Notable People Sharing The Smyth Surname
Listed here are people who share the 'Smyth' surname, organized by birth year, to assist in assembling a view of the geographic distribution of this surname over time.
Name | Birth | Death | Nationality • Notability • Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Born after 1400 | |||
William Smyth | c. 1460 | 1514 | English • Anglican Bishop; Lord President of the Council of Wales and the Marches; co-founder of Brasenose College |
Richard Smyth (Regius Professor) | c. 1499 | 1563 | English • first person to hold the office of Regius Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford • migrated to France late in life |
Born after 1500 | |||
John Smyth (1570-1612) | 1570 | 1612 | English • founder of the modern Baptist denomination in England |
Born after 1600 | |||
Born after 1700 | |||
Thomas Smyth | 1740 | 1785 | Irish • Mayor of Limerick; member of Parliament • Smyth's children bore the surname 'Stuart' rather than 'Smyth' |
John Prendergast Smyth, 1st Viscount Gort | 1742 | 1817 | Irish • Member of the House of Commons; Peer of Ireland as Baron Kiltarton and Viscount Gort • Born 'John Smyth'; took the name 'Pendergast' in 1760; reverted to name 'Smyth' in 1785. |
John Smyth (1748-1811) | 1748 | 1811 | British • Master of the Mint of Great Britain and Lord High Treasurer; Member of Parliament |
Alexander Smyth | 1765 | 1830 | Irish-American • National politician; General during the War of 1812 • Born in Ireland and immigrated to the American colony of Virginia in 1775, at the age of 10 |
George Stracey Smyth | 1767 | 1823 | English-Canadian • Second Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, Canada • Born in England and migrated to Canada before 1798 |
James Carmichael Smyth | 1779 | 1838 | British • First Baron of Nutwood, Surrey; twenty-seventh Colonial Governor of the Bahamas; second Colonial Governor of British Guiana |
William Henry Smyth | 1788 | 1865 | English • Astronomer and author of the Bedford Catalogue of deep sky objects • Born to a Colonial American who immigrated to England after the American Revolution |
William Smyth (professor) | 1797 | 1868 | American • Mathematician and theologian; author of several widely used mathematics textbooks |
Born after 1800 | |||
George W. Smyth | 1803 | 1866 | American • National politician: third Representative from the Texas 1st Congressional District |
Clement Smyth | 1810 | 1865 | Irish-American • Roman Catholic Bishop • Immigrated to the United States before 1849 |
Sir Warington Wilkinson Smyth | 1817 | 1890 | English • Geologist; member of the Royal Society; President of the Geological Society of London; Knighted in 1867 • Born to an English father while in Italy on a military posting |
Sir Edward Selby Smyth | 1819 | 1896 | Irish-Canadian • British General; first General Officer commanding the Militia of Canada; Knight of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George • Immigrated to Canada before 1874 |
Frederick Smyth (New Hampshire) | 1819 | 1899 | American • Mayor of Manchester, New Hampshire; Governor of New Hampshire |
Charles Piazzi Smyth | 1819 | 1900 | English • Astronomer Royal for Scotland; recipient of the Makdougall Brisbane Prize; pioneer in the field of infrared astronomy • Born to English father during Naval service in the Mediterranean |
William Smyth (congressman) | 1824 | 1870 | Irish-American • National politician: eighth Representative from the Iowa 2nd District (died in office) • Immigrated (with his parents) to the United States in 1838, at the age of 14 |
Richard Smyth (minister) | 1826 | 1878 | Irish • Academic; Member of Parliament |
Robert Brough Smyth | 1830 | 1899 | English-Australian • Secretary for the Department of Mines at the height of the Australian gold rushes; author of a significant work on the Australian aborigines of Victoria • Immigrated to Australia in 1852, at the age of 22 |
Thomas Alfred Smyth | 1832 | 1865 | Irish-American • Union Army General during the American Civil War • Immigrated to the United States in 1854, at the age of 22 |
William Ross Smyth | 1857 | 1932 | Scottish-Canadian • National politician: second member of Parliament from Algoma East, Ontario • |
Herbert Weir Smyth | 1857 | 1937 | American • author of a notable comprehensive grammar of Ancient Greek |
