Congressman Smith was elected as a member of the
Kentucky House of Representatives, serving from 1861 to 1863. On April 4, 1862, he was commissioned
colonel of the Fourth Regiment of the Kentucky Volunteer Cavalry. He was appointed
brigadier general of volunteers on June 12, 1862. Like his uncles Brutus J. and Cassius M. Clay, Smith joined the Unconditional Union Party. In 1862, he was elected as an Unconditional Unionist to the
thirty-eighth congress, resigning from his military post on December 1, 1863. He served as chairman of the
Committee on Militia from 1865 to 1866. He was
brevetted major general of volunteers on March 13, 1865.
Governor Smith resigned from Congress in July 1866 when
President Andrew Johnson appointed him as
Territorial Governor of Montana. He served there from 1866 to 1869, working to moderate hostilities between European American settlers and the Native Americans who occupied the lands, including tribes of the
Blackfoot Confederacy.
Pastor After he resigned, Smith returned to
Washington, D.C. He was ordained to the
Baptist ministry and served in a number of congregations while supporting the
temperance movement. He was pastor in
Richmond,
Mt. Sterling,
Frankfort and
Louisville, Kentucky. In 1890 he was called as pastor of the Metropolitan Baptist Church (now
Capitol Hill Baptist Church) in
Washington, D.C., which he served until his death in 1895.
Presidential nomination In 1876, the
National Prohibition Party nominated Smith for
President of the United States. With his running mate,
Gideon T. Stewart, the two received 9,737 popular votes in the election. Smith continued his work in religion and temperance. ==Death==