Background
Woodson was born on a farm in Albemarle County, Virginia and orphaned at age 7.
Woodson was born on a farm in Albemarle County, Virginia and orphaned at age 7.
He was apprenticed as a printer and became quite skilled at the trade.
Foreign eight years Woodson served as coeditor and publisher of the Democratic newspaper Lynchburg Republican. In 1851, he became editor of the Richmond Republican-Advocate, another Democratic newspaper. Woodson was appointed secretary of the Kansas Territory by President Franklin Pierce on June 29, 1854 and took the oath of office in Washington, District of Columbia on September 28th, drawing an annual salary of $2,000.
Because he was fully sympathetic to those who wanted to make Kansas a slave state, he agreed with the wishes of the proslavery forces in the territory.
While Governor Andrew Reeder was away from the territory, Woodson became acting governor, signing the first laws passed by the territorial legislature. Even though this first territorial legislature was accepted by the federal government, free staters called the laws "bogus laws".
Altogether, Woodson served as acting governor for a little more than five months during the absences of governors Andrew Reeder, Wilson Shannon, and John West. Geary. Woodson spent his last years in Parker, Kansas where he was actively helping to establish a town which its residents believed would be located along a railroad line.
When the railroad bypassed Parker, most of the citizens – including Woodson – relocated to Coffeyville, Kansas.
Woodson operated a variety of newspapers, including the Coffeyville Journal. He was visiting Claremore, Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) when he died in 1894. Woodson County, Kansas was named for him in 1855.
lieutenant was the only county named for a Kansas territorial official, until 1889 when Davis County was renamed Geary County.