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Jethro Sumner

Jethro Exum Sumner (c. 1733 – c. March 18, 1785) was a senior officer of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. Born in Virginia, Sumner's military service began in the French and Indian War as a member of the state's Provincial forces. After the conclusion of that conflict, he moved to Bute County, North Carolina, where he acquired a substantial area of land and operated a tavern. He served as Sheriff of Bute County, but with the coming of the American Revolution, he became a strident patriot, and was elected to North Carolina's Provincial Congress.

Jethro Sumner
A posthumous depiction of Sumner produced c. 1890
Birth nameJethro Exum Sumner
Bornc. 1733
Nansemond County, Virginia
Diedc. March 18, 1785 (aged 51–52)
Warren County, North Carolina, US
Buried 36°07′56.0″N 79°50′33.1″W / 36.132222°N 79.842528°W / 36.132222; -79.842528
Allegiance
Service/branch
Years of service1758–1783
RankBrigadier General
Commands held
Battles/wars
Signature

Sumner was named the commanding officer of the 3rd North Carolina Regiment of the North Carolina Line, a formation of the Continental Army, in 1776, and served in both the Southern theater and Philadelphia campaign. He was one of five brigadier generals from North Carolina in the Continental Army, in which capacity he served between 1779 and 1783. He served with distinction in the battles of Stono Ferry and Eutaw Springs, but recurring bouts of poor health often forced him to play an administrative role, or to convalesce in North Carolina. Following a drastic reduction in the number of North Carolinians serving with the Continental Army, Sumner became a general in the state's militia but resigned in protest after the North Carolina Board of War awarded overall command of the militia to William Smallwood, a Continental Army general from Maryland. At the end of the war in 1783, Sumner helped to establish the North Carolina Chapter of the Society of the Cincinnati, and became its first president. He died in 1785 with extensive landholdings and 35 slaves.

Early life Edit

 
A portion of John Collet's 1770 map of North Carolina depicting the environs of Bute County

Sumner was born in Nansemond County, Virginia, in 1733 to Jethro and Margaret Sullivan Sumner. His family had originally settled in Nansemond County in 1691.[1]

Between 1758 and 1761, during the French and Indian War, he was a lieutenant in the Virginia Provincial forces in Pennsylvania under the command of William Byrd III.[2] On November 25, 1758, Sumner participated in the capture of Fort Duquesne.[3] He was made commander at Pennsylvania's Fort Bedford in 1760.[4]

After his regiment was disbanded in 1761, he returned home to Nansemond County.[5] Between 1761 and 1764, he moved to Bute County in North Carolina, and married Mary Hurst of Granville County, with whom he had three children.[1][4] One daughter, Mary,[6] went on to wed Thomas Blount, who later served multiple terms in the United States House of Representatives.[7]

Sumner owned substantial property inherited through his wife's family in Bute County,[1] where he also owned and possibly operated a tavern on land that he leased for £36 annually.[8] Like many former Virginians who moved across the border into North Carolina during the colonial era, it is likely that Sumner would have retained close business ties with the province of his birth.[9]

Between 1772 and 1776, he served as sheriff of Bute County, resigning when he became an officer during the American Revolutionary War.[10] Sumner was active in pre-Revolution protests and politics, as he believed a separation from Great Britain was inevitable.[11]

American Revolutionary War Edit

In 1775, the North Carolina Provincial Congress passed legislation to raise militia forces throughout the state,[12] and to that end it organized six militia districts, including one, centered on the town of Halifax, which contained Sumner's home.

The soldiers comprising the militia throughout the state were to enlist for six-month periods.[13] Sumner was chosen to be a major in the Halifax District militia, and was instructed to drill his men so that they would be prepared for the expected conflict.[14] Between August and September 1775, he served as Bute County's representative at the Third North Provincial Congress.[1] In November 1775, Sumner summoned his militia into active service, and marched north to join Robert Howe in capturing (and later burning) Norfolk, Virginia.[15]

