[1] Wethered held several local offices, and engaged in the manufacture of woolen goods at Wetheredville,[1] which was later renamed Dickeyville[2] and incorporated into Baltimore City.
[1] He was nominated as the Whig candidate for the Thirty-third Congress, but lost to Jacob Shower.
He also served as delegate from Baltimore County to the State convention which framed the Constitution of Maryland in 1867.
[1][4] He retired from active pursuits in 1868 and lived on his estate, "Ashland", near Catonsville, Maryland.
[1] This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress