George Washington Smyth (1803-1866), congressman and signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and Constitution, was born in North Carolina as eldest son of Andrew and Susannah Smyth. In 1827 or 1828, George came to Texas and in 1830 settled in Bevil’s Settlement (near present-day Jasper), where he married Frances M. Grigsby (1809-1888) in 1834. The couple had seven children, including George Washington, Jr.
The Mexican government appointed Smyth as a surveyor, then as a commissioner of titles to issue titles to colonists entitled to Mexican land grants. He served as delegate from Jasper to the Convention of 1836 and signed the Texas Declaration of Independence.
In 1839, President Mirabeau B. Lamar appointed Smyth as Texas commissioner to help set the boundary line between the Republic of Texas and the United States. In 1844, he served in the Texas House of Representatives as a strong proponent to annexation. He then took part in the Convention of 1845, which developed the first Constitution of the State of Texas.
Smyth continued his involvement in the State of Texas’s politics, becoming the second commissioner of the General Land Office in 1848. After four years, he left to serve as Democratic elector and then from 1853 to 1855 as Congressman from the First Congressional District of Texas in the US House of Representatives. As an opponent to the passage of a law to allow the African slave trade in Texas, he ran for and barely lost the position as State Comptroller. Although Smyth opposed secession, he stayed loyal to Texas during the Civil War and encouraged his sons to fight for the Confederacy, which they did.
After the war, Jasper elected Smyth as representative to the Constitutional Convention of 1866. Against the advise of his doctors, he went to Austin, where he died on February 21, 1866.
Sources:
George Washington Smyth Papers, 1819-1892, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin.
Wooster, Robert. “Smyth, George Washington (1803-1866).” Handbook of Texas Online, http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/SS/fsm51.html (accessed February 22, 2010).
From the guide to the George Washington Smyth Papers 1931; 70-047; 2005-135., 1819-1892, 1912-1960, (Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin)