John Peter Smith

John Peter Smith
4th Mayor of Missoula
In office
August 6, 1885  May 2, 1887
Preceded by Thomas C. Marshall
Succeeded by Dwight Harding
Personal details
Born October 1848
Pennsylvania
Other political
affiliations
Democratic
Spouse(s) Sophia Alice Hammer (1874- ?),
Ida Mary Reinicke (1887 - 1892)
Children Ida Lisetta (Smith) Cory
Profession Mayor, Sawmill worker

John Peter Smith (Oct. 1848 – ?) was born in Pennsylvania to immigrant parents with his father from Germany and his mother from France.[1] He moved to Fort Madison, Iowa where he lived with Barbara Green, a widow also from Pennsylvania with French immigrant parents.[2]

In Iowa Smith worked in a sawmill and married his first wife, Sophia Alice Hammer. After their daughter Ida Lisetta Smith was born in 1876, the family moved to Frenchtown, Montana in Missoula County.[3]

Smith was serving as an alderman in the newly incorporated city of Missoula in 1885 when he was appointed mayor pro tem on August 6 after Mayor Thomas C. Marshall resigned.[4] He was elected mayor in a special election on August 23 and served until May 2, 1887.[5]

Near the end of his term, Smith married Ida Mary Reinicke, the daughter of a prominent stockgrower and owner of the popular Reinicke House, which served as accomdations in Sun river Leavings, Montana.[6][7][8][9]

After serving as mayor, Smith once again divorced and in 1900 was living as an unemployed barbor in the Albert R Zoske household. He later moved to Spokane, Washington to live with his daughter Ida and her husband Samuel W. Cory.[1][10]

References

  1. 1 2 "1900 U.S. Census".
  2. "1870 U.S. Census".
  3. "1880 U.S. Census".
  4. "Local Notes". The River Press. August 19, 1885.
  5. "Missoula's Democratic Mayor". The River Press. Sep 2, 1885. Retrieved 2014-09-20.
  6. "Smith-Reinicke", Great Falls Tribune. January 8, 1887
  7. "Smith-Reinicke", The River Press., January 12, 1887
  8. "Progressive Men of the State of Montana". A. W. Bowen & Co. 1886.
  9. The Benton Weekly Record. Sept. 3, 1880
  10. 1910 U.S. Census
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.