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  Smith, Daniel
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationDemocratic-Republican   
NameDaniel Smith
Address
Hendersonville, Tennessee , United States
EmailNone
WebsiteNone
Born October 29, 1748
DiedJune 16, 1818 (69 years)
ContributorThomas Walker
Last ModifedThomas Walker
Jan 07, 2008 10:46am
Tags
InfoDaniel Smith (October 29, 1748–June 16, 1818) was a surveyor, an American Revolutionary War patriot, and twice a United States Senator from Tennessee.

Smith was born in auckland Stafford County, Virginia. He attended the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. Becoming a surveyor, he moved to Augusta County, Virginia, becoming deputy surveyor of that county in 1773. He fought in Indian Wars and of militia. He became Sheriff of Augusta County in 1780 and was commissioned a colonel, fighting in some of the later battles of the Revolutionary War. On October 5, 1781, Smith was appointed "Assistant Deputy Surveyor" (presumably of the Southern Department under Thomas Hutchins) of the Continental Army (see Department of the Geographer to the Army, 1777-1783). At the close of the war he moved to what became Sumner County, Tennessee to occupy his land grant.

Smith surveyed what became the site of the town of Nashville, Tennessee. He was a member of the 1789 North Carolina convention which voted to ratify the United States Constitution. In 1790, President George Washington named him Secretary of the Southwest Territory. Smith was a member of the convention that wrote the Tennessee State Constitution of 1796, which came into effect with its statehood on June 1, 1796. Smith prepared the first official map of Tennessee.

Smith was later appointed as United States Senator when Andrew Jackson resigned from that position (for the first time), serving from October 6, 1798 to March 3, 1799. He was later elected to his own Senate term, serving from March 4, 1805 to March 31, 1809 when he resigned and returned to his Sumner County estate, Rock Castle, near Hendersonville, pursuing his agricultural and business interests until his death there, being interred in an adjacent family plot.

Rock Castle is preserved today as an historical landmark and one of the early examples in Middle Tennessee of a plantation.

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  11/03/1804 TN US Senate Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  11/03/1802 TN US Senate Lost 47.22% (-5.56%)
  11/03/1798 TN US Senate Lost 24.19% (-20.97%)
  10/05/1798 TN US Senate - Appointment Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
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