Smyth
Appearance
Origin | |
---|---|
Meaning | Smith (metalwork) |
Region of origin | Originally England |
Other names | |
Variant form(s) | Smith, Smythe |
Smyth is an early variant of the common surname Smith commonly found in Ireland.[1] Shown below are notable people who share the surname "Smyth".
Notable people sharing the Smyth surname
[edit]Listed here are people who share the 'Smyth' surname, organized by birth year.
Name | Birth | Death | Nationality • Notability • Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Born after 1400 | ||||
William Smyth[2] | c. 1460 | 1514 | English • Roman Catholic Bishop; Lord President of the Council of Wales and the Marches; co-founder of Brasenose College | |
Richard Smyth (Regius Professor)[2] | 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 | English • founder of the modern Baptist denomination in England | |
Born after 1600 | ||||
Born after 1700 | ||||
Thomas Smyth[3] | 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[3] | 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 | 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[4] | |
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 | |
John Henry Smyth | 1780 | 1822 | English • Member of Parliament for the University of Cambridge | |
William Henry Smyth[5] | 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[5] | 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 politician) | 1819 | 1899 | American • Mayor of Manchester, New Hampshire; Governor of New Hampshire | |
Charles Piazzi Smyth[5] | 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[6] • 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 | |
Joseph Grigsby Smyth | 1847 | 1915 | American politician. Member of the Texas House of Representatives from 1870 to 1873. | |
William Ross Smyth | 1857 | 1932 | Scottish-Canadian • National politician: second member of Parliament from Algoma East, Ontario • it is unclear when Mr. Smyth immigrated to Canada | |
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 | |
Albert Henry Smyth | 1863 | 1907 | Professor, writer, editor, curator for the American Philosophical Society; Widely noted among historians for finding hundreds of lost letters of Benjamin Franklin and publishing them for the first time. | |
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 | ||||
Larry Smyth | 1902 | 1960 | American • Journalist and public official | |
Bill Smyth (umpire) | 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 | 2013 | 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 | 1933 | 2016 | English • Musician; co-founder of the band Gong and founder of the band Mother Gong | |
Hugh Smyth | 1941 | 2014 | Northern Irish • Fifty-first Lord Mayor of Belfast; first leader of the Progressive Unionist Party | |
John Smyth | 1941 | 2018 | English Barrister | |
Clifford Smyth | 1944 | (living) | Northern Irish • Historian and politician; second member of the Northern Ireland Assembly from the North Antrim constituency | |
Tommy Smyth | 1946 | (living) | Irish-American • Sports journalist; football (soccer) commentator • Immigrated to the United States in 1963 | |
Paul Smyth | 1947 | (living) | Australian • Professor of social policy | |
Ken Smyth | 1948 | (living) | Australian • Politician | |
William James Smyth | 1949 | (living) | Irish • Professor of geography; first university president of National University of Ireland Maynooth | |
Alan Smyth | before 1990 | (living) | English • Music producer | |
Anthony Smyth | before 1999 | (living) | Northern Irish • Arms smuggler | |
Eric Smyth | before 1981 | (living) | Northern Irish • Fifty-second Lord Mayor of Belfast | |
Malcolm Smyth | before 1972 | (living) | Irish • Academic analytical chemist | |
Seán Smyth | before 1993 | (living) | Irish • Musician; All-Ireland Champion on fiddle and whistle | |
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 | |
William Smyth | 1962 | (living) | Northern Irish award winning press photographer | |
Bryan Smyth | 1963 | (living) | Irish • Singer, television personality and actor | |
Karin Smyth | 1964 | (living) | English • Politician | |
Brian Smyth | 1967 | (living) | Irish • Painter | |
Stephen Smyth | 1968 | (living) | Northern Irish • Cricket player | |
Jim Smyth | approx. 1970 | (living) | Canadian • Law enforcement officer | |
Cameron Smyth | 1971 | (living) | American • California state politician | |
Ryan Smyth | 1976 | (living) | Canadian • Professional ice hockey player | |
Clare Smyth | 1978 | (living) | Northern Irish • Chef | |
Sarah Smyth | 1982 | (living) | Canadian • Actress | |
Mark Smyth | 1985 | (living) | English • Professional football player | |
Eloise Smyth | 1995 | (living) | English • Actress | |
Oisin Smyth | 2000 | (living) | Northern Irish • Professional football player | |
Keith Smyth | 2003 | (living) | Irish • Professional hurler |
Families
[edit]- Smyth baronets, several independently created British hereditary titles
- Bowyer-Smyth baronets, holders of a single British hereditary title
Smyth disambiguation pages
[edit]- John Smyth (disambiguation)
- Joseph Smyth (disambiguation)
- Peter Smyth (disambiguation)
- Richard Smyth (disambiguation)
- William Smyth (disambiguation)
Notes
[edit]- ^ Citation: Bardsley, 1901
- ^ a b Surname can be found as either 'Smyth' or 'Smith'
- ^ a b Brothers: Thomas 1740 and John 1742.
- ^ Virginia declared independence from Great Britain in 1776.
- ^ a b c Father and sons: William 1788 and sons Charles 1819 and Warington 1817
- ^ Smyth 1826 was born in a region that would later be a part of Northern Ireland, which came into existence as a separate entity in 1920.
Other uses
[edit]- Smyth County, Virginia
- Smyth (restaurant) - a restaurant in Chicago
References
[edit]- Bardsley, Charles Wareing (1901). English and Welsh Surnames (PDF). London: Henry Frowde. p. 699. ISBN 978-0-8063-0022-1. Retrieved 2008-03-03.
The y in Smyth is the almost invariable spelling in early rolls, so that it cannot exactly be styled a modern affectation.