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Frederick Smith (Pennsylvania lawyer)

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Frederick Smith
In office
December 18, 1823 – February 5, 1828
GovernorJohn Andrew Shulze
Preceded byThomas Elder
Succeeded byCalvin Blythe
Personal details
Bornoffice nsylvania Attorney General
March 1, 1773
Germantown, Philadelphia, US
DiedOctober 6, 1830 (aged 57)
Reading, Pennsylvania, US
Resting placeoffice nsylvania Attorney General
Attorney General of Pennsylvania]]
SpousesCatharine Leaf[1]
Parent
  • office nsylvania Attorney General
  • Attorney General of Pennsylvania]]
RelativesEdmond L. Smith (grandson)
Alma materUniversity of Pennsylvania
ProfessionAttorney, Judge

Frederick Smith (March 1, 1773 – October 6, 1830) was a Pennsylvania lawyer. He was state Attorney General (1823–8) and a justice of the state's Supreme Court (1828–30).

Biography and career

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Smith was born in the Germantown area of Philadelphia. After graduating in 1792[2] from the University of Pennsylvania, he worked and studied in the office of Jared Ingersoll, a signer of the U. S. Constitution who was then the newly appointed state Attorney General. In 1794, Smith moved to Reading, and practiced law in Berks, Lehigh, Northampton, and Schuylkill counties.

In 1809 he was part of the team defending, unsuccessfully, the controversial Susanna Cox.[3]

In 1823, Governor Shulze offered Smith the position of Secretary of the Commonwealth, which he declined, but then offered Smith the position of state Attorney General, which he accepted. He served until 1828, when he resigned upon being appointed to the state Supreme Court, where he served until his death in 1830.

His grandson Edmond L. Smith was a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives and the Colorado Territorial Legislative Assembly.[4]

References

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  1. ^ "Notes and Queries". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. XVII (2): 235. 1893.
  2. ^ Catalogue of the Alumni of the University of Pennsylvania: Comprising Lists of the Provosts, Vice-provosts, Professors, Tutors, Instructors, Trustees, and Alumni of the Collegiate Departments : with a List of the Recipients of Honorary Degrees, 1749-1877. 1877. p. 20.
  3. ^ Patricia Ernest Suter; Russell Earnest; Corinne Earnest (2010). The Hanging of Susanna Cox: The True Story of Pennsylvania's Most Notorious Infanticide and the Legend That's Kept it Alive. Stackpole Books. p. 118. ISBN 9780811705608.
  4. ^ Wiley, Samuel T. (1893). Garner, Winfield Scott (ed.). Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Chester County, Pennsylvania, Comprising A Historical Sketch of the County. Gresham Publishing Company. pp. 390–392. Retrieved 2023-11-05 – via Archive.org.Open access icon

Further reading

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  • Samuel Hazard (ed.), The Register of Pennsylvania, volume VI, July 1830–January 1831, p. 265 Obituary
Legal offices
Preceded by Attorney General of Pennsylvania
1823–1828
Succeeded by