Capt. James Smith, owner and
proprietor of the Smith Hotel, Kingsland, Ark. There is nothing that adds so much to the
prestige of a city in the estimation of a stranger as first-class hotel accommodations.
First among those of Kingsland is that owned and Conducted by Capt. Smith, which has every
convenience to add to the ease and comfort of the inmates. The Captain was born in what is
now Lincoln County, in 1836, and is the senior by a few months of his native State. His
father, John Smith, better known as "Bear Hunter John," was born in Mississippi,
was twice married; his last wife, Miss Sarah Bowden, being our subject's mother, whom he
married in Louisana (her native State). At a very early day, about twenty-five years
before the Captain was born, Mr. Smith with his wife and a number of slaves entered a boat
made by himself, rowed themselves up Bayou Bartholomew to a point somewhere near what is
now Chicot County, landed, and with their knives, cut away the cane and selected a
suitable place for a cabin. They opened up a settlement, and Mr. Smith afterward returned
to Louisiana for the rest of his property, leaving his family alone in the forest, far
from human habitation, and was gone about twenty-one days. Soon after his settlement some
of his relatives and friends followed and settled near him, which made one of the first
white settlements in this part of the State. Mr. Smith was a famous hunter, and delighted
in ridding the country of the wild animals with which it was overrun. He also attended
very closely to his domestic affairs, and through his industry and good business capacity,
became quite an extensive land owner. He continued to purchase land and moved farther up
the bayou until he finally settled about twenty-five or thirty miles below Pine Bluff,
where he passed his last days. His death occurring in 1862. He served in the War of 1812,
and was with Gen. Jackson at New Orleans. His second wife died about 1867, and was a
member of the Methodist Church for many years. They were the parents of twelve children,
Capt. James Smith being sixth in order of birth. He was reared in the wilds of Arkansas,
and as a consequence, received but a limited education. At abort the age of sixteen years
he took charge of his father's plantation, which he managed very successfully for quite a
number of years. He selected his wife in the person of Miss Mary Ropers, a native of
Georgia, and was united in marriage with her in 1847. Her parents, James and Matilda
Ropers were natives of North Carolina, but came from Georgia to what is now Lincoln
County, Ark., at a very early day. Mr. Ropers died there about 1852, and his widow died
about eleven years later. The result of the anion of Captain and Mrs. Smith was the birth
of nine children, two sons and five daughters now living. Capt. Smith continued as the
general superintendent of the plantation until the war, and in 1861 joined Company F,
Ninth Arkansas Infantry, and operated in Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Georgia and
Alabama, until the close of hostilities. He surrendered at Vicksburg, Miss. He took a
prominent part in the fights at Belmont, Corinth, siege of Vicksburg and was all through
the Georgia and Atlanta Campaign, never receiving a wound. After the war he farmed for a
few years in Lincoln County, and then for about twelve years was in the liquor and
merchandising business at Star City. His business was destroyed by fire, and in December,
1883, he came to Kingsland, erected the building which he now occupies, and is naturally
adapted and suited to the hotel business. He has been a Democrat in his political views
all his life, and his first presidential vote was cast for J. C. Breckinridge in 1860. |