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    The Peter D. Smith House at Waterloo Village

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    The Peter D. Smith house was erected in 1871, the same year Peter, 26, was married. The house overlooks the village and has a sweeping view of the Musconetcong River and Morris Canal. Peter D. Smith, grandson of John Smith, had this elaborate home with its fashionable Mansard roof and Second French Empire architecture built circa 1870. Peter D. married Ann Elizabeth Sandford of Newark and they had four children. Sadly, but not uncommon for the times, their two daughters died during childhood. Their oldest son married his childhood friend and love, Claribel Stackhouse, on his deathbed and died at the age of 26. The surviving child, Sandford Roy Smith (1887-1982), lived in Waterloo Village in his younger years and inherited his father�s estate.Original file name fullsizeoutput_b9c (2).jp

    The Peter D. Smith House at Waterloo Village

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    The Peter D. Smith house is considered to be the most architecturally significant building in the village. It is located on top of a rise of land on the north side of the old Waterloo Road. This house is a three-story wood-framed dwelling designed in the Second Empire style of architecture. Smith Peter Smith was the grandson of John Smith, who purchased both large and small tracts of land in and around the village in the late 1820s and early 1830sOriginal file name 47.jp

    The Peter D. Smith Carriage House - The Blue Barn

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    This beautiful cupola topped barn is located some distance behind the main house, on the other side of a road that passes at the back of. the village. It was built in 1871. This was the carriage house for Peter D. Smith. Carriage houses were usually located behind the main house and were used to store carriages, equipment, livery accessories, horses and hay.Original file name fullsizeoutput_ba4.jp

    J. D. Smith

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    J. D. Smith 1844

    W. D. Smith family at groundbreaking ceremony for the W. D. Smith Photography studio

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    W. D. Smith family at groundbreaking ceremony for the W. D. Smith Photography studio at 3400 Lovell Ave., Fort Worth. Standing in the back row are, from left, Mrs. Laura Smith, W. D. Smith, and their son Gordon Smith.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_wdsmithphotography/1029/thumbnail.jp

    Ray D Smith

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    Photograph of Ray D Smith with a pipe

    W. D. Smith portrait

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    W. D. Smith portraithttps://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_wdsmithphotography/12308/thumbnail.jp

    John D. Smith (right)

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    John D. Smith (right)https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-faulk-papers/2422/thumbnail.jp
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