S. S. Smith Biography This biography is from "Memorial and biographical record; an illustrated compendium of biography, containing a compendium of local biography, including biographical sketches of prominent old settlers and representative citizens of South Dakota..." Published by G. A. Ogle & Co., Chicago, 1899. Pages 354-355 Scan, OCR and editing by Maurice Krueger,mkrueger@iw.net, 1998. This file may be freely copied by individuals and non-profit organizations for their private use. Any other use, including publication, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission by electronic, mechanical, or other means requires the written approval of the file's author. This file is part of the SDGENWEB Archives. If you arrived here inside a frame or from a link from somewhere else, our front door is at http://usgwarchives.org/sd/sdfiles.htm S. S. SMITH is one of the wide-awake and progressive citizens that Canada has furnished to the United States. Though born across the border, he is thoroughly American in thought and feeling, and his patriotism and sincere love for the stars and stripes was manifest by his service in the Civil war. His career is identified with Jackson township, Sanborn county, South Dakota, where he has acquired a competence and where he is an honored and respected citizen. Mr. Smith was born in Ontario, Canada, in 1840, and is a son of John B. Smith, a native of Long Island, New York, who was murdered before our subject was born. The father was engaged in' merchandising and also owned and operated a sawmill and flour mill. Our subject was reared upon a farm in Canada until seventeen years of age when he came to the United States and worked as a farm hand until after the Civil war broke out. In 1862, he enlisted in Company H, Twentieth Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, which was assigned to the Thirteenth Army Corps, and participated in many battles and skirmishes with the army of the west. He took part in the siege of Vicksburg, the Red river expedition, the battle of Mobile and the capture of Fort Morgan, Fort Blakely and Spanish Fort, where his hearing was almost totally destroyed. At the close of the war he was honorably discharged in July, 1865. Practically he never attended school in his life and the greater part of his education was acquired in the United States service. After being mustered out, Mr. Smith resumed farming in Wisconsin, where he remained seven years, and then went to Minnesota, where he worked in the lumber woods and at farming. He was also in the employ of a machine firm for about twelve years, keeping books and buying and selling wheat, stock, etc., for them until his hearing gave way almost entirely. In 1870 he came to Sanborn county, South Dakota, and located on sections 4 and 9, and after erecting thereon a shanty, 12 x 14 feet, commenced to break and cultivate his land. When he settled there, there was only one house between his farm and Huron, the nearest railroad station, and here he began life with a capital of just twenty dollars. He is now the owner, however, of a fine farm of two hundred acres, of which one hundred and five acres are under a high state of cultivation, and the buildings, which are all painted and in good condition, consist of a small but comfortable residence, a large barn, 32 x 40 feet, with a nine foot-basement, corn-cribs, granaries, etc. The place is also adorned with forest and plum trees which add greatly to its attractive appearance. In days gone by Mr. Smith raised as high as three thousand bushels of grain, and though he is still successfully engaged in general farming, he has upon his place a general repair shop, where he does all kinds of repairing for his neighbors, being a first class mechanic, able to do almost anything in that line. In 1888, Mr. Smith was out in a blizzard for about three hours, and his face was badly frozen, but he found his way in safety. In the course of his life he has met with several serious accidents, breaking both legs, one arm, and one finger at three different times, but he is still quite active and well preserved for one of his years. During his early life in Dakota, he did considerable trapping and one winter lived in a tent and boarded himself on about ninety-eight cents per week, while he trapped one thousand muskrats, forty beaver, eighty-two mink, three wolves, two wild cats and a few other smaller animals. Socially he affiliates with the Grand Army of the Republic, and politically is a stanch Republican. Though not a prohibitionist he is strictly temperate and his life in many respects-is well worthy of emulation.