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Born: September 2, 1855, Newton, North Carolina
Died: November 27, 1931
Occupation: Teacher; lawyer; publisher; Secretary of the
Interior; Georgia governor and senator.
Accomplishments: In 1872, Mr. Smith was a reader in a law
office; in 1883, he became a village schoolmaster in North Carolina;
then he practiced law in Atlanta. He acquired the "Atlanta
Journal" in the 1880s and built it into a successful newspaper.
He was appointed as Secretary to the Interior by President Cleveland,
but returned to Georgia in 1907 and was elected governor. He lost
the office for one term, but was reelected in 1911. He fostered
the corn club for boys and domestic science clubs for girls, forerunners
of the 4-H program. He became a U.S. Senator in 1912 upon the
death of Senator Alexander S. Clay. He introduced the Smith-Lever
Act in 1914, which established the Cooperative Extension Service.
In 1917, the Smith-Hughes Act made funds available for training
in agriculture and home economics in high schools.
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