Lyndon A. Smith

Lyndon A. Smith
15th Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota
In office
January 3, 1899  January 5, 1903
Governor John Lind
Samuel Van Sant
Preceded by John L. Gibbs
Succeeded by Ray W. Jones
14th Minnesota Attorney General
In office
1912–1918
Preceded by George T. Simpson
Succeeded by Clifford L. Hilton
Personal details
Born (1854-07-15)July 15, 1854
Boscawen, New Hampshire
Died March 5, 1918(1918-03-05) (aged 63)
Saint Paul, Minnesota
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Dora Rogers
Profession educator, lawyer, state attorney general

Lyndon Ambrose Smith (July 15, 1854  March 5, 1918) was an American educator, lawyer and Republican politician who served as the 14th Attorney General and the 15th Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota.

Life and career

Smith was born in Boscawen, New Hampshire in 1854. His father Ambrose Smith was a clergyman and congregational pastor; his mother Cynthia Egerton was a descendant of Plymouth colony governor William Bradford. Smith attended Dartmouth College and served as the superintendent of schools in Norwich, Vermont while in school. He graduated as valedictorian in 1880. He later worked with the National Commissioner of Education and as the superintendent of the World Cotton Centennial's educational department. He also earned a law degree at Georgetown University Law Center.[1]

In 1885 Smith moved to Minnesota, settling in Montevideo, Minnesota and establishing a law practice. In 1886 he married Dora Rogers, a teacher originally from Maine. Together they had a daughter Charlotte (b. 1888).[1]

Smith's political career began in 1889 when he was elected attorney for Chippewa County, Minnesota. He served only one term but was later elected Lieutenant Governor under Republican John Lind in 1899 and re-elected under his successor Samuel Van Sant in 1901. He returned to the position of Chippewa County attorney from 1903 to 1909 when he was appointed as assistant state Attorney General. Smith later ran for the office of Attorney General as a Republican, winning his first term in 1912 and re-election in 1914 and 1916.[2][3]

Smith died while in office on March 5, 1918.[2] He is buried in Orchard Grove Cemetery in Kittery, Maine.[4]

Electoral history

References

Political offices
Preceded by
John L. Gibbs
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota
1899  1903
Succeeded by
Ray W. Jones
Legal offices
Preceded by
George T. Simpson
Minnesota Attorney General
1912  1918
Succeeded by
Clifford L. Hilton
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