Southern theater, 1776 Edit

On April 4, 1776, after the American Revolutionary war had been raging in Massachusetts for nearly a year, the Provincial Congress at Halifax chose Sumner to be colonel, and thus commanding officer, of the 3rd North Carolina Regiment.[11] He likely participated in the defense of Charleston against a British invasion attempt in 1776,[16] after which he was involved in the aborted plans of Major General Charles Lee to invade British Florida. During the planning stages for the Florida invasion, Sumner disagreed with Peter Muhlenberg of the 8th Virginia Regiment over which of the two was to be given command over Lee's Virginia and North Carolina troops while the commanding general was traveling in advance of his men. This dispute was resolved only when a military court of inquiry awarded Muhlenberg temporary command after Sumner failed to appear and plead his case.[17] By August 18, 1776, Sumner's 3rd Regiment had reached Savannah, Georgia, where they joined Lee, who had arrived earlier in the month.[18] The planned invasion of Florida did not materialize, though, and Sumner left his regiment at Savannah in September 1776 to recruit more soldiers from North Carolina.[1]

Philadelphia campaign and Valley Forge Edit

In early 1777, Sumner resumed command of the 3rd North Carolina regiment, and marched the unit north to serve under George Washington in the Philadelphia campaign.[1] In early and mid-1777, he remained encamped with the main portion of the Continental Army at Morristown, New Jersey. He and his men drilled regularly and had their supplies and arms inspected and repaired, although many of the North Carolinians had such poor muskets that a substantial number were discarded.[19] Sumner and his regiment fought in the battles of Brandywine and Germantown, and spent the winter of 1777 to 1778 in Valley Forge with Washington's army.[1]

After the death at Germantown of General Francis Nash, the regiments of his North Carolina brigade were left without a commanding general. Generals Alexander McDougall of New York and Lachlan McIntosh of Georgia were appointed in succession to temporary command of the North Carolinians while in winter quarters. Many North Carolina officers believed the state was due the appointment of two additional brigadier generals based on the number of soldiers it provided to the Continental Army.[20] At Valley Forge, the North Carolina brigade had a total strength of 1,051, but 353 were ill, and 164 lacked sufficient clothes to be fit for service.[21] Sumner himself became ill in early 1778, and was forced to return home to recuperate; he continued to recruit soldiers in North Carolina during his recovery.[1] Despite his recruitment efforts, in February 1778, North Carolina's regiments were consolidated because of a lack of available soldiers, and Sumner's 3rd Regiment absorbed the 5th North Carolina Regiment.[22]

Promotion and campaigning in the Carolinas Edit

Although North Carolina believed it was owed additional general officer positions, conflicts between members of the North Carolina General Assembly over who was to be considered for the positions stalled the appointment of officers to assume those positions. Thomas Burke, one of North Carolina's leading delegates to the Continental Congress, apparently lacked interest in any of the suggested candidates. To complicate matters further, Alexander Martin, once a leading candidate for generalship, resigned after charges of cowardice were leveled against him, and was no longer seen as an appropriate candidate.[23] The General Assembly deferred discussion of possible replacement generals for more than a month after convening on November 7, 1777.[24] By December 15, the North Carolina General Assembly instructed its representatives in the Second Continental Congress to nominate Sumner for promotion to general.[25] It was not until January 9, 1779, though, that the Continental Congress commissioned Sumner as brigadier general (along with fellow North Carolinian James Hogun), and ordered him to join General Benjamin Lincoln in South Carolina.[1] Sumner received the highest number of congressional votes, thirteen to Hogun's nine and Thomas Clark's four.[26]

On June 20, 1779, Sumner led a Continental Army brigade at the Battle of Stono Ferry, assaulting the British right flank and routing the Hessian von Trümbach Regiment.[27] The Continentals and the Patriot militia began to run out of ammunition during the battle, and Lincoln was forced to order a general retreat. At least seven Continental officers under Sumner's command were wounded, and future United States President Andrew Jackson's brother Hugh was among ten North Carolinians killed.[28] After the engagement at Stono Ferry, Sumner experienced another bout of poor health. He returned to North Carolina to recover, continuing to recruit troops during his convalescence. He suffered financially during his recovery, as a monetary crisis at the time left many officers in his position barely able to support themselves at home.[29] He was also tasked by Lincoln with finding deserters in North Carolina and pressing them back into service.[30] Sumner was on a leave of absence in September and October 1779, during the Patriot defeat at the siege of Savannah.[31]

Militia command Edit

 
General Nathanael Greene, under whom Sumner served beginning in 1780

Between the siege of Charleston in May 1780 and the Battle of Camden in August that year, the North Carolina Line (a loose organizational structure that encompassed all of North Carolina's Continental Army units) was virtually annihilated, suffering substantial casualties and the loss of many men as prisoners of war.[32] During at least part of the intervening time, Sumner was in North Carolina on a recruiting mission.[31] Rather than rebuild the Line, the North Carolina General Assembly determined to rely on militia for the defense of the state.[33] In September 1780, Sumner temporarily transferred to command of the Hillsborough District Brigade, under the statewide leadership of Richard Caswell.[34] As commander of a brigade of North Carolina militia, Sumner was tasked with defending the state from the advances of British General Charles Cornwallis,[1] but the militiamen were poorly equipped and ill-trained.[34]

