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Jesse Nathaniel Smith

Jesse N. Smith
Lithograph of Jesse N. Smith
Family Lithograph of Jesse N. Smith
19th Arizona Territorial Legislature
In office
1897
24th Utah Territorial Legislatures
In office
January 12, 1880
22nd Utah Territorial Legislatures
In office
January 10, 1876
5th Utah Territorial Legislature
In office
1855 – 1856
Mayor of Parowan
In office
1859 – 1861
Personal details
Born Jesse Nathaniel Smith
(1834-12-02)December 2, 1834
, New York, United States
Died June 5, 1906(1906-06-05) (aged 71)
Snowflake, Arizona, United States
Resting place R V Mike Ramsay Memorial Cemetery
34°30′14″N 110°05′13″W / 34.504°N 110.087°W / 34.504; -110.087 (R V Mike Ramsay Memorial Cemetery)
Spouse(s) 5
Children 44
Parents Silas Smith
Mary Aikens
Website www.jessensmith.org

Jesse Nathaniel Smith (December 2, 1834 – June 5, 1906) was a Mormon pioneer, church leader, colonizer, politician and frontiersman. He was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was a first cousin to Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement.

Smith was born the youngest of three sons to Silas Smith (1779–1839) and his second wife Mary Aikens (1797–1877) in , New York. His older brothers were Silas Sanford Smith (1830–1910) and John Aikens Smith (1832–38), but John died as a young child. Smith's father, Silas, married his first wife in 1806. She bore seven children, but died in 1826. Silas met Mary while she was teaching school in Stockholm and they married in 1828. Both of Smith's grandfathers, Asael Smith (1744–1830) and Nathaniel Aikens (1757–1836), served in the American Revolutionary War. According to Smith, his grandfather Aikens served under General George Washington.

Smith's father was a younger brother of Joseph Smith, Sr., making him a first cousin of Joseph Smith. Silas was converted when Joseph Sr. visited him in 1830, but was not baptized into the church until 1835 by his nephew Hyrum Smith. Smith's mother, Mary, would join the church a couple of years later. Jesse was an infant when his parents joined the church and a young boy when his father died of illness. Smith and his brother were considered well educated, for the time, by their mother since she had taught school.

Smith and his family followed the Mormons to Ohio, Missouri, Illinois and finally out west to the Utah Territory. Smith's cousin William tried to persuade Mary Aikens Smith against following Brigham Young and the main body of Latter Day Saints west, but she informed him that this was her intention. The widow took Jesse N. and his brother, Silas S. across the plains with Young's group. At the age of twelve, Jesse N. drove his Uncle John's two yokes of oxen on the journey.


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