Joseph Woodward: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:1843 births]]
[[Category:1843 births]]
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[[Category:1917 deaths]]
[[Category:Union veterans]]
[[Category:US Army personnel]]
[[Category:Ranchers]]
[[Category:Industrialists]]
[[Category:Woodward Iron]]
[[Category:Woodward Iron]]
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[[Category:Bankers]]
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[[Category:Elmwood burials]]
[[Category:Elmwood burials]]

Revision as of 13:37, 4 November 2016

Joseph Woodward

Joseph Hersey Woodward (born December 1843 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; died December 15, 1917 in Birmingham) was the chairman and president of the Woodward Iron Company and a director and vice-president of the First National Bank of Birmingham.

Joseph was the son of Stimpson Harvey and Margaret Glass Woodward. He grew up in Wheeling, Virginia where his father was partner in the La Belle Iron Works and was educated at the Lindsley Institute there. During the Civil War West Virginia was admitted as a new state of the Union, and the Lindsley Institute's building served as its first capitol. Woodward, like his fellow cadets, enlisted with the United States Army. He served for three years before being discharged due to injury.

Woodward traveled to Alabama in 1869 to inspect investment property his father had purchased on Red Mountain and the Warrior Coal Field. He reported that the time wasn't yet ripe for development and moved to Taylor, Texas to operate a large cattle ranch.

Woodward returned to the booming Birmingham District in 1881. He and his brother William oversaw the founding and operation of the Woodward Iron Company, which was incorporated in December of that year with William as president and Joseph as secretary. The company put the first of the Woodward Furnaces into blast in 1883 and grew to become one of the nation's largest pig iron producers with an annual output of more than 250,000 tons. William left the business to his brother in 1886. Joseph's son, Rick Woodward took over as president in 1910.

Joseph Woodward married the former Martha Burt Metcalf and had three children: Bertha, Mary Margaret and Allen.

Woodward died in December 1917 after two years of infirmity, and is buried at Elmwood Cemetery.

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