In late 1780, the North Carolina Board of War removed Caswell from command of North Carolina's militia, and the General Assembly awarded command of the militia to Continental Army Brigadier General William Smallwood of Maryland, citing the Assembly's lack of confidence in their own state's military commanders. Sumner was further offended when command of the dwindling number of North Carolina Continentals in the southern theater was given to Smallwood as well.[35] Despite persistent urging from Alexander Martin and others, Sumner resigned from his militia command in October 1780, and returned to the Continental service.[36] A political backlash by prominent militia commanders like Caswell and Martin and their supporters led to the abolition of the Board of War by the General Assembly soon after Sumner's resignation, and Caswell in particular came back to power on the Board's replacement organ, called the "Council Extraordinary".[37]

Return to the Continental Army Edit

Sumner next served under General Nathanael Greene, who arrived in the southern theater in December 1780 and directed Sumner to recruit further Continental soldiers from North Carolina.[38] On June 2, 1781, Greene ordered Sumner to join him in South Carolina, which he did along with 350 new recruits on August 1.[1] Despite the passage of a draft law in North Carolina, the number of men under his command fluctuated from day to day because of both temporary and permanent desertions. These desertions eventually elicited his personal apology to Greene, as Sumner felt unable to control the ebb of soldiers in camp.[39] On September 8, his regiments were positioned on the right flank of the Continental Army at the Battle of Eutaw Springs, where his units served a vital role in halting several British assaults.[1] Greene commented on the North Carolinians' actions at Eutaw Springs, stating that they "fought with a degree of obstinacy that would do honor to the best of veterans".[40]

Following his success at Eutaw Springs, Sumner was made commanding officer of Continental Army forces in North Carolina by Greene in 1781.[4] Greene primarily wanted him to regain control of the military situation in the state, as then-Governor and former Continental Congress delegate Thomas Burke had been captured by David Fanning in a stunning daylight raid on Hillsborough, North Carolina on September 12, 1781.[41] Combat between the British and Continental armies effectively ceased in late 1781. After that point, Sumner failed to make any reports to Greene, who remained his commanding officer, for several months at a time, partly because of Sumner's recurring bouts of illness.[42]

Later life and legacy Edit

 
The Jethro Sumner Monument at Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, where Sumner was re-interred in 1891
 
A letter signed by Sumner appointing delegates from the North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati to a National Meeting in May 1784

Following the war's end in 1783, Sumner returned to Bute County, which had been renamed Warren County after Joseph Warren, the hero of the Battle of Bunker Hill.[4] It appears that Sumner's wife died at some point between 1781 and 1785.[43] For his service in the Continental Army, he received a land warrant on October 23, 1783, which represented compensation for 84 months of service.[44] Sumner helped create North Carolina's chapter of the Society of the Cincinnati in October 1783, and served as its first president.[45]

