John Kilby Smith
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John Kilby Smith was born in Boston Massachusetts December 17, 1752 and died in Portland Maine August 9, 1842.
John fought in the American Revolution.
Sketch of his life and war record by the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati New England Historic Genealogical Society lists him as an Original Member of the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati, John K Smith was born in Boston Mass Dec 17, 1753 and died in Portland Maine Aug 7,1842. During the war he was aid-de-camp to General Lafayette (per the Death notice posted in the Independent Treasury of Ohio date 9/14/1842) this is collaborated in the Maine Historical Society published in 1892. Per Daughters of the American Revolution lineage book published 1896, during the war he was at Ticonderoga and in the Burgoyne and Jersey campaigns. Also at Valley Forge, Monmouth, with Lafayette and in Rhode Island under Gen John Sullivan. The book also states that as of 1896 “His diary is in the possession of the family and details of his eight years’ service. John also has descendants listed in the Sons of the American Revolution
John Moved to Portland in the last year of the war and resided at the Zebulon Trickey House along with James Means and Josiah Cox. They bought the mast-yard triangle in 1786 and by 1796 Smith had sold his share. He was a general storekeeper with Means of the old George Tate warehouse.
John voted yes in the Convention of the Delegates of the People of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1788 to approve adoption of the Constitution of the United States. In January 1791 John wrote a letter to President George Washington requesting the position of Inspector General of the district of Main in the State of Massachusetts. By 1792 John Kilby Smith as an innholder in Newglouster. By 1809 John was working at the War Department, documented by a March 6th 1809 letter to President James Madison recommending agents of fortification of various territories while serving as acting Secretary of War.
In 1810 John was in the New Orleans area scouting for land for the Marquis de Lafayette, documented by letters from John K Smith to President Madison dated March 1810, May 1810, and July 10, 1810 In August 1810 John was still active in the War Department, as documented by an August 7, 1810 letter to James Madison.
Even though John never rose above the rank of Brig Major in the Continental Army, in the Maine Militia he was a General. He also participated in the War 1812 as documented in “Portland in the Past with Historical Notes of Old Falmouth” by William Goold 1886…. Page 492…“ A company of “exempts”, numbering sixty, was organized in the town under Brigadier-General John K Smith, who was a captain in the Revolution.
In April 1818 and again in June 1820, John Applied for and received a pension; he had served for the entire 8 years of the revolutionary war. After his death in 1842, his children (his wife had died before him) applied for and received his pension as heirs
Circa 1790 he married Sarah “Sally” Webb Smith and they had 7 children:
1. Eben- born in 1792 – listed as the first storekeeper in Poland Me
2. Henry – born in Portland Maine 9/12/1794
3. John Kilby Jr- born in 1796
4. Wiliam W- born in 1/7/1802
5. Sally
6. Eliza Smith Davis Walker - Mr. Curtis Walker & Mrs. Eliza Davis, both of Thompson Pond Plantation, were m. Nov. 30, 1828, by Eliphalet Dunn, J.P.
7. Nancy