Philip Wadsworth (March 7, 1832 – September 12, 1901) was an American dry goods merchant, politician, and military leader. Born to the prominent Wadsworth family in New Hartford, Connecticut, he attended private academies until he was sixteen, when he entered the dry goods trade. In 1853, he moved to Chicago, Illinois to join his brother in his dry goods operation, eventually rising to become president of Philip Wadsworth & Co., a clothing store. Wadsworth was also interested in the military, and although he never officially served, he maintained a military company where soldiers could train in advance of the Civil War. Later in his life he returned to Connecticut where he served a two-year term in the Connecticut House of Representatives.
Philip Wadsworth was born on March 7, 1832 in New Hartford, Connecticut. The Wadsworths were a prominent family in Connecticut; his great uncle Jeremiah was a government official for the Continental Army and his father Tertius was a wealthy real estate developer. Philip Wadsworth was raised in New Hartford and attended public schools before studying at Williston Seminary and the Connecticut Baptist Literary Institute. After graduating at the age of sixteen, Wadsworth forwent further study at a college in favor of entering the dry goods business. He took a position in New York City, New York with Hopkins, Allen & Co., who specialized in importing European goods.
In 1853, Wadsworth's brother Elisha S. invited him to Chicago, Illinois to join the dry goods house of Cooley, Wadsworth & Co. Wadsworth rose to become the president of the clothing supplier spun off from the company, and after his co-partners died, it became known as Philip Wadsworth & Co. The company had annual revenues exceeding one million dollars, including a woolen goods manufactury in Boston, Massachusetts.