"Raccoon" John Smith

Is your surname Smith?

Connect to 18 Smith profiles on Geni

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

"Raccoon" John Smith

Also Known As: "Raccoon", "John Schmidt", "Racoon"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Sullivan County, Tennessee, United States
Death: February 28, 1868 (83)
Mexico, Audrain County, Missouri, United States
Place of Burial: Lexington Cemetery, Lexington, Fayette, Kentucky, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of George Smith; George Smith; Whitney Rebecca Smith and Mary Smith
Husband of Anna Smith and Nancy Smith
Father of Zerelda Ann Smith
Brother of William Elijah Smith; Hanah Smith; Abraham Smith; Sarah Ball; Hannah Smith and 19 others
Half brother of Nancy Agnes Mitchell; Rebecca Davis; Lily Robinson and Moses Whitley

Managed by: Destiny Ely
Last Updated:
view all 36

Immediate Family

About "Raccoon" John Smith

"Raccoon" John Smith (1784 - February 28, 1868) was an early leader in the Restoration Movement.[1]:690 His father, George Smith (originally Schmidt) was of German ancestry, and may have been born in Germany, while his mother, Rebecca Bowen Smith, was of Welsh and Irish ancestry.[2] He played a critical role uniting the movement led by Thomas and Alexander Campbell with the similar movement led by Barton W. Stone and in spreading the message of the movement over much of Kentucky.[1]:690

Personal life[edit]

Log cabin in downtown Monticello, Kentucky, built in the early 19th-century by "Raccoon" John Smith (1784–1868). The cabin was originally located in Horse Hollow on the Little South Fork River. Smith was born in what is now Sullivan County, Tennessee, in 1784 to a family of Regular Baptists.[1]:690 His nickname, "Raccoon", reportedly resulted from him saying he lived in such a remote location that his only neighbors were raccoons.[3] Smith moved with his family to what is now Clinton County, Kentucky.[1]:690 He was largely self-educated, with no more than six months of formal schooling.[1]:690 He was baptized in 1804, and ordained as a minister in 1808.[1]:690 Smith married Anna Townsend in 1806.[1]:690 They lost two children to a cabin fire, and Anna died from shock shortly afterward in 1815.[1]:690 Smith remarried in December of the same year to Nancy Hurt.[1]:690

As a preacher, Smith began to wrestle with the Calvinist teachings of predestination and total depravity as taught in The Philadelphia Confession of Faith[1].[1]:690 His doubts regarding these doctrines meant that when he met Alexander Campbell in 1824 he was open to the Restoration Movement themes that salvation is open to all based on faith in Christ, repentance from sin and baptism by immersion.[1]:690

He died in Mexico, Missouri on February 28, 1868, and was buried next to Nancy.[1]:691

Career[edit] After meeting Alexander Campbell, Smith soon became a leader in the Restoration Movement, working primarily among the Baptists in Kentucky.[1]:690 Because preachers of the time were typically unpaid, he worked as a farmer for most of his life.[1]:690 He was willing, though, to go anywhere and preach to anyone who would listen and was successful in persuading many in Kentucky to join the movement.[1]:691

He also played a key role in bringing the Stone and Campbell movements together in late 1832 and early 1833.[1]:691 This was formalized at the High Street Meeting House in Lexington, Kentucky, with a handshake between Barton Stone and Smith.[4]:116-120 Smith had been chosen by those present to speak on behalf of the followers of the Campbells.[4]:116 A preliminary meeting of the two groups was held in late December 1831, culminating with the merger on January 1, 1832.[4]:116-120[5]:xxxvii Two representatives of those assembled were appointed to carry the news of the union to all the churches: John Rogers, for those associated with Stone and Smith for those associated with the Campbells. They spent three years reporting the news to the associated churches. Despite some challenges, the merger succeeded.[6]:153-154 Many believed the union held great promise for the future success of the combined movement and greeted the news enthusiastically.[7]:9 Smith spent three years traveling through Kentucky with Rogers encouraging congregations associated with the Stone and Campbell movements to unite.[1]:691 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Smith_(clergyman)

http://www.firstchristianmonticello.com/about-about-first-christian...


view all

"Raccoon" John Smith's Timeline

1784
October 15, 1784
Sullivan County, Tennessee, United States
1814
June 7, 1814
Wayne County, KY, United States
1860
1860
Age 75
District 2, Scott, Kentucky, United States
1868
February 28, 1868
Age 83
Mexico, Audrain County, Missouri, United States
????
Lexington Cemetery, Lexington, Fayette, Kentucky, United States