Sumner died in Warren County between March 15 and March 19, 1785, at the age of 52. At his death, he owned 20,000 acres (8,000 ha) of land in North Carolina and Tennessee (much of which in the latter was part of the Continental Army land warrant he received), as well as 35 slaves.[46] He was originally buried eight miles (13 km) outside of Warrenton,[47] but in 1891 his remains were moved to the Guilford Courthouse Battlefield, where they were interred under a monument intended as part of a "shrine to patriots".[48][49] In March 2012, a driver struck Sumner's monument after going off-road to avoid hitting a deer, nearly destroying the stone structure.[50] The monument was restored by May 2012, and Sumner was reburied in a public ceremony.[51] Sumner County, Tennessee, originally in the western portion of North Carolina, was named for him, although Sumner never visited the county.[52]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Rankin 1988, p. 476.
  2. ^ Battle 1891, p. 12.
  3. ^ Battle 1891, p. 13.
  4. ^ a b c d . North Carolina Highway Historical Marker Program. North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  5. ^ Battle 1891, pp. 14–15.
  6. ^ Nash, Jaquelin Drane. "Blount, Mary ("Jackie") Sumner". ncpedia.org. Retrieved August 24, 2015.
  7. ^ Drake 1879, p. 885.
  8. ^ Wellman 1959, p. 36, cf. Battle 1891, pp. 17–18 suggests that Sumner owned the tavern land and merely rented it out to a man named "Elliott" for the sum of £36.
  9. ^ Battle 1891, pp. 15–16.
  10. ^ Wellman 1959, pp. 34, 41.
  11. ^ a b Griswold 1885, p. 163.
  12. ^ Clark 1895, p. ix.
  13. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 17.
  14. ^ Battle 1891, p. 24.
  15. ^ Battle 1891, p. 25.
  16. ^ Battle 1891, p. 29, noting that previous authors believed only the 1st and 2nd North Carolina Regiments had participated, but that Sumner's correspondence suggested he was present as well.
  17. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 76.
  18. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 78.
  19. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 92.
  20. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 122.
  21. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 122–23.
  22. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 147.
  23. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 132.
  24. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 132, 134.
  25. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 134.
  26. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 168.
  27. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 204–05.
  28. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 205–06.
  29. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 208.
  30. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 216, 219.
  31. ^ a b Battle 1891, p. 34.
  32. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 244–45.
  33. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 246.
  34. ^ a b Rankin 1971, p. 247.
  35. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 255–56.
  36. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 257.
  37. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 269.
  38. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 260.
  39. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 343.
  40. ^ Babits & Howard 2004, p. 209.
  41. ^ Rankin 1971, pp. 364–65.
  42. ^ Rankin 1971, p. 373.
  43. ^ Battle 1891, p. 46.
  44. ^ Babits & Howard 2004, p. 210.
  45. ^ Davis & Bellas 1896, p. 82.
  46. ^ Battle 1891, p. 47.
  47. ^ Federal Writers' Project 1939, p. 480.
  48. ^ Battle 1891, p. 51.
  49. ^ . List of Classified Structures. National Park Service. Archived from the original on January 1, 2015. Retrieved June 23, 2013.
  50. ^ . DigTriad.com. WFMY News 2. March 13, 2012. Archived from the original on November 2, 2013. Retrieved June 23, 2013.
  51. ^ . DigTriad.com. WFMY News 2. May 30, 2012. Archived from the original on November 2, 2013. Retrieved June 23, 2013.
  52. ^ Sherry Mitchell (October 21, 2007). "Jethro Sumner never saw the county named for him". Hendersonville Star News. from the original on November 13, 2013. Retrieved January 22, 2013.

Bibliography Edit

  • Babits, Lawrence; Howard, Joshua B. (2004). "Fortitude and Forbearance": The North Carolina Continental Line in the Revolutionary War 1775–1783. Raleigh, NC: North Carolina Department of Archives and History. ISBN 0-86526-317-5.
  • Battle, Kemp P. (1891). Address on the Life and Services of Brigadier General Jethro Sumner: At the Battle Ground of Guilford Court House, July 4th, 1891. Greensboro, NC: Reese & Elam, Publishers. OCLC 9244453.
  • Clark, Walter, ed. (1895). Colonial and State Records of North Carolina. Vol. 11. Raleigh, NC: State of North Carolina. OCLC 1969836.
  • Davis, Charles L.; Bellas, Henry H. (1896). A Brief History of the North Carolina Troops on the Continental Establishment in the War of the Revolution, With a Register of Officers of the Same, and A Sketch of the North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati, From its Organization in 1783 to its So-called Dissolution after 1790. Philadelphia, PA: [s.n.] OCLC 3170032.
  • Drake, Francis Samuel, ed. (1879). Dictionary of American Biography, Including Men of the Time. Boston, MA: Houghton, Osgood. OCLC 6830924. jethro sumner dictionary of american biography.
  • Federal Writers' Project (1939). North Carolina: A Guide to the Old North State. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. OCLC 769612.
  • Griswold, Rufus W. (1885). Washington and the generals of the American Revolution. Philadelphia, PA: Henry T. Coates. OCLC 10983739. jethro sumner.
  • Lewis, J.D. (2012). NC Patriots 1775-1783: Their Own Words - a 3-Volume Set.
  • Rankin, Hugh F. (1988). "Sumner, Jethro". In Powell, William S (ed.). Dictionary of North Carolina Biography. Vol. 5 (P–S). Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. 476. ISBN 978-0-8078-1806-0.
  • Rankin, Hugh F. (1971). The North Carolina Continentals. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-1154-2.
  • Wellman, Manly W. (1959). The County of Warren, North Carolina, 1586–1917 (2002 ed.). Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-5472-7. OCLC 2155277.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Jethro Sumner at Wikimedia Commons
  • Jethro Sumner Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution

