Smyth, Andrew Farney, 1817-1879

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1817
Death 1879

Biographical notes:

Andrew Farney Smyth (1817-1879), riverboat captain, surveyor, mill owner, farmer, merchant, and judge, was the second eldest son of Andrew and Susannah Smyth. After living in Pennsylvania and Tennessee, the family settled down near Moulton, Alabama, in 1817. Andrew F. Smyth moved to Jasper county, Texas, in 1835, and initially aided in managing the affairs of his brother George W. Smyth, a congressman and signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and Constitution. Andrew gradually found his own success, first as a surveyor then as a grist and sawmill owner, employing 80 people full time at the Smyth Mills by 1855. Andrew entered a brief and ill-fated partnership between 1855 and 1859 with W. A. Ferguson to operate a general store that nearly resulted in Andrew's bankruptcy, but with his family and friends’ financial assistance, he was able to buy out Ferguson and turn Smyth's Mercantile into a profitable business.

Andrew is best known as a riverboat captain, a business he began in 1838 by building flatboats to ship cotton down river, then selling both the cotton and the timber of the boat upon arrival at the Gulf of Mexico. Around 1850, Andrew acquired the keelboat Jasper, for transporting cotton to the Gulf. Upon retirement, the Jasper 's hull was used to build a house on the Smyth acreage along the Angelina River. Andrew captained his first steamboat, Camargo, beginning in 1862, but persistent mechanical problems compelled him to replace it with the newly built Laura in the early 1870s. The best-known ship on the Neches for 25 years, the Laura hauled cargo and provided the first dependable passenger transportation in lower east Texas.

In 1844, Andrew married Emily Allen (1827-1907), daughter of Benjamin and Nancy Allen. The couple had six children, all of whom Emily corresponded with regularly: Frances, Andrew C. “Buddy” or “Constantine,” Araminta “Mintie,” Susannah “Susan” or “Coo”, Nancy “Nannie,” and George W. “Buck,” II (not to be confused with Andrew F.’s brother George W. Smyth, Sr., or his son George W., Jr.). After his father's death, George II formed the George W. Smyth & Co. partnership with his mother and brother Andrew, in order to handle the business affairs of the family, including the land, the Smyth & Seale General Merchant Store & Sawmill, and the steamer Laura, now captained by M. C. Smyth.

In 1861, Nancy Smyth (1846-1892) married Elisha D. Seale (1833-1911), son of Lewis Seale and grandson of Joshua Seale. Elisha was a well-respected teacher and served briefly as a school supervisor at the Jasper Collegiate Institute before the Civil War caused the school to close. Elisha had a close relationship with his mother-in-law Emily Smyth, and referred to her affectionately as “Ma” and “Little Mother.” Elisha and Nancy had fifteen children: Emma “Emily”, Francis “Jimmie”, Henry M., Andrew G., Basco, Esther “Essie”, David W. “Watts”, Ruth, Minnie, Susan E. “Coo”, Lewis J., William, Nancy, Mary “Mame”, and Grace. Ruth went on to become a pharmacist and owned R. Seale & Co. Drugs, raising chickens on the side for additional income. William, a contractor and timberman, was actively involved in the American Lumberman Society during the 1920s. Both Esther and William Seale became interested in family genealogy. In 1966, Wiliam’s son, Dr. William Seale, Jr., published the biography, Texas Riverman: The Life and Times of Captain Andrew Farney Smyth .

From the guide to the Andrew F. Smyth Papers, 1799-1800, 1832-1990, (Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin)

Andrew Farney Smyth (1817-1879), riverboat captain, surveyor, mill owner, farmer, merchant, and judge, was the second eldest son of Andrew and Susannah Smyth.

After living in Pennsylvania and Tennessee, the family settled down near Moulton, Alabama, in 1817. Andrew F. Smyth moved to Jasper county, Texas, in 1835, and initially aided in managing the affairs of his brother George W. Smyth, a congressman and signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and Constitution. Andrew gradually found his own success, first as a surveyor then as a grist and sawmill owner, employing 80 people full time at the Smyth Mills by 1855. Andrew entered a brief and ill-fated partnership between 1855 and 1859 with W. A. Ferguson to operate a general store that nearly resulted in Andrew's bankruptcy, but with his family and friends' financial assistance, he was able to buy out Ferguson and turn Smyth's Mercantile into a profitable business.

From the description of Smyth, Andrew F., papers, 1799-1990 1840s-1940s. (University of Texas Libraries). WorldCat record id: 245118523

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Subjects:

  • Shipping
  • Surveyors

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Beaumont (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Texas (as recorded)
  • Jasper (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Jasper (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Beaumont (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Woodville (Tex.) (as recorded)
  • Woodville (Tex.) (as recorded)