Sir Matthew Wood, 1st Baronet


Sir Matthew Wood, 1st Baronet was a British Whig politician and was Lord Mayor of London from 1815 to 1817.

Origins

Matthew Wood was the son of William Wood, a serge maker from Exeter and Tiverton both in Devon, by his wife Catherine Cluse. He was descended from the Wood family of Hareston in the parish of Brixton in Devon, which the family had inherited by marriage to the heiress of the Carslake family. The present Page-Wood baronets quarter the arms of Carslake Argent, a bull's head erased sable.

Career

He was educated briefly at Blundell's School in Tiverton, before being obliged to help his ailing father. He was apprenticed to his cousin, an Exeter chemist and druggist, but moved to London in 1790 to set himself up in business.
He was a member of the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers, of which he became Prime Warden, a member of the Court of Aldermen of the City of London, and served as Sheriff of the City of London for 1809 and as Lord Mayor of London from 1815 to 1817. He was elected unopposed as a Member of Parliament for the City of London at a by-election in June 1817, following the resignation of Harvey Christian Combe MP. He held the seat until his death in 1843.
Wood was a prominent partisan and adviser of Queen Caroline on her return to England in 1820, a controversial role. Greville noted acerbically in his diary on 7 June 1820:

Wood's radicalism belied his very 19th century propensity for improving his and his family's lot. The brush with royalty may have given him ideas about fixing his status and his family's inheritance prospects. In 1836 the 'Gloucester millionaire', banker James 'Jemmy' Wood, and one of the richest men in the country, died, and the Alderman became one of his heirs. Matthew Wood was actually no relation to the millionaire despite their shared surname. It seems Jemmy Wood's feeble-minded sister was an admirer of Queen Caroline and had taken a shine to the Alderman, to the extent of leaving property to him when she died. Gaining more knowledge of the Gloucester Woods by living in his newly acquired property, the radical MP must have soon realized the vulnerability of the old banker and his fortune. In 1833, Jemmy gave the Alderman rent-free use of Hatherley House which the bank had acquired through a bankruptcy. The mutual back scratching led to Wood allowing Jemmy to send all his mail under parliamentary franked cover. Soon, the Alderman was setting his sights on a baronetcy not only for himself, but also for the old millionaire as a kind of backstop.
The story of the will is a very complex one, but it involved leaving the entire estate valued at nearly £1,000,000, to Alderman Wood and three other executors. Eventually, after a long court case against Wood and the other three executor-beneficiaries, on 20 Feb 1839 Judge Jenner in an extremely long and detailed verdict at the Arches Prerogative Court, London, 'decided that the terms were made by conspiracy and fraud, and ordered that the whole of the immense property should be divided amongst two relations'. And yet, within a couple of years, this verdict was overturned on appeal by Lord Lyndhurst, and the four men who had been accused of fraud were awarded what money and property was left after court costs were allowed for. The inheritance formed the basis of the Wood family fortunes and also that of John Chadborn's daughter's family, the Prices.
Alderman Wood was finally made a Baronet in 1837, of Hatherley House in Gloucestershire, the name of his country seat.

Marriage and children

On 5 November 1795 Wood married Maria Page, the daughter of John Page of Woodbridge in Suffolk, by whom he had six children:
  1. John-Page Wood, who became a Church of England vicar in Essex His daughter Katharine Wood was better known by her married name of Katharine O'Shea. Popularly known as Kitty O'Shea, her relationship with the Irish leader Charles Stewart Parnell led to a political scandal which caused his downfall. John's son Evelyn Wood was a Field Marshal and a recipient of the Victoria Cross.
  2. Maria-Elizabeth Wood
  3. Catharine Wood
  4. William Wood, 1st Baron Hatherley, a barrister and Liberal MP who served as Lord Chancellor from 1868 to 1872
  5. Western Wood, MP for the City of London 1861–63
  6. Henry-Wright Wood, died an infant