Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Margaret Bayard Smith

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Margaret Smith

Role
  
Author

Parents
  
John Bayard


Margaret Bayard Smith httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
June 7, 1844, Washington, D.C., United States

Books
  
First forty years of Washingt, Children's Daily Prayer: U, Daily Prayer Under the, Mystical Energy Healing, What Was I Thinking?: How Bein

Margaret Bayard Smith (20 February 1778 – 7 June 1844) was a successful author and politician in a time when women lived under strict gender roles. Her writings and relationships shaped both politics and society in early Washington. Mrs. Smith began writing books in the 1820s: a two-volume novel in 1824 called A Winter in Washington, or Memoirs of the Seymour Family, another novel in 1825, What is Gentility? She also wrote several biographies including Dolley Madison. Her literary reputation, however, comes primarily from a collection of her letters and notebooks written from 1800 to 1841 and published in 1906 by Gaillard Hunt as The First Forty Years of Washington Society.

Contents

Early life

Margaret Bayard was born on 20 February 1778 in Pennsylvania, the seventh of eight children born to Colonel John Bubenheim Bayard (1738–1807) and Margaret Hodge (1740–1780). At the time of her birth, her father was with George Washington at Valley Forge. Her first cousin was Rev. Charles Hodge (1797–1878).

Also included in her immediate family were three orphaned children of Col. Bayard's twin brother, Dr. James Asheton Bayard, who had married Margaret Hodge's sister, Ann Hodge. One of the orphaned children was James A. Bayard, who later became a lawyer and politician.

Career

Smith was a well known editor and publisher who befriended Thomas Jefferson when they both acted as officers of the American Philosophical Society. In 1809, Smith and her husband moved to Washington where he became president of the Bank of the United States. Almost immediately, they became a political power couple. Smith establish the first newspaper in Washington City, the Daily Intelligencer, when the government moved from Philadelphia to Washington. When Jefferson took office, he granted Smith a government contract printing The House of Representatives Journal. Margaret’s ability to write about her observations made her an ideal partner for Samuel. She often wrote for the paper and other publications, sometimes under her own name, but most often anonymously.

As a woman, her role in the new republic was expected to be exclusively domestic. Smith used this role to her advantage by quickly immersing herself in Washington life; befriending local families and politicians and strengthening her relationships with previous acquaintances. Most notably, Mr. and Mrs. Smith became frequent visitors to the White House. Her nearly unlimited access to political figures and inside knowledge of Washington made her an authority on Washington politics and the shaping of the new republic. Margaret’s letters to her sisters, and sisters-in-law, were full of insightful details about the political landscape of Washington. Her letters were the first step in establishing herself as a legitimate political thinker. The information in her letters was later published in the Richmond Enquirer and finally in her memoir, which was a political and social exploration of Washington more than a description of her own life.

Her skill and enduring legacy is especially evident in her writings on Thomas Jefferson and James Madison in the summer of 1809. She was acutely aware of the state of the nation and understood that the citizenry was in need of reassurance regarding the leadership coming from the President’s House. Her commentary during her summer trip firmly established Jefferson’s legacy as president as well as shaped his image as “the Sage of Monticello.” While visiting Montpelier, the home of James and Dolley Madison, she was a keen observer of Dolley’s hospitality and her political performance as the wife of the President. The ease of Dolley’s entertaining became her trademark and Smith wrote about it in great detail. Margaret was able to subtly manipulate the minds of the American people and reassure them that the government was physically and metaphorically in good hands. Margaret Bayard Smith managed to do all of this in a time when women were confined to play mother and wife at all times.

Personal life

On 29 September 1800, at the age of 22, Margaret married Samuel Harrison Smith (1772–1845), her second cousin. Soon after the birth of their first child was born in 1801, the family bought a farm, Turkey Thicket, three miles from town (now part of Catholic University). They renamed the farm Sidney. Together, they were the parents of:

  • Julia Harrison Smith (b. 1801)
  • Susan Harrison Smith (b. 1804)
  • Jonathan Bayard Harrison Smith (1810–1889), a Washington D.C. lawyer who married Henrietta Elizabeth Henley, daughter of Com. John Dandridge Henley in 1842.
  • Anna Maria Harrison Smith (b. 1811)
  • Margaret died on 7 June 1844.

    Descendants

    Through her son, she was the grandmother of John Henley Smith (c. 1844–1907), who married Rebecca Young, Samuel Harrison Smith, who married Alive Hall, and Bayard Thornton Smith (b. 1857), who married Eleanor J. Hyde (d. 1929) (the daughter of George Hyde (1819–1890), an early settler and the Alcalde of San Francisco) in 1882.

    References

    Margaret Bayard Smith Wikipedia