Smith was born in either
North Carolina or
York County, South Carolina. A memoirist called "Septugenarian," writing in 1870, referred to the historic
Tryon County, North Carolina, which included parts of present-day South Carolina, and stated "I always thought he was from Lincoln," meaning the vicinity of
Lincolnton, in what is now
Lincoln County, North Carolina. Lincolnton was connected to Yorkville (present-day
York, South Carolina) by what was called the King's Mountain Road. Smith's granddaughter and heir, Mary Taylor Calhoun, volunteered to a researcher that "vague impression that, by a re-adjustment of the boundary lines between North and South Carolina, his birth-place, formerly in the jurisdiction of South Carolina, was thrown into North Carolina. Not much is known about Smith's early life outside of his education. According to his granddaughter, "Judge Smith's father was, at one time, a man of considerable property, but his fortune was greatly impaired by the depreciation of the
continental money. He, however, was able to give his sons as good classical educations as the academies of those days afforded. Judge Smith was a good Latin and Greek scholar...His father started him in the world with only one negro, Priam, well known here as a foreman, and now living on the farm, adjacent to the town of Huntsville, which Judge Smith left to Mrs. Calhoun." The school at Bullock's Creek was located in the "District between
Broad and
Catawba Rivers," and taught by Rev. Mr. Joseph Alexander, who also had a school in
the Waxhaws. Over a century later, another Carolinian described Smith as "a strong personal friend of President Jackson." The memoirs of Alabama "belle"
Virginia Clay-Clopton, published 1904, described Smith as "the warm friend of Andrew Jackson." Another report attesting to Bennett Smith's alcohol use is in the 1845 journal of
Murfreesboro resident Samuel Harvey Laughlin, who wrote that, "Maj. Bennett Smith, a remarkable man, is still living, had removed to town to enjoy his fortune about the time I went to the place to live. He pretended, however, now and then, especially when drunk, to engage in the practice of law." Smith then attended
Mt. Zion College in
Winnsboro, South Carolina, which was the first
preparatory school in the region. He once stated to a friend stated that his life could be described as "wild, reckless, intemperate, rude and boisterous, yet resolute and determined." To that same friend he also credited all of his success to a promise he once made to his wife, Margaret Duff, to forego alcohol. Smith's law career began on January 6, 1784 when he was admitted to the bar. In one notable case, his client who had been charged for killing a horse failed to appear before the court. Smith did not see the man for a number of years until he ran into him in the Hall of the House of Representatives. The man, known to Smith by the surname "Elchinor", now went by the name
John Alexander and was a Representative for the state of
Ohio. Smith ensured that Representative Alexander paid him for his previous services. He may have been resident in the
York District during his South Carolina days, but also dwelled for a time in
Pinckneyville in the Union District. The South Carolina local historian "Septugenarian" described Smith as an angry, violent man, widely feared as a controlling power within the community: == Political career ==