Bedford County PA Archives Biographies.....Smith, Rufus E. ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Banja jbanja@msn.com May 2003 RUFUS E. SMITH is a well-known and influential citizen of Hopewell township, Pa., where he is now serving as a member of the local school board. He was born October 17, 1844, in Muskingum County, Ohio, a son of John P. and Maria (Eaches) Smith. His father was the son of a pioneer of Bedford County, and was himself a resident of Hopewell township a large part of his active career, as he returned from Ohio in 1847. Rufus E. Smith was but three years old when he came with his parents from his birthplace in Ohio to Hopewell. Here he was bred and educated. When twenty years of age, in 1864, he enlisted in Company C, Two Hundred and Fifth Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, which became a part of the Ninth Corps of the Army of the Potomac. He was at the front in the battle of Fort Steadman, on March 25, 1865, and afterward at the siege of Petersburg was in various skirmishes, besides which, on April 2 of that memorable year, he was one of the assailants who made the brave charge upon the Confederate forces before that city. He likewise fought in the engagements at Weldon Railroad and Hatcher's Run. Honorably discharged from the service in the summer of 1865 at Alexandria, Va., he returned at once to Hopewell, where he has since been an esteemed resident. During a part of Grant's second term and again during a part of the administration of President Arthur, making six years in all, he held the office of Storekeeper and Gauger of the Sixteenth Internal Revenue District. He was also for a brief period a mail clerk on the route between Huntingdon and Cumberland, Pa. Mr. Smith has for several years been Auditor of Hopewell township, and is now serving his second term as a School Director. Politically, he is a sound Republican and actively in favor of all enterprises conducive to the public welfare. Fraternally, he is a member of the L. R. Piper Post, G.A.R., of Hopewell, which he served one year as Commander. Of later years he has confined his attention to agricultural pursuits. He has a fine farm of one hundred acres, which in regard to appointments and improvements ranks second to none in the vicinity, and he is carrying on general farming with eminent success. On May 6, 1875, Mr. Smith married Miss Margaret McCleary, of Hopewell township, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Smith are the parents of eleven children, namely: Lena, William H., James A., John P., Mary M., Franklin C.; Joseph M., Rufus E., Jr., Harriet A., Robert, and Clarence. Source: Bedford Biographical Review, 1899, Bedford Co., Pa