Levi Heywood Greenwood | |
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Levi H. Greenwood
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Member of the Massachusetts State Senate 3rd Worcester District |
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In office January 1909 – January 1913 |
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Preceded by | J. Lovell Johnson |
Succeeded by | Edward Sibley |
President of the Massachusetts State Senate |
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In office January, 1912 – January, 1913 |
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Preceded by | Allen T. Treadway |
Succeeded by | Calvin Coolidge |
Personal details | |
Born | December 22, 1872 Gardner, Massachusetts |
Died | April 7, 1930 Tucson, Arizona |
(aged 57)
Political party | Republican |
Spouse(s) | Mary Alberta Cann |
Children | Eleanor Greenwood (Hornblower), Margaret Greenwood Richard N. Greenwood Robert E. Greenwood |
Alma mater |
St. Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire Harvard College, Class of 1896 |
Profession | Newspaper Publisher Manufacture of Furniture. |
Levi Heywood Greenwood (December 22, 1872 – April 7, 1930) was a businessman and Republican politician from Massachusetts in the late 19th and early 20th century. He was the father of former Fitchburg Mayor Robert E. Greenwood.
Greenwood was born in Gardner, Massachusetts, to Alvni M. and Helen R. Greenwood, on December 22, 1872.
Greenwood married Mary Alberta Cann of Brooklyn, New York on February 11, 1895. They had four children, Eleanor Greenwood (Hornblower), Margaret Greenwood, Richard Neal Greenwood and Robert E. Greenwood.
Greenwood was President of the Massachusetts State Senate in 1912 and 1913.
In 1913 election, Greenwood had initially decided not to run for re-election the Senate but to run for Lieutenant Governor. He then changed his mind. His opposition to giving women the right to vote caused him to be a focus of opposition by the suffragist movement, and suffragists threw their support to Edward Sibley, Greenwood's opponent, which helped Sibley win.
Greenwood was the Publisher and President of The Gardner News of Gardner, Massachusetts.
In 1912, Greenwood was one of the directors of Heywood Brothers and Wakefield Co, manufacturers of Rattan & Reed Furniture in Gardner. By 1921 Greenwood was one of the owners By 1926 he was the President of the Heywood-Wakefield Company.
Greenwood was also a corporate director of several banks (The First National Bank of Boston, The First National Bank of Gardner) and street railways (The Paducah Light and Traction Company, The Galveston-Houston Electric Company, and the Columbus Electric Company).