Career
He is buried in a mausoleum in Oakwood Cemetery in Syracuse, New New York L.C. Smith’s first business venture occurred in 1873, when he opened a livestock commission in New York City. The business failed within two years.
Undeterred, Smith next attempted to establish a lumber business in Syracuse in 1875.
His success in lumber was limited. Again on the verge of financial failure, Smith decided to enter into the lucrative business of producing firearms.
Instead, Lyman Smith was the namesake of the famous L.C. Smith Shotgun. However, in 1880, Leroy Smith and West.H. Baker left the company, and founded Ithaca Gun Company.
The defection of Leroy Smith and Baker from the company did not hamper business, as they were replaced by Smith’s younger brother, Wilbert, and a new designer Alexander T. Brown.
The company was renamed the L.C. Smith Shotgun Company of Syracuse and went on to produce several popular breech-loading shotguns. In 1886, the company produced its first hammerless shotgun. This proved to be their most successful design.
Despite the success of the company, Smith decided to sell the manufacturing rights for the entire line of L.C. Smith shotguns to Hunter Arms Company in 1889.
Hunter Arms would produce the line until 1945, when they sold it to Marlin Firearms Company. Marlin halted production of L.C. Smith shotguns in 1950.
They briefly revived the brand in 1967, before retiring it for good in 1972. Smith later went on to found the Smith-Premier Typewriter Company, which would later become Smith-Corona Typewriter Company.
He also funded the Smith Tower in Seattle, Washington, and there are several buildings at Syracuse University named after him.
Smith Corona or the Supply Chain Management Corporation is a United States typewriter and calculator company. The company experienced a decline in sales since the mid-1980s upon the introduction of Personal Computer-based word processing. Its competitors include Brother, Olivetti and International Business Machines Corporation.