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'Caleb Blood Smith' (
April 16,
1808 –
January 7,
1864) was an
American journalist and politician, serving in the
Cabinet of
Abraham Lincoln during the
American Civil War.

Caleb Blood Smith
Born in
Boston, Massachusetts, he emigrated with his parents to
Ohio in 1814, was educated at
Cincinnati College and
Miami University, studied law in
Cincinnati and in
Connersville, Indiana, and was admitted to the bar in 1828. He began practice at the latter place, established and edited the ''Sentinel'' in 1832, served several terms in the
Indiana legislature, and was in the
United States Congress in 1843–1849, having been elected as a
Whig. During his congressional career, he was one of the
Mexican claims commissioners. He returned to the practice of law in 1850, residing in Cincinnati and subsequently in
Indianapolis. He was influential in securing the nomination of
Abraham Lincoln for the presidency at the Chicago
Republican National Convention in 1860.
Lincoln appointed Smith as the
United States Secretary of the Interior in 1861 as a reward for his work in the presidential campaign. He was the first citizen of Indiana to hold a Presidential Cabinet position. However, Smith had little interest in the job and, with declining health, delegated most of his responsibilities to
Assistant Secretary of the Interior John Palmer Usher. In
1862, he was interested in the empty seat in the
United States Supreme Court vacated by
John Archibald Campbell's resignation the previous year. However, Lincoln nominated
David Davis for the position instead. After Smith resigned in December 1862, Usher became Secretary. Smith went home to become the United States circuit judge for
Indiana. He died
January 7,
1864, from his ill health. President Lincoln ordered that government buildings be drapped in black for two weeks in a sign of mourning for Smith's death.
Search for body
It has been said that Caleb B. Smith's body is buried in a
Connersville, Indiana, cemetery. In 1977
John Walker, a Connersville, Indiana resident, received permission from the Smith family, Norvella Thomas Copes, and Nancy S. Hurley, and the city of Connersville, Indiana, to excavate the body of Caleb Blood Smith. Walker had an interest in
President Lincoln, and discovered in reading about Lincoln that one of his cabinet members was buried in the city he lived in. An excavation was done in November, but Smith's body was not there. It was Smith's son-in-law William Watton Smith. C.B. Smith's wife,
Elizabeth B. Watton Smith, had paid $500 for the choice of plots, in
Greenlawn Cemetery, but had to remove the body to
Crown Hill Cemetery in
Indianapolis for fear of southern dissenters, the
Sons of Liberty, desecrating his body and of local teens knocking over the markers. There was also a possibility that his body was in one of the two above ground vaults behind the
Warren Lodge, also known as
Elmhurst, but both doors were standing open and had been for years, with nothing inside (also in Connersville, Indiana). A letter inquiring about the whereabouts of Smith's body found in the 1980s came from a N.Y. public library in the 1930s.
External links
★
Caleb Blood Smith at
Find A Grave
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Mr. Lincoln's White House: Caleb Blood Smith
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Caleb Blood Smith papers at the Indiana Historical Society
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''The Department of Everything Else: Highlights of Interior History (1989)