jethro, sumner, jethro, exum, sumner, 1733, march, 1785, senior, officer, continental, army, during, american, revolutionary, born, virginia, sumner, military, service, began, french, indian, member, state, provincial, forces, after, conclusion, that, conflict. Jethro Exum Sumner c 1733 c March 18 1785 was a senior officer of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War Born in Virginia Sumner s military service began in the French and Indian War as a member of the state s Provincial forces After the conclusion of that conflict he moved to Bute County North Carolina where he acquired a substantial area of land and operated a tavern He served as Sheriff of Bute County but with the coming of the American Revolution he became a strident patriot and was elected to North Carolina s Provincial Congress Jethro SumnerA posthumous depiction of Sumner produced c 1890Birth nameJethro Exum SumnerBornc 1733 Nansemond County VirginiaDiedc March 18 1785 aged 51 52 Warren County North Carolina USBuriedGuilford Courthouse National Military Park 36 07 56 0 N 79 50 33 1 W 36 132222 N 79 842528 W 36 132222 79 842528Allegiance Great Britain United StatesService wbr branchNorth Carolina Provincial TroopsContinental ArmyNorth Carolina MilitiaYears of service1758 1783RankBrigadier GeneralCommands heldFort Bedford 1760 3rd North Carolina Regiment 1776 1778 Battles warsFrench and Indian War Battle of Fort Duquesne American Revolutionary War Battle of Sullivan s Island Battle of Brandywine Battle of Germantown Battle of Stono Ferry Battle of Eutaw SpringsSignatureSumner was named the commanding officer of the 3rd North Carolina Regiment of the North Carolina Line a formation of the Continental Army in 1776 and served in both the Southern theater and Philadelphia campaign He was one of five brigadier generals from North Carolina in the Continental Army in which capacity he served between 1779 and 1783 He served with distinction in the battles of Stono Ferry and Eutaw Springs but recurring bouts of poor health often forced him to play an administrative role or to convalesce in North Carolina Following a drastic reduction in the number of North Carolinians serving with the Continental Army Sumner became a general in the state s militia but resigned in protest after the North Carolina Board of War awarded overall command of the militia to William Smallwood a Continental Army general from Maryland At the end of the war in 1783 Sumner helped to establish the North Carolina Chapter of the Society of the Cincinnati and became its first president He died in 1785 with extensive landholdings and 35 slaves Contents 1 Early life 2 American Revolutionary War 2 1 Southern theater 1776 2 2 Philadelphia campaign and Valley Forge 2 3 Promotion and campaigning in the Carolinas 2 4 Militia command 2 5 Return to the Continental Army 3 Later life and legacy 4 References 4 1 Bibliography 5 External linksEarly life Edit nbsp A portion of John Collet s 1770 map of North Carolina depicting the environs of Bute CountySumner was born in Nansemond County Virginia in 1733 to Jethro and Margaret Sullivan Sumner His family had originally settled in Nansemond County in 1691 1 Between 1758 and 1761 during the French and Indian War he was a lieutenant in the Virginia Provincial forces in Pennsylvania under the command of William Byrd III 2 On November 25 1758 Sumner participated in the capture of Fort Duquesne 3 He was made commander at Pennsylvania s Fort Bedford in 1760 4 After his regiment was disbanded in 1761 he returned home to Nansemond County 5 Between 1761 and 1764 he moved to Bute County in North Carolina and married Mary Hurst of Granville County with whom he had three children 1 4 One daughter Mary 6 went on to wed Thomas Blount who later served multiple terms in the United States House of Representatives 7 Sumner owned substantial property inherited through his wife s family in Bute County 1 where he also owned and possibly operated a tavern on land that he leased for 36 annually 8 Like many former Virginians who moved across the border into North Carolina during the colonial era it is likely that Sumner would have retained close business ties with the province of his birth 9 Between 1772 and 1776 he served as sheriff of Bute County resigning when he became an officer during the American Revolutionary War 10 Sumner was active in pre Revolution protests and politics as he believed a separation from Great Britain was inevitable 11 American Revolutionary War EditIn 1775 the North Carolina Provincial Congress passed legislation to raise militia forces throughout the state 12 and to that end it organized six militia districts including one centered on the town of Halifax which contained Sumner s home The soldiers comprising the militia throughout the state were to enlist for six month periods 13 Sumner was chosen to be a major in the Halifax District militia and was instructed to drill his men so that they would be prepared for the expected conflict 14 Between August and September 1775 