According to family history, Smith was born into
slavery, the son of Susan, a slave, and Elijah Smith, a slave owner. Upon the outbreak of the Civil War, Elijah Smith joined the
Confederate military, with the intention of taking 19-year-old Andrew along with him. When Andrew Smith learned of this, he and another slave ran away, walking through the rain before presenting themselves to a
Union Army regiment, the
41st Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment, in
Smithland, Kentucky. Smith was taken in by the 41st Illinois and became a servant to Major John Warner at the regiment's post in nearby
Paducah, Kentucky. Among Smith's duties were, in the event of Warner's death, to return his belongings to his home in
Clinton, Illinois. On March 10, 1862, the regiment moved out to
Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee, where it took part in the
Battle of Shiloh a month later. During the fighting, Smith supplied Major Warner with fresh horses after the officer had two mounts shot out from under him. Smith was then struck by a "spent
minié ball that entered his left temple, rolled just under the skin, and stopped in the middle of his forehead." The bullet was removed by the regimental surgeon, leaving Smith with only a scar. By November 30, 1864, Smith was serving as a
corporal in the
55th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment. On that day, both the 55th and its sister regiment, the
54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment, participated in the
Battle of Honey Hill in
South Carolina. The two units came under heavy fire while crossing a swamp in front of an elevated Confederate position. When the 55th's
color bearer was killed, Smith took up the battle flag and carried it through the remainder of the fight. It was for this action that Smith was later awarded the Medal of Honor. Smith was promoted to
color sergeant before leaving the Army. After the war, he lived in Kentucky, where he bought and sold land. He died at age 88 and was buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery,
Grand Rivers, Kentucky. Smith was nominated for the Medal of Honor in 1916, but the Army denied the nomination, citing a lack of official records documenting his case. Smith's commander at Honey Hill had not included an account of Smith's actions in the official battle report. It was not until January 16, 2001, 137 years after the Battle of Honey Hill, that Smith was recognized; President
Bill Clinton presented the Medal of Honor to several of Smith's descendants during a ceremony at the
White House on that day. Former President
Theodore Roosevelt was also posthumously awarded the medal at the same ceremony, for his actions during the
Spanish–American War. ==Medal of Honor citation==