William Smeathers Explained

William "Bill" Smeathers
Birth Date:unknown,
Birth Place:unknown, probably Pennsylvania or North Carolina
Death Place:Columbia, Texas
Other Names:William Smithers, William Smothers
Known For:Pioneer settler of Kentucky and Texas

William "Bill" Smeathers (1767 – August 13, 1837), also known as Smithers or Smothers,[1] [2] was a pioneer settler of Kentucky and later Texas.

Not much is known about his early days. He is believed to have been born in either Pennsylvania, Virginia or North Carolina. He may have been born as early as 1759[3] or as late as 1767.[1] When Smeathers was 12 his father was killed by Indians and his mother died shortly thereafter, leaving young Smeathers to tend to his younger brother James and sister Mollie.[1] He was married twice, the second time to Mary Winters of Tennessee. He had two sons, John and Archibald, and four daughters.[2]

Kentucky

In 1782 he was one of the first settlers in the Rough River area of Kentucky, where he built Smeathers Station. Smeathers was also an early settler of Fort Hartford (present-day Hartford in Ohio County), and he helped to build a fort at Vienna (later Calhoun in McLean County) on the Green River in the early 1780s.[4] In 1797 or 1798 he built a home on the Ohio River, at a site that became known as Yellow Banks, becoming the first settler in what is now Owensboro, Kentucky.[5] Smeathers served on first grand jury of Court of Quarter Sessions at Hartford, 1803. In 1808 he was appointed land commissioner of Ohio County. In 1809 he was tried for murder (under the name Bill Smothers[6]) for killing a man who had allegedly raped his sister. He was acquitted but was advised to leave the area temporarily for his own safety.[1] He served in the Kentucky "Corn Stalk" militia in 1803,[1] and he served in the War of 1812 as a captain in the Kentucky Mounted Spies under the command of Major Toussaint Dubois.[7]

Texas

He reportedly visited Texas (then under Spanish rule) in 1810, and at some point he seems to have lived in Indiana.[1] He eventually relocated to Texas, and in 1821 he helped Stephen F. Austin explore the coast to choose a location for Austin's first colony.[2] In 1822 he was one of the five men who established a fort, Fort Bend, at a bend in the Brazos River near the site of present-day Richmond, Texas; the fort gave its name to present-day Fort Bend County. Smeathers is listed as one of the Old Three Hundred, original settlers in Austin's colony along the Brazos River in Mexican Texas, the first of many Americans to settle in Texas with the permission of the Mexican government. Later he was one of the first settlers in the DeWitt Colony in the Lavaca River valley area near current Hallettsville. His son and three grandsons fought in the Texas Revolution.

He died in Columbia, Texas, on August 13, 1837.[1]

Recognition

References

Notes and References

  1. http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/smothers.htm Sons of DeWitt Colony, Texas
  2. https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fsm55 Handbook of Texas Online
  3. http://www.txssar.org/Buried.htm Sons of the American Revolution, Texas Society
  4. http://migration.kentucky.gov/kyhs/hmdb/MarkerSearch.aspx Kentucky Historical Marker database, #1548
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=8eFSK4o--M0C&dq=william+smeathers+kentucky&pg=PA254 Kleber, J, The Kentucky encyclopedia, University Press of Kentucky, Third Printing, 1992
  6. Taylor, Harrison and Taylor, Anthony, Ohio County, Kentucky, in the Early Days, originally published Louisville, Kentucky, 1926, reprinted by Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1997,, p.25-27
  7. https://archive.org/stream/kentuckysoldier00reporich/kentuckysoldier00reporich_djvu.txt Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Kentucky, Soldiers of the War of 1812, page 22.
  8. http://migration.kentucky.gov/kyhs/hmdb/MarkerSearch.aspx Kentucky Historical Marker database, #744
  9. http://www.9key.com/markers/marker_detail.asp?atlas_number=5285005846 Historical marker on U.S. 77
  10. https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/rbsdb The Handbook of Texas Online:Smothers Creek