he served as Bute County s representative at the Third North Provincial Congress 1 In November 1775 Sumner summoned his militia into active service and marched north to join Robert Howe in capturing and later burning Norfolk Virginia 15 Southern theater 1776 Edit On April 4 1776 after the American Revolutionary war had been raging in Massachusetts for nearly a year the Provincial Congress at Halifax chose Sumner to be colonel and thus commanding officer of the 3rd North Carolina Regiment 11 He likely participated in the defense of Charleston against a British invasion attempt in 1776 16 after which he was involved in the aborted plans of Major General Charles Lee to invade British Florida During the planning stages for the Florida invasion Sumner disagreed with Peter Muhlenberg of the 8th Virginia Regiment over which of the two was to be given command over Lee s Virginia and North Carolina troops while the commanding general was traveling in advance of his men This dispute was resolved only when a military court of inquiry awarded Muhlenberg temporary command after Sumner failed to appear and plead his case 17 By August 18 1776 Sumner s 3rd Regiment had reached Savannah Georgia where they joined Lee who had arrived earlier in the month 18 The planned invasion of Florida did not materialize though and Sumner left his regiment at Savannah in September 1776 to recruit more soldiers from North Carolina 1 Philadelphia campaign and Valley Forge Edit In early 1777 Sumner resumed command of the 3rd North Carolina regiment and marched the unit north to serve under George Washington in the Philadelphia campaign 1 In early and mid 1777 he remained encamped with the main portion of the Continental Army at Morristown New Jersey He and his men drilled regularly and had their supplies and arms inspected and repaired although many of the North Carolinians had such poor muskets that a substantial number were discarded 19 Sumner and his regiment fought in the battles of Brandywine and Germantown and spent the winter of 1777 to 1778 in Valley Forge with Washington s army 1 After the death at Germantown of General Francis Nash the regiments of his North Carolina brigade were left without a commanding general Generals Alexander McDougall of New York and Lachlan McIntosh of Georgia were appointed in succession to temporary command of the North Carolinians while in winter quarters Many North Carolina officers believed the state was due the appointment of two additional brigadier generals based on the number of soldiers it provided to the Continental Army 20 At Valley Forge the North Carolina brigade had a total strength of 1 051 but 353 were ill and 164 lacked sufficient clothes to be fit for service 21 Sumner himself became ill in early 1778 and was forced to return home to recuperate he continued to recruit soldiers in North Carolina during his recovery 1 Despite his recruitment efforts in February 1778 North Carolina s regiments were consolidated because of a lack of available soldiers and Sumner s 3rd Regiment absorbed the 5th North Carolina Regiment 22 Promotion and campaigning in the Carolinas Edit Although North Carolina believed it was owed additional general officer positions conflicts between members of the North Carolina General Assembly over who was to be considered for the positions stalled the appointment of officers to assume those positions Thomas Burke one of North Carolina s leading delegates to the Continental Congress apparently lacked interest in any of the suggested candidates To complicate matters further Alexander Martin once a leading candidate for generalship resigned after charges of cowardice were leveled against him and was no longer seen as an appropriate candidate 23 The General Assembly deferred discussion of possible replacement generals for more than a month after convening on November 7 1777 24 By December 15 the North Carolina General Assembly instructed its representatives in the Second Continental Congress to nominate Sumner for promotion to general 25 It was not until January 9 1779 though that the Continental Congress commissioned Sumner as brigadier general along with fellow North Carolinian James Hogun and ordered him to join General Benjamin Lincoln in South Carolina 1 Sumner received the highest number of congressional votes thirteen to Hogun s nine and Thomas Clark s four 26 On June 20 1779 Sumner led a Continental Army brigade at the Battle of Stono Ferry assaulting the British right flank and routing the Hessian von Trumbach Regiment 27 The Continentals and the Patriot militia began to run out of ammunition during the battle and Lincoln was forced to order a general retreat At least seven Continental officers under Sumner s command were wounded and future United States President Andrew Jackson s brother Hugh was among ten North Carolinians killed 28 After the engagement at Stono Ferry Sumner experienced another bout of poor health He returned to North Carolina to recover continuing to recruit troops during his convalescence