William Smoot
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

William M. Smoot () was a resident of Occoquan,
Virginia Virginia, officially the Commonwealth of Virginia, is a state in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern regions of the United States, between the Atlantic Coast and the Appalachian Mountains. The geography and climate of the Commonwealth ar ...
and for many years was a leading Predestinarian Old School Primitive Baptist preacher in Prince William County. He was the preacher of Occoquan (also known as Bacon Race to those outside the membership of those associated with Smoot) an
Quantico Baptist
churches from 1888 to 1938. Smoot, whose followers were known locally as "Smootites", engaged in a heated rivalry over doctrine and practice as set forth in the Bible with the reverend Thomas D.D. Clark, whose Union Baptist Church was located across the road from the Quantico Baptist Church in the village of Independent Hill. Smoot was a prolific writer of religious tracts on
predestination Predestination, in theology, is the doctrine that all events have been willed by God, usually with reference to the eventual fate of the individual soul. Explanations of predestination often seek to address the paradox of free will, whereby G ...
,
election An election is a formal group decision-making process by which a population chooses an individual or multiple individuals to hold public office. Elections have been the usual mechanism by which modern representative democracy has opera ...
, total depravity, including several books and pamphlets, and a monthly newsletter he printed himself on a press set up in his home in Occoquan. This newsletter, "The Sectarian", devoted to the cause of the Bible Baptists appeared in monthly installments from 1890 until Smoot's death in 1938. In 1904, Smoot also published a collection of 698 hymns, called "The Sectarian Hymnal". Smoot died at his home in 1938 at the age of 90. He was found on his front porch seated in a chair with his Bible in his hand and glasses still on his nose.


References

CONTEST OF 1886---1889 BY ELDER WILLIAM MIDDLETON SMOOT 1848 births 1938 deaths 19th-century Baptist ministers from the United States {{US-reli-bio-stub