid out. He wrote:
"I also will, order & require that said Caty (with whom I have cohabited as aforesaid) shall live with and work & provide for her said children begotten by me as aforesaid, and also for my said son John until they shall have respectively come of age or married and that said Caty shall be decently maintained and furnished with all the necessaries of life by my said son John or at his expense so long as she manifest a good disposition towards her said children and my said son John by living with and working and providing for them as much as it is in her power reasonable to do, and so long as she remains the wife or widow of said Doctor Wood and lives separate and apart from him and doth not cohabit with any other living man on earth."
Catherine honored the stipulations -- or, if not honored, submitted to the force of Weaver's invisible hand -- until she learned of Wood's death. Although they had never reconciled, Wood and Catherine had reached an understanding that proved important when she had no resources of her own. Separated nearly a half century, they had remained married.
The 1840 Federal Census showed Dr. Wood, then 88, living with Thomas and Mary Ferguson near the home of Wood's daughter, Clarissa, and her second husband, James Berry, in Moravia, N.Y. Wood had retired from his medical practice and since 1836 had lived on a military pension of $40 monthly.
Shortly after Wood died on Oct. 3, 1843, Catherine applied for his pension as his widow. She then learned that three men, who had pledged to help her, used the power of attorney she had signed to apply for Wood's pension for themselves. With two sisters and a brother testifying for her, a court in early 1844 stopped the scam and Catherine was awarded the pension.
Five years later, Catherine Crouse Wood died and was buried in St. Johnsville, the town of the minister who had wed her to Dr. Daniel Wood 56 years earlier. In 1860, her son, Illinois Gov. John Wood, who had built a fortune, raised a family on his "farmstead" in Quincy, and had been elected on the Republican Party's first statewide ticket in 1856, returned to his birthplace in New York.
He had the body of his father, Dr. Daniel Wood, exhumed and removed, along with a large gravestone, to Quincy. Gov. Wood reinterred his father's body in the family plot at the heart of Woodland Cemetery. The governor had established Woodland in 1846 and reserved space for generations of family members to come.
He left the remains of his mother, Catherine, in New York.
Reg Ankrom is a member of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County, the author of a narrative history of Stephen A. Douglas, and speaks frequently on pre-Civil War history.
Sources
Ankrom, Reg. "Citizen Wood and His Woodland Cemetery," Quincy Herald-Whig, October 28, 2012.
Barkley, Cleve. "Dr. Daniel Wood's Revolutionary War Service," Quincy Herald Whig, August 31, 2014.
"Certificate of Pension 4832, New York, Daniel Wood," Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County (HSQAC) MS920 WOO, "Daniel Wood File."
"Certificate of Pension 8072, New York, Catharine Wood," HSQAC, MS9200 WOO File 2.
Cool, Ken. E-mail messages to author, July 15-August 14, 2014.
"Day, R., to Col. J.L. Edwards, Moravia N.Y. Jan 19, 1844."
Depositions of Clarissa Wood, Gertrude Best, Jacob Crouse, and Margaret Clause [sic], before John Darrow, Judge of Montgomery County Court, December 7, 1843. HSQAC, File 920 WOO, File 2.
"Descendants of Daniel [Dr.] WOOD," The Wood Families of Orange County, NY. Popenoe/Popnoe/Poppino & Allied Families, 2006.
"Genealogy of John Wood," HSQAC, MS 920 WOO, File 1.
"Revolutionary War-papers of Daniel Wood, father of John Wood." Quincy Public Library, Illinois Room File: Illinois-Quincy-Biography, John Wood & Descendants.
Underwood, Virginia. Moravia's Early Days. Moravia, New York: V. Underwood, Undated.
"U.S. Federal Census." National Archives and Records Administration, 1810 and 1850.
Walker, William Scott. "Application for Membership; National Society, Sons of the American Revolution," Vol. 360, http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=2204/ .
"Will of John Weaver, 27 Feb 1813." Transcribed by Ken Cool. Town of Palatine, Montgomery Co., NY. Will Book, Vol. 2.





