Asa Butler Wood (August 26, 1865 - May 7, 1945) was an American politician and newspaper publisher, serving as a state senator in the U.S. state of Nebraska from 1924 to 1930.
Life
Born in Wapello County, Iowa. Wood entered the newspaper business as a printer in his teens. In 1887, at the age of 21, he founded the Gering Courier, a newspaper he ran until his death in 1945. He was known as "the dean of the newspapermen of the Nebraska Panhandle,” and was at one time president of the Nebraska Press Association. He was also a breeder of cattle, and, like many publishers of that time, the local postmaster.
In 1925, he was elected state senator of Nebraska's Thirty-third District. He served as a Republican senator through 1930, and was known as an advocate of clean government and irrigation policy.
Described as a "walking encyclopedia" of western Nebraska history, he served as president of the Nebraska Historical Society from 1936 to 1938.
He left the Courier to his son, Warren Wood, on his death in 1945.
References
- ^ "A B Wood". Nebraska History. 26. Nebraska Historical Society: 52–53. 1945.
- ^ "Asa B. Wood". Lincoln Journal Star. 8 May 1945. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
- "Editor Becomes Candidate". Lincoln Journal Star. 18 May 1922. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
- "Editor Becomes Candidate (cont'd)". Lincoln Journal Star. 18 May 1922. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
- ^ "Publisher at Gering Dies". The Lincoln Star. 8 May 1945. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
- Shumway, Grant Lee (1921). History of Western Nebraska and Its People: General History. Cheyenne, Box Butte, Deuel, Garden, Sioux, Kimball, Morrill, Sheridan, Scotts Bluff, Banner, and Dawes Counties. A Group Often Called the Panhandle of Nebraska. Western publishing & engraving Company. p. 334.
Asa B. Wood.
- ^ Nebraska Blue Book, 1930. Lincoln, Nebraska: Nebraska. Legislative Reference Bureau. 1930. p. 270.