Born in Kintyre, Scotland, Smith emigrated to Southern Rhodesia in 1946 to take up farming. Initially a farm assistant, he rose to become a farm manager and later co-founded a farming enterprise of his own in Mazowe. He was elected to the Southern Rhodesian Legislative Assembly in 1965, the year of Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence, and was added to the cabinet three years later as agriculture minister. He later held the portfolios of finance and commerce, and served for three years as Ian Smith's deputy prime minister. Considered a moderate within the Rhodesian Front, he was one of a few white ministers included in the cabinets of premier Abel Muzorewa of Zimbabwe Rhodesia in 1979, and by Robert Mugabe in 1980. He resigned from the cabinet and the Rhodesian Front in 1981, and remained in retirement in Harare until his death.
Smith emigrated to Southern Rhodesia in 1946, sailing from England on the Winchester Castle's first post-war voyage.[1][3][4][7][8] His brother, Hamish Smith, also moved to the colony and farmed in Nyabira.[9] Prior to leaving, Smith became engaged to Jean Barclay Graham, whom he married in 1948.[3][4][7] Together, they had five children, Catherine, Marge, Graham, Elizabeth, and William Lindsay—who died in 1952 at the age of two—and fourteen grandchildren.[2][4][7]
Farming in Rhodesia
In Southern Rhodesia, Smith initially worked as a farm assistant, before becoming a farm manager.[1][3][4][6][10] He later started his own farming enterprise, Smith and Wheeler (Pvt) Ltd., with a partner in Mazowe.[3][6][7][10] He joined the Grain Marketing Board in 1953, and served on several other agricultural committees.[3] He became chairman of the national Farmers' Co-operative in 1966.[3][4] In 1974, he purchased a farm in Banket worth several hundred thousand dollars.[1]
In the country's first multiracial elections in 1980, Smith was reelected unopposed as MP for Borrowdale, one of the twenty seats reserved for whites.[7] After the election, he was named Minister of Commerce and Industry in Prime Minister Robert Mugabe's cabinet.[5][7][20][24] He was one of two whites in the cabinet, along with agriculture minister Denis Norman, and was the only minister belonging to the Rhodesian Front.[20][24][25] He said he would remain in the party, and Ian Smith played a role in his selection for the cabinet.[20] He was sworn in with the other cabinet ministers on 19 April 1980.[26] Later that year, his title was changed to Minister of Trade and Commerce, with the industry portfolio going to Simba Makoni.[27][28] In early March 1981, Smith resigned from the cabinet, citing ill health.[5][7][8][25][29][30] He resigned from Parliament and the Rhodesian Front on 30 April, saying in a statement that he had decided to retire from politics but would be "an interested onlooker".[8][10][31]
Later life and death
After leaving politics, Smith remained in Zimbabwe in retirement.[5][7] He enjoyed riding and shooting, and was a member of the Harare Club and Dining Club.[3] He died at his home in Harare on 9 July 1996 at age 74, several years after being diagnosed with heart disease.[5][7][32] He was buried at Kilkerran Cemetery in Campbeltown, Argyll and Bute, with his parents and son, William.