Smith was born on August 31, 1787, in Trappe, Pennsylvania. He moved with his father to Philadelphia in 1792 and was educated in a prestigious preparatory school there. In 1799, he entered Latin school, but soon his education was taken over by his paternal grandfather, Reverend William Smith—who had been the first provost of the College of Philadelphia.[1] In 1803, his father, William Moore Smith, was appointed one of the commissioners to England to negotiate the ongoing adjustments and claims related to the "Jay Treaty" of 1795. The 16-year-old Smith was then employed by his father as a private secretary and accompanied him on his mission to the United Kingdom.[2][3]
He returned to the United States in 1805 and studied law. In 1808, he was admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar and moved to Huntingdon, Pennsylvania—a town that had been laid out by his grandfather—where he started his legal practice. In 1811, he was appointed Deputy Attorney General for nearby Cambria County.[2]
On March 25, 1837, Smith was appointed commissioner for the United States, along with Wisconsin Territory Governor Henry Dodge, to negotiate with the Chippewa to purchase Ojibwe lands.[8] He arrived too late; Dodge had already single-handedly wrested old growth pine and millsites in the future east central Minnesota and central Wisconsin from the assembled Ojibwe by a treaty negotiated at Fort Snelling in late July 1837.[9] In 1838 Smith published his travel notes as Observations on the Wisconsin Territory: Chiefly on That Part Called the Wisconsin Land District: With a Map, Exhibiting the Settled Parts of the Territory. As laid off in Counties by Act of the Legislature in 1837.[10]
Following the treaty, Smith remained in the Wisconsin Territory, and, in 1839, was appointed adjutant general of the Wisconsin Territorial militia. He retained this office by a vote of the Legislature after Wisconsin achieved statehood in 1848, relinquishing it in 1852 after nearly 13 years in command of the Wisconsin Militia.[2] He also became heavily involved with the emerging Democratic Party in the Wisconsin Territory, presiding over the first convention of the party in the territory, in 1840, and drafted the address of the party to the people of the territory.
In 1846, Smith was hired as Clerk of the Legislative Council (the upper body of the territorial legislature) and, that same year, was elected as one of Iowa County's delegates to Wisconsin's first constitutional convention. He sat in the chair of the constitutional convention when it first convened until the convention was able to elect a president.[11] The constitution produced by this convention was ultimately rejected by the voters and another attempt was made in 1848, which produced the Constitution of Wisconsin.
After Wisconsin achieved statehood, in the 2nd session of the Wisconsin State Senate (1849), the members elected Smith as Chief Clerk of the Senate. He was re-elected for another term in the 3rd Legislature (1850).[12] In 1852, Smith was commissioned by the Legislature to compose a documentary history of Wisconsin and, at the creation of the Wisconsin Historical Society, Smith was appointed the first President of the organization. He ultimately produced two volumes of a planned three volume history.[13]
In 1855, Smith was elected the 5th Attorney General of Wisconsin, in the first statewide elections after the creation of the Republican Party. Smith defeated Republican candidate Alexander Randall, who, two years later, would be elected Governor. Immediately after taking office, Smith was confronted by the controversy over the disputed results of the 1855 Wisconsin gubernatorial election—in which both Republican candidate, Coles Bashford, and Democratic candidate, William A. Barstow, claimed victory. Smith ultimately referred the matter to the Wisconsin Supreme Court on the information provided by Bashford that Barstow's majority relied on fraudulent returns. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Bashford and he was ultimately installed as Governor.[14]
After leaving office in 1857, Smith largely retired from public affairs.[2]
Personal life and family
Smith was married twice. His first wife, Eliza Anthony, was a granddaughter of Michael Hillegas, who had been the first Treasurer of the United States. Smith and Eliza Anthony were married March 17, 1809, and she died in 1821. In 1823, Smith married Mary Campbell Van Dyke, a niece of Congressman Thomas Jefferson Campbell of Tennessee.
With his first wife, Smith had at least one child:
William Anthony Smith became a medical doctor and served as a surgeon in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Earlier in his life, he raised a company of militia known as the Cambria Guards who served in the Mexican American War.[15]
With his second wife, Smith had at least four children:
Penelope "Nellie" Smith married William T. Henry and moved to Sacramento, California, dying at age 22.
John Montgomery Smith also served one term in the Wisconsin State Assembly, in 1892.
Maria Letitia Smith died of a lung disease at age 16.
In addition to his political interests, Smith was active in the masonic organizations of Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and had served as Grand Master of both state organizations. He died on August 22, 1868, while visiting one of his daughters living in Quincy, Illinois. He was interred at Graceland Cemetery in Mineral Point.[17] Sources indicate Smith had eight children still living at the time of his death.[7]
^ abcdefgCrawford, George; Crawford, Robert M., eds. (1913). "Biographical". Memoirs of Iowa County, Wisconsin. Northwestern Historical Association. pp. 165–167. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
^Heg, J. E., ed. (1882). "Annals of the Legislature". The Blue Book of the state of Wisconsin (Report). State of Wisconsin. pp. 179, 180. Retrieved August 7, 2020.