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  1. Caleb Blood Smith (* 16. April 1808 in Boston, Massachusetts; † 7. Januar 1864 in Indianapolis, Indiana) war ein US-amerikanischer Politiker, der dem Kabinett von US-Präsident Abraham Lincoln als Innenminister angehörte. Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Berufliche Laufbahn. 2 Öffentliche Ämter. 3 Verwirrung über die letzte Ruhestätte. 4 Weblinks.

  2. Caleb Blood Smith (April 16, 1808 – January 7, 1864) was a United States Representative from Indiana, the 6th United States Secretary of the Interior and a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of Indiana.

  3. Caleb B. Smith (1861–1863) Caleb Blood Smith was born in 1808 in Boston, Massachusetts. He attended Cincinnati College and Miami University, studied law, and began to practice in Indiana. By 1831, Smith was involved in politics, copublishing a Whig newspaper, and, from 1833 to 1841, serving three terms in the Indiana state house of ...

  4. Bailey: Caleb Blood Smith 217 in the interior, but was worth forty cents on the Ohio river, and sixty cents on the Atlantic coast. The flatboat trade to New Orleans had helped somewhat in the Southern counties, but the central and northern section was still inaccessible. The National Road from the East had been surveyed

  5. Caleb Blood Smith. Congressman and U.S. Secretary of Interior. (Apr. 16, 1808-Jan. 7, 1864). Caleb Blood Smith was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the son of a merchant who moved his family to Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1814.

  6. Caleb Blood Smith (16. April 1808 – 7. Januar 1864) war ein Vertreter der Vereinigten Staaten aus Indiana, der 6. Innenminister der Vereinigten Staaten und ein Bezirksrichter der Vereinigten Staaten am Bezirksgericht der Vereinigten Staaten für den Bezirk Indiana.

  7. Caleb Blood Smith was born on April 16, 1808, in Boston, Massachusetts. His family moved to Ohio in 1814. He graduated from Miami University of Ohio in 1827 and was admitted to the bar in 1828. Smith began practicing law in Connersville, Indiana, where he also founded and edited the Indiana Sentinel in 1832.