From a metropolitan commercial background, Woodd became Conservative MP for Knaresborough after acquiring a local country seat. He made a limited impact in the chamber, but became an active and well-respected committee-man.
The Woodds could trace their Yorkshire roots back to 1450, although the family had moved to Shinewood, Shropshire before 1525.
Woodd became a magistrate for the West Riding in 1842 and for the North Riding the following year, giving ‘regular attendance’ on the bench.
Woodd stood as a Conservative at Knaresborough in 1852 after another candidate withdrew. He abandoned his previous stance on the corn laws, stating that he would not support the re-imposition of protection, although he would ‘willingly assist’ any effort to relieve the agricultural interest without injuring another class. He favoured ‘economy and retrenchment’ and ‘all practicable reforms’ in the courts of law and equity.
Woodd took his seat, 26 Apr. 1853, and cast his first vote in the division lobbies the following day.
Seeking re-election in 1857, when he was commended to voters as ‘a Conservative of the moderate school’, Woodd declared that ‘all the pledges – pledges they were not, but promises – he had made to them, he had faithfully kept’. Alongside his commitment to free trade, he wished to see national expenditure brought within ‘a reasonable limit’ and income tax reduced. He endorsed the system of education grants, but suggested that larger grants be given to areas where it was difficult to collect school fees. Having voted against the premier on Canton, he observed that ‘he could not say he was a supporter of Lord Palmerston; but he would always support him in measures which he believed were right, – and he was very often right’.
Woodd initially voted with Palmerston on the conspiracy to murder question, 9 Feb. 1858, but opposed him in the critical vote of 17 Feb. In March 1858 he accompanied a deputation to the home secretary on the licensing of beer-houses.
Woodd’s voting habits remained unchanged, routinely opposing the abolition of church rates, the Maynooth grant, the ballot and electoral reform. He also divided against the abolition of religious tests at Oxford university, 16 Mar. 1864. He made his first contributions to debate in 1860, defending the interests of wine merchants. He asked questions on the wine duties, 23, 27 Feb. 1860, warning on the latter occasion that the retrospective application of a new level of duties might open the door to fraud, and contending that ‘the wine trade did not ask for any favour, but merely justice’. He again displayed his knowledge of his family business when commenting on the details of the refreshment houses and wine licences bill in May 1860.
In 1863 Woodd became a director of the London and Northern Bank, founded the previous year,
Seeking re-election in 1865 Woodd addressed his first public meeting in Knaresborough for six years. Noting that he had had many private opportunities to hear ‘any objections they had’ to his parliamentary conduct, he condemned ‘the system which now so generally prevailed of annual meetings between electors and members, upon the principle that when he was sent to Parliament he went there not as a delegate but as a representative, and not bound to answer at certain intervals as to the course he took’. Although he opposed many of Gladstone’s policies, he was pleased to see the national finances ‘in a flourishing condition’, and unlike many of his party wished to retain the malt tax as a valuable source of revenue. He favoured a non-interventionist foreign policy. He considered lowering the franchise ‘a most dangerous step to take’, both in relation to Baines’s £6 borough franchise bill and Locke King’s £10 county franchise bill, and reiterated his opposition to the ballot. On the thorny question of church rates he professed support for a plan to relieve Dissenters.
Woodd divided against the Liberal ministry’s reform bill, 27 Apr. 1866. He generally followed the Conservative leaders into the division lobby on the major clauses of their reform bill in 1867. He was among 70 Conservatives who divided for Laing’s amendment for the partial disfranchisement of one MP from boroughs with populations under 10,000, 31 May 1867 – thereby depriving Knaresborough of one seat – but resisted the complete disfranchisement of boroughs of under 5,000 people, 3 June 1867, a threshold which Knaresborough only marginally exceeded.
Woodd’s decision to step down at the 1868 general election was ascribed by later accounts to ‘ill-health’,
In 1874 Woodd was re-elected for Knaresborough. He was chairman of the general committee on railway and canal bills, 1876-80.
Thereafter Woodd took an increasingly significant role in local government. Having previously served as deputy chairman of the West Riding quarter sessions, he became chairman in 1885, reluctantly retiring in 1892 when he began having difficulties hearing witnesses, although he remained a magistrate.
Having been ‘in feeble health’ and suffering from ‘chronic rheumatism’ for some time, Woodd in 1895 spent five weeks at Bath in the hope of alleviating an ‘ailment in his legs’.
