After the war, Smith was an architect in Nashville, Tennessee.[1] In 1874, he designed the Main Building of Vanderbilt University, later known as Kirkland Hall, as two French Gothic towers.[4][5] The building burnt down in a fire in 1905, and it was later rebuilt with only one tower.[5]
Additionally, Smith was commissioned to two buildings in Downtown Nashville in 1893: a four-storey building on the corner of Printer's Alley and Church Street and a five-story building at 317 North College Street.[11] He was also commissioned to restore a three-story building at 315 North College Street.[11]
Smith quit his architectural career to serve in the Philippine–American War, where he commanded the 1st Tennessee Infantry Regiment of the United States Army in 1898–1899.[14]
Personal life
Smith was married.[2] They had several children, including a son, George J. Smith, who also served in the Philippine–American War,[15] and a daughter, who married Hart B. Blanton.[2]
Smith died of heat exhaustion during the Battle of Manila February 5, 1899, in the Philippines.[1][14][17] His corpse was shipped back to San Francisco, California, where it received a Masonic service.[18] Shortly after, his corpse was returned to Nashville, where it lay in the Nashville Masonic Temple, followed by a service in the Tabernacle.[18] He was buried on April 19, 1899, at the Mount Olivet Cemetery.[2][19]
In 1903, an honorary plaque from the Nashville Red Cross Society was installed inside the Parthenon.[2] The ceremony was attended by Benton McMillin, who served as the governor of Tennessee from 1899 to 1903.[2]
^Coleman, Christopher K. (Fall 1990). "From Monument to Museum: The Role of the Parthenon in the Culture of the New South". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 49 (3): 140. JSTOR42626877.
^ abBaxter, Colin F. "Spanish–American War". The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Tennessee Historical Society & University of Tennessee Press. Retrieved November 23, 2015.
^Adgent, Nancy L. "Clarence Kelley Colley (1868–1956)". The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Tennessee Historical Society & University of Tennessee Press. Retrieved November 23, 2015.