Edwin Vose Sumner Sr.
Born: January 30, 1797
Birthplace: Boston, Massachusetts
Father: Elisha Sumner 1760 – 1839
(Buried: Old Burial Ground, Rutland, Massachusetts)
Mother: Nancy Vose 1765 – 1848
(Buried: Old Burial Ground, Rutland, Massachusetts)
Wife: Hannah Wickersham Foster 1805 – 1880
(Buried: Oakwood Cemetery, Syracuse, New York)
Children:
Nancy Sumner Jenkins 1823 – 1911
(Buried: Oakwood Cemetery, Syracuse, New York)
Margaret Foster Sumner McLean 1828 – 1905
(Buried: Oakwood Cemetery, Syracuse, New York)
Sarah Sumner Teall 1831 – 1928
(Buried: Oakwood Cemetery, Syracuse, New York)
Brevet Brig. General Edwin Vose Sumner Jr. 1835 – 1912
(Buried: U.S. Military Academy Post Cemetery, West Point, New York)
Mary Heron Sumner Long 1837 – 1900
(Buried: Maplewood Cemetery, Charlottesville, Virginia)
Major General Samuel Storrow Sumner 1842 – 1937
(Buried: Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia)
Occupation before War:
1819 – 1825: 2nd Lt. United States Army, 2nd Infantry Regiment
1825 – 1833: 1st Lt. United States Army, 2nd Infantry Regiment
1833 – 1846: Captain United States Army, 1st Dragoons Regiment
1838: Commander of Cavalry School at Carlisle Barracks in Pennsylvania
1842 – 1845: Commander of Fort Atkinson, Iowa Territory
1846 – 1848: Major United States Army, 2nd Dragoons Regiment
Brevetted Lt. Colonel for Gallantry at Battle of Cerro Gordo, Mexico
Received the nickname bullhead at the Battle of Cerro Gordo
Brevetted Colonel for Gallantry at the Battle of Molino del Rey
1848 – 1855: Lt. Colonel United States Army, 1st Dragoons
1851 – 1853: Military Governor of New Mexico Territory
1855 – 1861: Colonel United States Army, 1st Cavalry Regiment
Led an expedition against the Cheyenne Natives
1856: Commander of Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
1857: Served in the crisis known as Bleeding Kansas
1858: Commander of U.S. Army, Department of the West
1861: Wrote President Elect Lincoln advising him to carry a weapon
1861: Senior officer to accompany Lincoln from Illinois to Washington
Civil War Career:
1861 – 1863: Brigadier General, United States Army Infantry
1861: Commander of U.S. Army, Department of California
His son – in – law Armistead Long resigned his commission in Army
1861: His horse threw him forward in Alexandria, Virginia in December
1862: Commander of the 2nd Army Corps, Army of the Potomac
1862: Led his troops during the Peninsula Campaign
1862: Led his troops during the Sevens Days Battles
1862: Served in the Battle of Williamsburg, Virginia
1862: Brevetted Major General U.S. Army for Gallantry at Seven Pines
1862: Wounded in the arm and hand at Battle of Glendale, Virginia
1862 – 1863: Major General Union Army Volunteers Infantry
1862: Corps Commander at Battle of Antietam, Maryland
1862: McClellan recommended Sumner being relieved of duty
1862: Commander of Right Grand Division, Battle of Fredericksburg
1863: Relieved of command of his troops at his own request
1863: Reassigned as Commander Department of the Ohio
Died: March 21, 1863
Place of Death: Syracuse, New York
Cause of Death: Congestion of the lungs and fever
Age at time of Death: 66 years old
Burial Place: Oakwood Cemetery, Syracuse, New York
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