Milo Smith

Milo Smith
Mayor of Chattanooga
In office
1862–1863
Preceded byJames Cartwright Warner
Succeeded by Military Occupation (1863–1865)
Richard Henderson (1865)
In office
1850–1852
Preceded byThomas Crutchfield Sr.
Succeeded byHenry White Massengale
In office
1842–1844
Preceded byBeriah Frazier
Succeeded byJoseph Strong Gillespie
Personal details
Born1807
Dayton, Tennessee
DiedSeptember 25, 1869

Milo Smith (1807 – 25 September 1869) was an American medical doctor and owner of the leading medical practice in the early days of Chattanooga, Tennessee, who served as mayor of the city in three different decades.[1]

He was born at Smith's Cross Roads, now Dayton, Tennessee, in 1807, by William Smith and Elizibeth Cozby. Dr. Milo Smith attended the Philadelphia Medical School where he studied medicine and earned his M.D. He later went on to marry Caroline Lipscomb, daughter of Spotswood and Elizabeth Smith Pendleton Lipscomb, of Grainger County, Tennessee, on July 20, 1833, in Athens, Tennessee. Their daughter, Elizibeth Nisbet Smith, was the first white child born in the city of Chattanooga after its naming and their son, William Spotswood Smith, attended the medical school in Nashville and later worked on the medical staff for Dr. Samuel H. Stout in the Confederate Army. Smith was elected mayor of Chattanooga in 1842 and then again in 1843, making him the first mayor to ever serve two terms both consecutively and all together. He served as mayor again in from 1862 and 1863 until his office was abrogated by the Union Army during the occupation of Chattanooga. In total, Smith was served as mayor for seven individual terms; however, each was only a year long.[2][3][4]

  1. ^ "Death of a Well Known Physician". Nashville Union and American. September 29, 1869. p. 1. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  2. ^ "1842-1843 Dr. Milo Smith". 2013. Retrieved October 10, 2014.
  3. ^ Armstrong, Zella (1940). The History of Hamilton County and Chattanooga Tennessee. The Lookout Publishing Company. pp. 298–305.
  4. ^ "Dr. Milo Smith". Retrieved October 24, 2014.