Samantha Smith

Activist

Birthday June 29, 1972

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Houlton, Maine, US

DEATH DATE 1985-8-25, Auburn, Maine, US (13 years old)

Nationality United States

#12161 Most Popular

1956

Andropov had been the Soviet Ambassador to Hungary during the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, which was put down by the Soviet Army, and the Chairman of the KGB from 1967 to 1982; during his tenure, he was known in the West for crushing the Prague Spring and the brutal suppression of dissidents, such as Andrei Sakharov and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

He began his tenure as Soviet leader by strengthening the powers of the KGB, and by suppressing dissidents.

According to Vasili Mitrokhin, Andropov saw the struggle for human rights as a part of a wide-ranging imperialist plot to undermine the foundation of the Soviet state.

Much international tension surrounded both Soviet and American efforts to develop weapons capable of being launched from satellites in orbit.

Both governments had extensive research and development programs to develop such technology.

However, both nations were coming under increasing pressure to disband the project.

In the United States, President Ronald Reagan came under pressure from a lobby of US scientists and arms experts, while in the Soviet Union the government issued a statement that read, "To prevent the militarization of space is one of the most urgent tasks facing mankind".

1972

Samantha Reed Smith (June 29, 1972 – August 25, 1985) was an American peace activist and child actress from Manchester, Maine, who became famous for her anti-war outreaches during the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union.

Samantha Smith was born on June 29, 1972, in the small town of Houlton, Maine, on the Canada–United States border, to Jane Goshorn and Arthur Smith.

At the age of five, she wrote a letter to Queen Elizabeth II in order to express her admiration to the British monarch.

1979

The 1979–1989 Soviet–Afghan War was also into its third year.

1980

When Smith had finished second grade in spring 1980, the family settled in Manchester, Maine, where she attended Manchester Elementary School.

Her father served as an instructor at Ricker College in Houlton before teaching literature and writing at the University of Maine at Augusta while her mother worked as a social worker with the Maine Department of Human Services.

1982

In 1982, Smith wrote a letter to the newly appointed General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Yuri Andropov, and received a personal reply with an invitation to visit the Soviet Union, which she accepted.

Smith attracted extensive media attention in both countries as a "Goodwill Ambassador", becoming known as America's Youngest Ambassador and subsequently participating in peacemaking activities in Japan.

With the assistance of her father, Arthur (an academic), she wrote a book titled Journey to the Soviet Union, which chronicled her visit to the country.

When Yuri Andropov succeeded Leonid Brezhnev as leader of the Soviet Union in November 1982, the mainstream Western newspapers and magazines ran numerous front-page photographs and articles about him.

Most coverage was negative and tended to give a perception of a new threat to the stability of the Western World.

In this atmosphere, on November 22, 1982, Time magazine published an issue with Andropov on the cover.

When Smith viewed the edition, she asked her mother: "If people are so afraid of him, why doesn't someone write a letter asking whether he wants to have a war or not?"

Her mother replied, "Why don't you?"

In November 1982, when Smith was 10 years old, she wrote to Soviet leader Yuri Andropov, seeking to understand why Soviet Union–United States relations were so tense:

"Dear Mr. Andropov,

My name is Samantha Smith.

I am 10 years old.

Congratulations on your new job.

I have been worrying about Russia and the United States getting into a nuclear war.

Are you going to vote to have a war or not?

If you aren't please tell me how you are going to help to not have a war.

This question you do not have to answer, but I would like it if you would.

Why do you want to conquer the world or at least our country?

God made the world for us to share and take care of.

Not to fight over or have one group of people own it all.

Please lets do what he wanted and have everybody be happy too.

Samantha Smith"

Her letter was published in the Soviet state-run newspaper Pravda.

1983

At the time, large anti-nuclear protests were taking place across both Europe and North America, in the midst of which the November 20, 1983, screening of ABC's post-nuclear war dramatization The Day After became one of the most anticipated media events of the decade.

The two superpowers had by this point abandoned their strategy of détente and in response to the deployment of the Soviet Union's new SS-20, NATO deployed cruise and Pershing II missiles in Europe.

1984

She later became a child actress, hosting a child-oriented special on the 1984 United States presidential election for The Disney Channel and playing a co-starring role in the television series Lime Street.

1985

Smith died at the age of 13 in 1985, onboard Bar Harbor Airlines Flight 1808, which crashed short of the runway on final approach to the Auburn/Lewiston Municipal Airport in Maine.