Smith was born on July 12, 1771, in
Topsfield,
Massachusetts, to
Asael Smith and Mary Duty. He married
Lucy Mack in
Tunbridge, Vermont, on January 26, 1796, and had 11 children with her. Details of Smith's paternal line go back to his 3rd great-grandfather Robert Smith from
Lincolnshire, England who settled in
Massachusetts colony during the
Puritan migration. Some previous DNA testing on Smith's descendants had revealed some Irish roots. Smith was a Universalist in his early years and founded a
Universalist society in
Topsfield, Massachusetts, in 1797 with his brother Jesse and father Asael. While the society was short-lived, Smith maintained a philosophical, though not an institutional, tie to Universalism. Like most 19th-century Americans, Smith was unaffiliated with any organized religion for much of his life. Smith practiced his Universalist beliefs through folk religion and magical beliefs, which included dream Interpretation and visionary experience, use of "divining rods" and "seer stones", as well as using magic to identify and dig for buried treasure. Smith modeled each folk religion and magic tradition for all of his children. Most notably his son Joseph relied on all three categories of folk magic gifts as he shared his religious story of obtaining and translating the Book of Mormon. Smith, like his wife Lucy, struggled with depression. Lucy described her husbands depression as "deep periods of melancholy," which she said he "medicated" with alcohol. Folk magic also offered Smith less self-destructive and destabilizing comforts. In dreams he taught his family were visionary Smith saw resolution to the troubles that regularly overwhelmed him and Lucy in life. Smith believed one such dream foreshadowed his own salvation. He moved his family to
Palmyra, New York, in 1816 and began to make payments on a farm located on the edge of neighboring
Manchester Township. Work on a frame house at the farm was halted by the unexpected death of Smith's eldest son,
Alvin, in 1823. Smith subsequently failed to make payments on the farm. Smith's wife, Lucy, became involved with Presbyterianism. Joining the Presbyterian church did not dissuade Lucy away from folk religion and magic beliefs she shared with her husband. However, the differing religious affiliations Smith and Lucy held did cause her personal dissonance. In her own visionary dreaming experience, she said felt she received a divine witness that her husband would some day accept "the pure and undefiled Gospel of the Son of God." When the older Smith was baptized into the Church of Christ, his son Joseph seemed to feel it was the culmination of Lucy's vision. In the interim, Smith continued to have his own visionary dreams with highly symbolic content. == Participation in the Latter Day Saint movement ==