In March 2015, Smith co-founded the Grateful American Book Prize, with Dr. Bruce Cole, the former chairman of the
National Endowment for the Humanities. The annual award will honor a single 7th-9th grade level work culled from fiction, historical fiction, and non-fiction entries. The Prize consists of a $13,000 cash award in commemoration of the 13 original Colonies. In addition, the winner receives a silver medal designed by Smith’s mother, the renowned artist Clarice Smith. The inaugural winner, announced at
President Lincoln's Cottage in Washington, was Kathy Cannon Wiechman for her Civil War novel,
Like a River. It was the author's first book. 2015 Honorable Mentions were Michaela MacColl's
The Revelation of Louisa May and Darlene Beck Jacobson's
Wheels of Change. 2016's Grateful American Book Prize was presented to Chris Stevenson at the
Library of Congress for his Revolutionary War novel,
The Drum of Destiny. "Honorable Mentions" went to Michaela MacColl's and Rosemary Nichols's, ''Freedom's Price'', and
Laura Amy Schlitz's,
The Hired Girl. 2017's Grateful American Book Prize was given to
Margot Lee Shetterly at Washington, DC's
National Archives for
Hidden Figures, a true story of four African American women, hired by NASA in the mid-twentieth century, to be "human" computers. "Honorable Mentions" went to Jennifer Latham for
Dreamland Burning, and Edward Cody Huddleston's,
The Story of John Quincy Adams 250 Years After His Birth. 2018's Grateful American Book Prize was given to
L. M. Elliott at the
Society of the Cincinnati for the Cold War-themed,
Suspect Red. A double-winner, she also received one of the two "Honorable Mentions" for
Hamilton and Peggy! A Revolutionary Friendship; the other was presented to
Teri Kanefield for
Andrew Jackson: The History of America. 2019's Grateful American Book Prize was presented to
Sonia Sotomayor at the
Corcoran School of the Arts and Design, Washington, DC, for her memoir,
The Beloved World of Sonia Sotomayor. “Honorable Mentions" went to
Henry Louis Gates Jr., and
Tonya Bolden for
Dark Sky Rising: Reconstruction And The Dawning Of Jim Crow, and to Mike Winchell for
The Electric War: Edison, Tesla, Westinghouse, and the Race To Light The World. 2020’s Grateful American Book Prize was presented, virtually, to Sharon Robinson, for
Child of the Dream: A Memoir of 1963. "Honorable Mentions" went to Alan Gratz for "
Allies," and Larry Dane Brimmer for
Accused! The Trials of the Scottsboro Boys: Lies, Prejudice, and the Fourteenth Amendment. 2021's Grateful American Book Prize was given virtually to
Alan Gratz for
Ground Zero: A Novel of 9/11, while "Honorable Mentions" went to Chris Stevenson's
The Cannon of Courage: Gabriel Cooper & the Noble Train of Artillery, and Michaela MacColl's
View From Pagoda Hill. 2022's Grateful American Book Prize was presented at the Perry Belmont House, in Washington DC, to Michelle Coles for her debut novel,
Black Was the Ink, while "Honorable Mentions" went to Gail Jarrow for
Ambushed! The Assassination Plot Against President Garfield, and
Tonya Bolden for
Speak Up! Speak Out!: The Extraordinary Life of Fighting Shirley Chisholm. 2023's Grateful American Book Award was presented at Washington DC's Warner Theater to Lynn Ng Quezon for her debut novel, "Mattie and the Machine," while Honorable Mentions went to
Sheila Turnage for her mystery, "Island of Spies," and Sara Latta's biography, "I Could Not Do Otherwise: The Remarkable Life of Dr. Mary Edwards Walker." 2024's Grateful American Book Prize was presented at Washington DC's
Renwick Gallery to Stuart H. Brody for his novel, "Humphrey and Me." Honorable Mentions went to Lea Lyon for "The Double V Campaign: African Americans Fighting for Freedom at Home and Abroad," and to
Lindsey Fitzharris and Adrian Teal's "Plague-Busters!: Medicine's Battles with History's Deadliest Diseases." 2025’s Grateful American Book Prize was presented to
Laurie Halse Anderson for her historical novel, "Rebellion 1776 " at The St. Regis Hotel in Washington, DC. Honorable Mention recipients were Rebecca Brenner Graham for "Dear Miss Perkins: A Story of Frances Perkins’s Efforts to Aid Refugees from Nazi Germany," and Debbie Levy for "A Dangerous Idea: The Scopes Trial, the Original Fight over Science in Schools." ==Grateful American Book Series==