Larkin Smith | |
Order: | 10th |
Office: | Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates |
Term Start: | 1799 |
Term End: | 1802 |
Preceded: | John Wise |
Succeeded: | Edmund Harrison |
Office2: | Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from King and Queen County |
Term2: | December 2, 1799-December 4, 1803 |
Preceded2: | Henry Young |
Successor2: | Thomas G. Smith |
Alongside2: | Richard Corbin, Benjamin Dabney |
Term3: | December 1, 1797-December 22, 1798 |
Preceded3: | Henry Young |
Successor3: | Henry Young |
Alongside3: | Richard Brooke |
Term4: | October 1, 1792-November 11, 1794 |
Preceded4: | Benjamin Dabney |
Successor4: | Benjamin Dabney |
Alongside4: | John Walker Semple |
Term5: | June 23, 1788-October 17, 1790 |
Preceded5: | William Dudley |
Successor5: | Benjamin Dabney |
Alongside5: | Anderson Scott, William Roane |
Term6: | May 3, 1784-October 16, 1785 |
Preceded6: | Henry Todd |
Successor6: | William Dudley |
Alongsid: | Edmund Byne |
Allegiance: | United States |
Branch: | Virginia Militia Continental Army |
Serviceyears: | 1777–1783 (Continental Army 1775-1807 (Virginia militia) |
Rank: | Colonel(Virginia militia) Captainl(Continental Army) |
Battles: | American Revolutionary War |
Birth Date: | 1745 7, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Rickahock, Virginia |
Death Place: | Fredericksburg, Virginia |
Spouse: | Mary Eleanor Hill (21 April 1781 – 10 February 1797) Sophia Ann Tazewell Taliaferro |
Children: | John Hill Smith |
Parents: | John Morris Smith (father) Mary Beverly née Chew (1735-1757) |
Residence: | Virginia |
Larkin Smith (10 Jul 1745 28 Sep 1813) was a Virginia officer, planter and politician who represented King and Queen County in the Virginia House of Delegates, and served as that body's Speaker from 1799 until 1802.
Born at Richahock plantation in King and Queen County to Mary Chew and her planter husband, John Smith. A member of the First Families of Virginia, he could trace his ancestors in the colony several generations back to immigrants from England.
Smith enlisted in November 1775 as a private in a company of minutemen. He was promoted to cadet in the 6th Virginia Regiment on February 10, 1776, then cornet of the 4th Regiment Continental Light Dragoons on August 1, 1777. His first officer's commission was issued on September 4, 1778, when he became a lieutenant. He was promoted to captain on April 1, 1780, and received land in southern Virginia as partial compensation for his patriotic service. Following the conflict, Smith became a member of the Society of the Cincinnati and continued in the Virginia militia, retiring as Colonel of the Regiment of Dragoons in 1807.
Following the war, on September 30, 1784, Smith became one of the Justices of the Peace which collectively ruled his native King and Queen County.
King and Queen County voters elected Smith as their (part-time) representative in the Virginia House of Delegates in 1784-1785 and both re-elected him and failed to re-elect him many times.[1] In the period June 7, 1794 until 1797 he was ineligible for legislative service because fellow legislators elected him as a member of the Governor's Privy Council which governed the Commonwealth's small executive branch. During their joint Privy Council service, he and Edmund Harrison (who would succeed him as speaker) on October 7, 1794, issued a report to the Governor on the condition of the State Treasury. Smith again won election to the Virginia House of Delegates in 1797, and was re-elected several times. Fellow delegates elected and re-elected him as their Speaker beginning in 1799, and he served until 1802.[2] Smith moved to Norfolk, Virginia and accepted the office of tax Collector for the Port of Norfolk, serving from October 12, 1807, until his death on September 28, 1813.
Smith married twice. On April 21, 1781, he married Mary Eleanor Hill. Following her death, on May 25, 1804, Smith married Sophia Ann Tazewell Taliaferro (widow of Benjamin Taliaferro) at the home of her brother, Littleton Waller Tazewell, who would become Governor of Virginia in 1834–36. Her father was Judge Henry Tazewell of Williamsburg.
Smith died in Fredericksburg, Virginia in 1813.He is buried in Dinwiddie County with a nice toumb stone in the rock wall cemetery at Village View or Diamon Springs or Smith Farm. Same place different names.
List of former Speakers of the House of Delegates, in the old House chamber in the Virginia State Capitol