Wood's German heritage helped him rise to governor

John Wood of Quincy was not his party's choice for lieutenant governor when Republicans met in their first statewide convention in Bloomington on May 29, 1856. Believing they needed the support of Illinois' German voters to win, delegates chose Francis Hoffman of DuPage County as the party's first candidate for the office. Earlier, they had nominated Peoria Congressman William H. Bissell for governor.
Democrats on May 1 nominated William A. Richardson of Quincy for governor. A longtime lieutenant of Illinois U.S. Sen. Stephen A. Douglas, Richardson had resigned from Congress to run. Second on the ticket was Richard J. Hamilton, a Chicago lawyer.
European immigrants had traditionally favored Democrats in statewide elections. But Republican leaders in 1856 believed the Kansas-Nebraska Act had changed that. Hoffman and many German voters abandoned the Democratic Party in droves after Douglas' Kansas-Nebraska Act became law in May 1854. The measure repealed the Missouri Compromise and opened federal territories to slavery. Having themselves felt the sting of oppression and fleeing Prussia in the 1840s, most German voters detested slavery.
Republicans wanted a German friend on the ballot and considered Hoffman the man to fill that need. Hoffman had been born in Herford, Prussia, in 1822, and fled in 1840. In the United States, he became a teacher, Lutheran minister, newspaper editor and banker. The state's German population regarded him highly. Soon after his nomination, however, Republicans discovered that he had not been naturalized for 14 years, as the state constitution required. Hoffman agreed to withdraw. Several Quincyans had been prominent in the creation of the Republican Party in Illinois and would be prominent in the counsel they provided about the man who would succeed Hoffman.
V.Y. Ralston, editor of the Quincy Whig, was among the editors of several Whig newspapers who gathered in Decatur in February 1856 to form a new party. Abraham Lincoln was the only non-editor invited. He drafted a platform and the resolution that called for a statewide convention of the new party at Major's Hall in Bloomington on May 29.
John Tillson Jr. of Quincy was elected one of the convention's five secretaries. Quincyan Edward Dudley, Adams County's first Republican county chair, was appointed to the party's state central committee and helped lead the call for the statewide convention. Before and during the convention, Quincyans took on important roles. None was more important than Orville Hickman Browning, who has been credited with saving the party's first convention.
Browning arrived in Bloomington the day before the convention, hoping to keep control of the convention in the hands of moderate and conservative men and out of the hands of radicals. He was alarmed to find that no resolutions or plan of organization had been prepared. Unless the "many discordant elements (could) be harmonized," he wrote in his diary that day, the convention would fall into chaos. Browning assembled 15 to 20 men "of all shades of opinion" to settle on an order for the proceedings and draft the first resolution, which was designed to persuade German delegates to reconcile to the convention's goals. The next morning, Browning prepared resolutions on the slavery question "then agitating the country." As Browning had counseled, conservative men were named to lead each committee. He and Lincoln were named to the Committee on Resolutions. Lincoln also chaired the committee that recommended Bissell and Hoffman for the top of the ticket. Each was nominated unanimously and without opposition.
Once Hoffman was off the ticket, Lincoln assembled his committee in Springfield to propose a new candidate. Lincoln nominated Wood, and the committee concurred. Wood was of German descent, an early employer of German emigrants, and was popular among Germans throughout Western Illinois.
Though a hero of the Mexican War, Bissell had not been well for some time. He had served three terms in Congress and retired in 1855 an invalid. He initially turned down the offer of the top spot on the Republican ballot. But he reconsidered and sent word to Bloomington -- he was ill at home at the time -- that he would accept.
Bissell made only one speech during the campaign. Illness confined him to his home the rest of the time and prevented him from going to the statehouse for his inauguration. Leaders of the General Assembly and members of the Supreme Court went to the governor's mansion for the swearing-in. Few others witnessed his inaugural.
Not once during the three years he was governor did Bissell go to the state capitol to attend his duties. Growing weaker almost daily, he worked from the second floor of the 16-room governor's mansion. History disputes the malady from which Bissell suffered. Publicly, the governor described his ailment as rheumatic or neuralgic. His personal physician and friend, Dr. John F. Snyder, however, said Bissell died of the effects of syphilis, which he said Bissell had contracted in Mexico during the war.
During his three years as lieutenant governor, John Wood's chief role was to be president of the Illinois Senate. He attended to his duty regularly and earned universal approval from senators for his administration. At the end of the term over which Wood first presided, the senate unanimously passed a resolution that said, "We have never observed a deliberate body dispatch business with such general harmony and good feeling. Gov. Wood metes out to all the same courtesy, and receives in return from all the same cordial feeling."
Wood was sworn in as the 12th governor of Illinois on March 18, 1860, the day Bissell died. Wood served 10 months as governor from Quincy. With the permission of legislative leaders, he conducted the state's business from an office he built on the south side of his home at 12th and State. Citing his business interests, Wood declined his party's request that he run for a full four-year term. His service as governor ended Jan. 18, 1861. Once again, he became Quincy's Citizen Wood.
Reg Ankrom is a member of the Historical Society and a local historian. He is a member of several history-related organizations, the author of a history of Stephen A. Douglas, and a frequent speaker on pre-Civil War history.
Sources
Orville Hickman Browning, The Diary of Orville Hickman Browning. Theodore Calvin Pease, ed. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Historical Society. 1925.
William E. Gienapp, The Origins of the Republican Party, 1852-1856. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987.
Robert P. Howard, Mostly Good and Competent Men: Illinois Governors, 1818-1988. Springfield, Illinois: Sangamon State University and Illinois State Historical Society, 1988.
Journal of the Senate of the General Assembly, State of Illinois, at Their Regular Session Begun, and Held, in Springfield. January 8. Springfield, Illinois: Lanphier & Walker Printers, 1857.
J.H.A Lacher, "Francis A Hoffman of Illinois and Hans Buschbauer of Wisconsin," Wisconsin Magazine of History.Vol. 13, No. 4, June 1930.
D.W. Lusk, Eighty Years of Illinois: Politics and Politicians, Anecdotes and Incidents. Springfield, Illinois: H.W. Rokker, 1889.
Reinhard H. Luthin, "Abraham Lincoln becomes a Republican," Political Science Quarterly, Vol 59, No 3 (Sept., 1944) The Academy of Political Science, 437.
"Lieut. Gov. Wood," The Quincy Weekly Whig. February 21, 1857.





