- Orlando J. Smith
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Orlando J. Smith (1842-1908) was an early 20th-century American philosopher. Smith was an avowed agnostic who still sought to understand meaning as the ultimate intelligence would, if such existed.
The sitter was born on June 14, 1842 in Terre Haute, Indiana. He fought in the Civil War, and was wounded near Atlanta, Georgia on August 3rd, 1864. He achieved the rank of Major. He was editor of the Terre Haute Mail, the Terre Haute Express, the Chicago Express and was the Founder of the American Press Association in 1882, whose General Office in 1910 was at 225, West 39th Street, New York. He lived at Dobbs Ferry-on-Hudson, New York.
He was an antisemite and among the thinkers whose works influenced Henry Ford.[citation needed]
Among works by Smith were A Short View of Great Quests (1899), The Coming Democracy, Balance the Fundamental Variety (1904), and The Agreement Between Science and Religion (1906)
His portrait was painted in 1910 by the Swiss-born American artist Adolfo Müller-Ury (1862-1947), for his son Courtland Smith (1884-1970), whose wife, Elinor Cary Smith, he painted six months later.
Sources
- New York Times, Sep. 20, 1902
- Neil Baldwin. Henry Ford and the Jews. (New York: PublicAffairs, 2001) p. 17-19.
- Open Library entry for Smith
Categories:- American philosophers
- American agnostics
- 1908 deaths
- 1842 births
- People from Terre Haute, Indiana
- People of Indiana in the American Civil War
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