Dame Ethel Smyth | 1858 | 1944 | English • Composer and leader of the women's suffrage movement in the United Kingdom of the early 20th century |
George Smyth (Canadian politician) | 1864 | 1938 | Canadian • Ontario Provincial politician |
Nevill Maskelyne Smyth | 1868 | 1941 | English • Victoria Cross recipient |
Sir John Smyth, 1st Baronet | 1893 | 1983 | English • Victoria Cross recipient; Member of Parliament; holder of the first Baronet of Teignmouth |
Henry DeWolf Smyth | 1898 | 1986 | American • physicist; author of the Smyth Report (first history of the Manhattan Project) |
Born after 1900 | |||
Bill Smyth | 1916 | 2007 | Australian • Cricket test match umpire; Officer of the Order of Australia |
Brendan Smyth (priest) | 1927 | 1997 | Northern Irish • Catholic priest, who used his position to facilitate the molestation of hundreds of children over a period of four decades |
Jimmy Smyth (hurler) | 1931 | (living) | Irish • prominent hurling athlete |
Martin Smyth | 1931 | (living) | Northern Irish • Grand Master of the Orange Order; eleventh Member of Parliament from the Belfast South constituency |
Gilli Smyth | c. 1933 | (living) | English • Musician; co-founder of the band Gong and founder of the band Mother Gong |
Alan Smyth | before 1990 | (living) | English • Music producer |
Anthony Smyth | before 1999 | (living) | Northern Irish • Arms smuggler |
Cameron Smyth | before 1994 | (living) | American • California state politician |
Clifford Smyth | before 1973 | (living) | Northern Irish • Historian and politician; second member of the Northern Ireland Assembly from the North Antrim constituency |
Eric Smyth | before 1981 | (living) | Northern Irish • Fifty-second Lord Mayor of Belfast |
Hugh Smyth | before 1973 | (living) | Northern Irish • Fifty-first Lord Mayor of Belfast; first leader of the Progressive Unionist Party |
Malcolm Smyth | before 1972 | (living) | Irish • Academic analytical chemist |
Sarah Smyth | before 2004 | (living) | Canadian • Actress |
Seán Smyth | before 1993 | (living) | Irish • Musician; All-Ireland Champion on fiddle and whistle |
Tommy Smyth | before 1963 | (living) | Irish-American • Sports journalist; football (soccer) commentator • Immigrated to the United States in 1963 |
Born after 1950 | |||
Des Smyth | 1953 | (living) | Irish • professional golfer |
Patty Smyth | 1957 | (living) | American • Singer |
Phil Smyth | 1958 | (living) | Australian • Professional basketball player |
Brendan Smyth (politician) | 1959 | (living) | Australian • Politician; fourth Member of Parliament for the Division of Canberra |
Chas Smash | 1959 | (living) | English • Singer and dancer for the band Madness • born to the name "Cathal Joseph Patrick Smyth" to Irish-English immigrant parents |
Gerry Smyth | 1961 | (living) | Irish • Academic in the areas of Irish literature and music history |
Bryan Smyth | 1963 | (living) | Irish • Singer, television personality and actor |
Brian Smyth | 1967 | (living) | Irish • Painter |
George Henry Smyth | 1968 | (living) | Northern Irish • Artist |
Stephen Smyth | 1968 | (living) | Northern Irish • Cricket player |
Ryan Smyth | 1976 | (living) | Canadian • Professional ice hockey player |
Mark Smyth | 1985 | (living) | English • Professional football (soccer) player |
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Famous quotes containing the words notable, people, sharing and/or smyth:
“Every notable advance in technique or organization has to be paid for, and in most cases the debit is more or less equivalent to the credit. Except of course when its more than equivalent, as it has been with universal education, for example, or wireless, or these damned aeroplanes. In which case, of course, your progress is a step backwards and downwards.”
—Aldous Huxley (18941963)
“Theres so few people in this town with a conscience.”
—Blake Edwards (b. 1922)
“I go for all sharing the privileges of the government, who assist in bearing its burthens.”
—Abraham Lincoln (18091865)
“The habit some writers indulge in of perpetual quotation is one it behoves lovers of good literature to protest against, for it is an insidious habit which in the end must cloud the stream of thought, or at least check spontaneity. If it be true that le style cest lhomme, what is likely to happen if lhomme is for ever eking out his own personality with that of some other individual?”
—Dame Ethel Smyth (18581944)