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S. E. Smith: Difference between revisions

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'''Source''': ''The Baptist Home Mission Monthly, Volume 17-18, pg. 273''
'''Source''': ''The Baptist Home Mission Monthly, Volume 17-18, pg. 273''
'''Source''': http://docsouth.unc.edu/church/morris/ill295.html


Category: People
Category: People

Revision as of 04:20, 6 October 2016

S. E. Smith

Baptist minister and civil rights activist S. E. Smith was born in Glasgow, Barren County

Kentucky June 7, 1860. After completing his primary education in the common schools, Smith

entered State University (later Simmons University) where he graduated with honors.

He would later serve as a Trustee of the University. In 1895, Smith was serving as Pastor

of Fourth Street Baptist Church in Owensboro, and the congregation under his leadership had

built a new brick church at a cost of $30,000.

S. E. Smith held the distinction of being a delegate to every National Republican Convention

for sixteen consecutive years. During this time span, he also was the National Grand Secretary

of the Order of the Samaritans. Smith was a staunch opponent of the Separate Coach Act in

Kentucky, and was a member of the State Executive Committee handling arrangements of the case.

Upon leaving Owensboro, he was called as pastor of First African Baptist Church in Lexington, KY.

Reverend S. E. Smith passed away on August 5, 1907.


Source: Sermons, Addresses, Reminiscences & Important Correspondence; E.C. Morris, D.D., 1901, pg. 295

Source: Notable Kentucky African Americans Database; University of Kentucky

Source: Biographical Sketches of Prominent Negro Men and Women of Kentucky; W. D. Johnson, 1897

Source: The Baptist Home Mission Monthly, Volume 17-18, pg. 273

Source: http://docsouth.unc.edu/church/morris/ill295.html

Category: People