He suffered financially during his recovery as a monetary crisis at the time left many officers in his position barely able to support themselves at home 29 He was also tasked by Lincoln with finding deserters in North Carolina and pressing them back into service 30 Sumner was on a leave of absence in September and October 1779 during the Patriot defeat at the siege of Savannah 31 Militia command Edit nbsp General Nathanael Greene under whom Sumner served beginning in 1780Between the siege of Charleston in May 1780 and the Battle of Camden in August that year the North Carolina Line a loose organizational structure that encompassed all of North Carolina s Continental Army units was virtually annihilated suffering substantial casualties and the loss of many men as prisoners of war 32 During at least part of the intervening time Sumner was in North Carolina on a recruiting mission 31 Rather than rebuild the Line the North Carolina General Assembly determined to rely on militia for the defense of the state 33 In September 1780 Sumner temporarily transferred to command of the Hillsborough District Brigade under the statewide leadership of Richard Caswell 34 As commander of a brigade of North Carolina militia Sumner was tasked with defending the state from the advances of British General Charles Cornwallis 1 but the militiamen were poorly equipped and ill trained 34 In late 1780 the North Carolina Board of War removed Caswell from command of North Carolina s militia and the General Assembly awarded command of the militia to Continental Army Brigadier General William Smallwood of Maryland citing the Assembly s lack of confidence in their own state s military commanders Sumner was further offended when command of the dwindling number of North Carolina Continentals in the southern theater was given to Smallwood as well 35 Despite persistent urging from Alexander Martin and others Sumner resigned from his militia command in October 1780 and returned to the Continental service 36 A political backlash by prominent militia commanders like Caswell and Martin and their supporters led to the abolition of the Board of War by the General Assembly soon after Sumner s resignation and Caswell in particular came back to power on the Board s replacement organ called the Council Extraordinary 37 Return to the Continental Army Edit Sumner next served under General Nathanael Greene who arrived in the southern theater in December 1780 and directed Sumner to recruit further Continental soldiers from North Carolina 38 On June 2 1781 Greene ordered Sumner to join him in South Carolina which he did along with 350 new recruits on August 1 1 Despite the passage of a draft law in North Carolina the number of men under his command fluctuated from day to day because of both temporary and permanent desertions These desertions eventually elicited his personal apology to Greene as Sumner felt unable to control the ebb of soldiers in camp 39 On September 8 his regiments were positioned on the right flank of the Continental Army at the Battle of Eutaw Springs where his units served a vital role in halting several British assaults 1 Greene commented on the North Carolinians actions at Eutaw Springs stating that they fought with a degree of obstinacy that would do honor to the best of veterans 40 Following his success at Eutaw Springs Sumner was made commanding officer of Continental Army forces in North Carolina by Greene in 1781 4 Greene primarily wanted him to regain control of the military situation in the state as then Governor and former Continental Congress delegate Thomas Burke had been captured by David Fanning in a stunning daylight raid on Hillsborough North Carolina on September 12 1781 41 Combat between the British and Continental armies effectively ceased in late 1781 After that point Sumner failed to make any reports to Greene who remained his commanding officer for several months at a time partly because of Sumner s recurring bouts of illness 42 Later life and legacy Edit nbsp The Jethro Sumner Monument at Guilford Courthouse National Military Park where Sumner was re interred in 1891 nbsp A letter signed by Sumner appointing delegates from the North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati to a National Meeting in May 1784Following the war s end in 1783 Sumner returned to Bute County which had been renamed Warren County after Joseph Warren the hero of the Battle of Bunker Hill 4 It appears that Sumner s wife died at some point between 1781 and 1785 43 For his service in the Continental Army he received a land warrant on October 23 1783 which represented compensation for 84 months of service 44 Sumner helped create North Carolina s chapter of the Society of the Cincinnati in October 1783 and served as its first president 45 Sumner died in Warren County between March 15 and March 19 1785 at the age of 52 At his death he owned 20 000 acres 8 000 ha of land in North Carolina and Tennessee much of which in the latter was part of the Continental Army land