Page:Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1900, volume 5).djvu/625

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SMITH
SMITH

He removed to Torresdale, Pa., in 1865, and resided there until his death. In the spring of 1887 he be- came engaged in the business department of the " Star," New York city. He was an active member of the Loyal legion. See " Life and Letters." ed- ited by his son Walter G. Smith (New York, 1898).


SMITH, Thomas Luchlnn, artist, b. in Glas- gow, Scotland, 2 Dec., 1835 ; d. in New York, 5 Nov., 1884. He came to the United States at an early age, and was for a time the pupil of George II. Boughton at Albany, N. Y., where he opened a studio in 1859. Three years later he removed to New York, and in 1869 was elected an associate of the National academy. He devoted himself chiefly to painting winter scenes. His " Deserted House " and " Eve of St. Agnes " were at the Centennial ex- hibition at Philadelphia in 1876.


SMITH, William, jurist, b. in Newport-Pag- nell, Buckinghamshire, England, 8 Oct., 1697 ; d. in New York city, 22 Nov., 1769. His father, Thomas, a tallow-chandler, came to this country on account of his religious opinions in 1715, ac- companied by his three sons. William was brought up as a Calvinist and a republican, was graduated at Yale in 1719, served as tutor there for five years, and in 1724 returned to New York city and was admitted to the bar. His eloquence and address soon brought him into notice, but in 1733 he was disbarred on account of his participation as coun- sel in a lawsuit against Gov. William Cosby, where the principle that was involved was the right of the provincial council to provide a salary for one of their own number as acting governor during the interval between the death of one royal ap- pointee and the arrival of another. He was re- stmvd in 1736, and his son, William Smith, the his- torian, recites as an instance of his eloquence that by his consummate art in telling the story of the crucifixion he succeeded in inducing the New York assembly to reject all the votes of the Jewish mem- bers, and so to establish the disputed election of his client. He also practised extensively in Con- necticut, and in 1743-'4 was counsel for that col- ony in their case against the Mohegan Indians. He was appointed attorney-general and advocate- general by Gov. George Clinton in 1751, succeed- ing Richard Bradley, and served one year, but was not confirmed by the royal authorities. He became a member of the governor's council in 1753, and held office till 1767, when he was succeeded by his son, William. In that capacity he attended the congress of the colonies that was held in Albany, N. Y., in June, 1754, and was the member from New York of the committee to draft the plan of union, which he earnestly favored. In the same month he was a commissioner to fix the boundary- lines between New York and Massachusetts. He declined the office of chief justice of New York in 1760, became the associate justice of the same court in 1763, and held office until his death. The " New York Gazette " of the next week described him as " a gentleman of great erudition, the most eloquent speaker in the province, and a zealous and inflexible friend to the cause of religion and liberty." His son, William, historian, b. in New York city. 25 June, 1728 ; d. in Quebec, Canada, 3 Nov., 1793, was graduated at Yale in 1745, studied law, was admitted to the bar of New York city, and soon acquired an extensive practice. He was an eloquent speaker, and many of his law opinions were collected and recorded by George Chalmers in his " Opinions on Interesting Subjects arising from American Independence" (1784). He became chief justice of the provinces of New York in 1763, succeeded his father as a member of the council in 1767, and held office nominally till 1782. Dur- ing the Revolution he seems to have been at a loss as to which cause he should espouse. Gov. Try on wrote In Lord George Germaine, 24 Sept., 1776, that "Smith has with- drawn to his plantation up the North river, and has not been heard from for five months." It is | probable he real- ly joined the loyalists about 1778 ; previous to that year he had been confined on pa- role at Livingston Manor on the Hudson. But as he was in pos- session of his costly furniture, his servants and his family, and none of his property had been confiscated, it

is probable that the

Americans did not consider him wholly inimical to them. When he finally attached himself to the British cause the Whigs wrote scurrilous verses on his apostasy, and called him the weather-cock. The royalists welcomed him with honors, although his motives were strongly suspected. He went to England in 1783 with the British troops, became chief justice of Canada in 1786, and held office until his death. He was an upright and just judge, and, among the minor changes that he instituted in the courts, established the office of constable, whose duties before his administration had devolved upon the soldiers. He was intimate with many eminent English statesmen. He. published, with William Livingston, "Revised Laws of New York, 1690-1762" (New York, 1762), and " History of the Province of New York from its Discovery in 1732," of which Chancellor James Kent says : " It is as dry as ordinary annals," and which John Neal calls " a dull, heavy, and circumstantial affair" (London, 1793 ; republished, with additions by William Smith, the third, 1814). The second William's son, William, historian, b. in New York, 7 Feb., 1769 ; d. in Quebec, Canada, 17 Dec., 1847, accompanied his father to England in 1783, and returned with him to Canada in 1786, meanwhile attending a grammar-school near Kensington, England. He became successively clerk of the provincial parliament, master in chancery, and in 1814 secretary of state for the colonies and a member of the executive council. He published a " History of Canada from its Discovery " (2 vols., Quebec, 1815). Another son of the first William, Joshua Hett, lawyer, b. in New York city in 1736 ; d. there in 1818, was educated for the bar, and practised with success. During the Revolution he was a Tory in politics, and in Benedict Arnold's treason in 1780 figured as his tool or accomplice. When Andre went up the Hudson river to meet Arnold, the two conspirators passed the night of 22 Sept. at Smith's house. When the plot was complete Andre was ready to return, but, for some reason that Smith never explained, the latter refused to carry him on board the " Vulture," but accompanied him by land to a place of supposed safety, exchanging coats before they parted, for the better protection of Andre. Smith was subsequently tried by a military court for his connect imi with the affair, and was acquitted, but taken into custody by the civil authorities and committed to jail. After several months' imprisonment he escaped in woman's dress and made his way to New