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  1. Clyde Harold Smith (June 9, 1876 – April 8, 1940) was a United States representative from Maine. [1] Life and career. Born on a farm near Harmony, Maine, he moved with his parents to Hartland, Maine in 1891. He attended the rural schools and Hartland Academy, and taught school.

  2. Clyde Harold Smith (1876-1940), husband of Margaret Chase Smith, a U.S. Representative was born on a farm near Harmony, on June 9, 1876. He moved with his parents to Hartland in 1891 and attended the rural schools and Hartland Academy. Smith taught school; served in the Maine House of Representatives (1899-1903 and 1919-1923). He engaged

  3. Clyde Harold Smith (June 9, 1876 – April 8, 1940) was a United States representative from Maine. Life and career. Born on a farm near Harmony, Maine, he moved with his parents to Hartland, Maine in 1891. He attended the rural schools and Hartland Academy, and taught school.

  4. US Congressman, Entrepreneur. He was born one of four children as Clyde Harold Smith in Harmony, Maine, to Willard F. Smith (1851-1919), and his wife Angie Bartlett Smith (1853-1882), on June 9, 1876. Raised on a farm in Harmony, Maine, with his siblings, he later moved with his parents to Hartland, Maine, in 1891.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Clyde_SmithClyde Smith - Wikipedia

    Clyde Smith may refer to: Clyde B. Smith (1906–1976), American football player, coach, and college athletics administrator; Clyde H. Smith (1876–1940), United States Representative from Maine; Clyde E. Smith (1897–1971), Justice of the Supreme Court of Texas

  6. Jul 1, 2021 · Clyde H. Smith was a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maine's 2nd district. In office January 3, 1937 – April 8, 1940. He was a Member of the Maine Senate from the 8th district.

  7. Clyde Smith was one of many New Englanders drawn to Southern Appalachia. After the Civil War, the era’s horseback riding travel writers, or, more rightly, “travel riders,” explored the Southern mountains, filling postbellum magazine articles with romantic tales of isolated mountaineers.