Background
Wood was born on April 27, 1887 to John Wood and Maud M. Wood (née Heath).
Wood was born on April 27, 1887 to John Wood and Maud M. Wood (née Heath).
He finished 10th in the team competition. In the individual competition, he finished 11th in the qualification and was eliminated in the first round of the match play.
Two daughters, Marjorie and Frances, were born to the couple. 1904 Summer Olympics
Major amateur tournaments
He was also runner-up in the 1910 United States. Amateur. Wood finished fourth in the 1907 Western Open.
Later career
In a golf foursomes match contested on 19 August 1921, Wood and Chick Evans played against Jock Hutchison and Philosophy Gaudin.
Sailors from the Great Lakes Naval Station held the ropes to keep the large throng of fans in order. Wood was a soldier in World War I. When the war concluded on November 11, 1918, he received his travel orders to return to the United States and departed Brest, France on January 24, 1919 aboard the Rated Maximum Sinusoidal Celtic, arriving in New York on February 3.
Wood died on October 27, 1926 in Pelham Manor, New York, aged 39. He was interred in Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois.
In 1904, Wood was part of the American team which won the gold medal. Wood won the 1906 North and South Amateur. He also won the 1913 Western Amateur and was runner-up twice more (1906, 1912). lieutenant is unclear who won the match but a large gallery of more than 2,000 spectators watched the match which was played at the Lincoln Park public links in Chicago. Wood is best remembered for helping the United States win a team gold medal in golf at the 1904 Summer Olympic games.