Smith’s distinguished career in the royal engineers and official roles regulating Victorian railway development have been well documented.
Born into an impeccable military lineage, whose members included his great-uncle Count Von Kalckreuth (1737-1818), a commander-in-chief of the Prussian army during the Napoleonic wars, and his father, a commander of the Royal Artillery, Smith took a commission in the royal engineers in 1805 after passing out from Woolwich. He served with distinction in the Peninsular wars between 1807 and 1812, taking an active part in the siege and capture of Ischia, Procida, Zante and Santa Maura, for which he was mentioned in despatches, before returning to Woolwich as adjutant to the sappers.
Smith’s contribution to railways included a brief spell as inspector-general of railways, 1840-1, chairing a royal commission on the desirability of a uniform railway gauge, 1845-6, and serving on that appointed to investigate London’s termini in 1846. In 1842 he was made director of the royal engineers’ base at Chatham, where he had been stationed for at least nine years, and in 1851 took command of the entire southern district, which included the bases at Chatham and Portsmouth. He refrained from becoming a candidate for Chatham during this period, as he later recalled, ‘not wishing to oppose’ the Whig courtier George Stevens Byng, who was the son-in-law of his ‘friend’ Lord Anglesey, the former Irish viceroy.
Meanwhile, Smith followed the Derby ministry into the lobbies on free trade, 27 Nov. 1852, their policy in Ireland, 30 Nov., 7 Dec. 1852, and their budget, 16 Dec. 1852, the issue which brought the ministry down. A committee was appointed to investigate his election, 17 Feb. 1853, and after a well-publicised inquiry, in which he strenuously denied any wrong-doing, he was unseated for bribing an elector with a position in the post office worth £50 a year, 7 Mar. 1853.
At the 1857 general election Smith was spoken of for Portsmouth, but in the event he stood again for Chatham after his brother, who had become unpopular for opposing Palmerston over the Chinese war, offered elsewhere.
A fairly regular attender, Sir Frederick Smith, as he was usually known, duly gave general support to Palmerston in the months ahead, breaking with Disraeli, the Conservative leader in the Commons, on a number of issues, including church rates, 17 Feb. 1858, and the conspiracy to murder bill which brought the ministry down, 19 Feb. 1858. In the first of many interventions on military matters, he offered advice about how to deal with the Indian mutiny, urging the deployment of ‘sappers and miners’ to create ‘a breach’ that would facilitate the recapture of Delhi, 20 Aug. 1857.
At the ensuing general election he was re-elected for Chatham with government support. Thereafter, following the change of ministry, he was absent from many major divisions, including those on church rates and reform of the borough and county franchises, although he divided steadily against the ballot. He remained a regular contributor to debate on military matters, however, taking issue with Charles Wood’s proposed reorganisation of the Indian army, 2 July 1860, questioning the utility and cost of additional fortifications along the south coast, 13 Aug. 1860, recommending open competition for appointments to the royal marines and navy, 8 Feb. 1861, and accusing ministers of ‘wasting money in the erection of barracks’, 25 June 1861. On 6 Mar. 1862 he criticised the cost and efficiency of the Armstrong gun. Explaining his rationale for calling ministers to account, he disclaimed any ‘feeling of hostility’ towards them, 3 June 1862, insisting that he was only motivated by ‘the defence or non-defence of the country’. His frequent spats with the secretary to the admiralty Lord Clarence Paget often assumed a partisan hue, and on one occasion resulted in a written attack on him by Paget’s nominee as chief constructor of the navy, whose competence he had questioned, which was ruled a breach of privilege.
Another frequent refrain was the lack of progress on creating harbours of refuge, as recommended by the various select committees to which Smith had been appointed since 1857, and the royal commission on which he served from 1858-9. Speaking at great length on the issue, 17 Apr. 1863, Smith moved unsuccessfully for work to begin on specific harbours, noting that:
In very early life he himself had been wrecked, and the impression on his mind of what he then saw had never left him. He felt most deeply for sailors when exposed to dangers in a position in which there was no refuge at hand.
Hansard, 17 Apr. 1863, vol. 170, cc. 308-27.
Resurrecting the issue in his last known speech, 13 June 1865, he contended that an annual outlay of £134,000 would be sufficient for the construction of harbours ‘that would lead to the saving of a vast amount of life; and it would be niggardly, on the part of this great country, to refuse so moderate an expenditure for the accomplishment of so desirable an object’. His motion was defeated by 99 to 111.
At the 1865 general election Smith ‘succumbed’ to the treasury influence at Chatham and quit the field after a disappointing canvass. Commenting on the Conservatives’ ‘severe losses’ that July, the Hampshire Advertiser noted how Sir John Charles Dalrymple Hay and Sir Frederick Smith, ‘both obnoxious to the government from their great knowledge of naval and military affairs, and for their exposures of government shortcomings, had both gone to the wall’.
Smith published a number of military works, including translations of Marshal Marmont’s The Present State of the Turkish Empire (1839) and the French army’s Military Course of Engineering at the Regimental School at Arras (1850), as well as his Journal of the operations in mining carried on under the direction of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir J. M. F. Smith (1844). He achieved general in 1863 and died childless at his London home in Notting Hill Gate in November 1874, leaving estate valued under £3,000.