warrant he received as well as 35 slaves 46 He was originally buried eight miles 13 km outside of Warrenton 47 but in 1891 his remains were moved to the Guilford Courthouse Battlefield where they were interred under a monument intended as part of a shrine to patriots 48 49 In March 2012 a driver struck Sumner s monument after going off road to avoid hitting a deer nearly destroying the stone structure 50 The monument was restored by May 2012 and Sumner was reburied in a public ceremony 51 Sumner County Tennessee originally in the western portion of North Carolina was named for him although Sumner never visited the county 52 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Rankin 1988 p 476 Battle 1891 p 12 Battle 1891 p 13 a b c d Marker E 17 North Carolina Highway Historical Marker Program North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved January 22 2013 Battle 1891 pp 14 15 Nash Jaquelin Drane Blount Mary Jackie Sumner ncpedia org Retrieved August 24 2015 Drake 1879 p 885 Wellman 1959 p 36 cf Battle 1891 pp 17 18 suggests that Sumner owned the tavern land and merely rented it out to a man named Elliott for the sum of 36 Battle 1891 pp 15 16 Wellman 1959 pp 34 41 a b Griswold 1885 p 163 Clark 1895 p ix Rankin 1971 p 17 Battle 1891 p 24 Battle 1891 p 25 Battle 1891 p 29 noting that previous authors believed only the 1st and 2nd North Carolina Regiments had participated but that Sumner s correspondence suggested he was present as well Rankin 1971 p 76 Rankin 1971 p 78 Rankin 1971 p 92 Rankin 1971 p 122 Rankin 1971 pp 122 23 Rankin 1971 p 147 Rankin 1971 p 132 Rankin 1971 pp 132 134 Rankin 1971 p 134 Rankin 1971 p 168 Rankin 1971 pp 204 05 Rankin 1971 pp 205 06 Rankin 1971 p 208 Rankin 1971 pp 216 219 a b Battle 1891 p 34 Rankin 1971 pp 244 45 Rankin 1971 p 246 a b Rankin 1971 p 247 Rankin 1971 pp 255 56 Rankin 1971 p 257 Rankin 1971 p 269 Rankin 1971 p 260 Rankin 1971 p 343 Babits amp Howard 2004 p 209 Rankin 1971 pp 364 65 Rankin 1971 p 373 Battle 1891 p 46 Babits amp Howard 2004 p 210 Davis amp Bellas 1896 p 82 Battle 1891 p 47 Federal Writers Project 1939 p 480 Battle 1891 p 51 Brig Gen Jethro Sumner Monument List of Classified Structures National Park Service Archived from the original on January 1 2015 Retrieved June 23 2013 Burial Site Of Gen Jethro Sumner Destroyed In Guilford Courthouse National Military Park DigTriad com WFMY News 2 March 13 2012 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved June 23 2013 Funeral Held For General Jethro Sumner At Guilford Courthouse National Military Park DigTriad com WFMY News 2 May 30 2012 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved June 23 2013 Sherry Mitchell October 21 2007 Jethro Sumner never saw the county named for him Hendersonville Star News Archived from the original on November 13 2013 Retrieved January 22 2013 Bibliography Edit Babits Lawrence Howard Joshua B 2004 Fortitude and Forbearance The North Carolina Continental Line in the Revolutionary War 1775 1783 Raleigh NC North Carolina Department of Archives and History ISBN 0 86526 317 5 Battle Kemp P 1891 Address on the Life and Services of Brigadier General Jethro Sumner At the Battle Ground of Guilford Court House July 4th 1891 Greensboro NC Reese amp Elam Publishers OCLC 9244453 Clark Walter ed 1895 Colonial and State Records of North Carolina Vol 11 Raleigh NC State of North Carolina OCLC 1969836 Davis Charles L Bellas Henry H 1896 A Brief History of the North Carolina Troops on the Continental Establishment in the War of the Revolution With a Register of Officers of the Same and A Sketch of the North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati From its Organization in 1783 to its So called Dissolution after 1790 Philadelphia PA s n OCLC 3170032 Drake Francis Samuel ed 1879 Dictionary of American Biography Including Men of the Time Boston MA Houghton Osgood OCLC 6830924 jethro sumner dictionary of american biography Federal Writers Project 1939 North Carolina A Guide to the Old North State Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press OCLC 769612 Griswold Rufus W 1885 Washington and the generals of the American Revolution Philadelphia PA Henry T Coates OCLC 10983739 jethro sumner Lewis J D 2012 NC Patriots 1775 1783 Their Own Words a 3 Volume Set Rankin Hugh F 1988 Sumner Jethro In Powell William S ed Dictionary of North Carolina Biography Vol 5 P S Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press p 476 ISBN 978 0 8078 1806 0 Rankin Hugh F 1971 The North Carolina Continentals Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 1154 2 Wellman Manly W 1959 The County of Warren North Carolina 1586 1917 2002 ed Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 5472 7 OCLC 2155277 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Jethro Sumner at Wikimedia Commons Jethro Sumner Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jethro Sumner amp oldid 1172153816, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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