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Edwin Vose Sumner - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edwin Vose Sumner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edwin Vose Sumner
January 30, 1797March 21, 1863

Maj. Gen. Edwin V. Sumner
Nickname Bull, Bull Head
Place of birth Boston, Massachusetts
Place of death Syracuse, New York
Allegiance Union
Years of service 1819–63
Rank Major General
Commands held II Corps (Army of the Potomac)
Battles/wars Black Hawk War
Mexican-American War
Bleeding Kansas
American Civil War:

Edwin Vose Sumner (January 30, 1797March 21, 1863) was a U.S. Army officer who became a major general and the oldest field commander of any Army Corps on either side during the American Civil War.[1] His nicknames "Bull" or "Bull Head" came both from his great booming voice and a legend that a musket ball once bounced off his head.

Sumner fought in the Black Hawk War, with distinction in the Mexican-American War, on the Western frontier, and in the Eastern Theater for the first half of the Civil War. He led the II Corps of the Army of the Potomac through the Peninsula Campaign, the Seven Days Battles, the Maryland Campaign, and the Battle of Fredericksburg.

Contents

[edit] Early life and career

Sumner was born in Boston, Massachusetts, to Elisha Sumner and Nancy Voss Sumner. His middle name may have originally been Voss, from his mother's maiden name. In 1819, after losing interest in a mercantile career in Troy, New York, he entered the United States Army as a second lieutenant in the 2nd US Infantry Regiment on 3 March 1819. He was promoted to first lieutenant on 25 January 1825.

He married Hannah Wickersham Foster (1804–1880) on March 31, 1822. They had six children together: Nancy, Margaret Foster, Sarah Montgomery, Mary Heron, Edwin Vose Jr., and Samuel Storrow Sumner. His son Samuel was a general during the Spanish-American War, Boxer Rebellion, and the Philippine-American War.

Sumner later served in the Black Hawk War and in various Indian campaigns. On March 4, 1833, he was promoted to the rank of captain and assigned to command B Company, the U.S. Dragoon Regiment (later First US Dragoons), immediately upon its creation by Congress.

In 1838, he commanded the cavalry instructional establishment in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. He was assigned to Ft. Atkinson, Iowa Territory, from 1842 until 1845. He was promoted to major of the 2nd Dragoons on 30 June 1846. Sumner was brevetted for bravery at Cerro Gordo (to lieutenant colonel). At the Molino del Rey he received the brevet rank of colonel. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel of the First US Dragoons on 23 July 1848. He served as the military governor of the New Mexico Territory from 1851 to 1853. He was promoted to colonel of the 1st U.S. Cavalry on March 3, 1855. In 1856 he commanded Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and became involved in the crisis known as Bleeding Kansas. In 1857, he commanded an expedition against the Cheyenne Indians. Lt. Gen. Winfield Scott assigned Sumner as the senior officer to accompany President-elect Abraham Lincoln from Springfield, Illinois, to Washington, D.C.

[edit] Civil War

In February 1861, Brig. Gen. David E. Twiggs was dismissed from the Army for treason by outgoing President James Buchanan, and on March 12, 1861, Sumner was nominated by the newly inaugurated Lincoln to replace Twiggs as one of only three brigadier generals in the regular army, with date of rank March 16.[2] Sumner was thus the first new Union general created by the secession crisis. He was then sent to replace Brig. Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston in command of the Department of the Pacific in California and thus took no part in the 1861 campaigns of the war.

In November 1861, he was brought back east to command a division, and soon afterwards, as a major general of volunteers, a corps in the Army of the Potomac, being organized by Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan. McClellan had not originally formed corps within the Army; Sumner was selected as one of four corps commanders by President Lincoln, based on his seniority. The II Corps, commanded during the war by Sumner, Darius N. Couch, Winfield Scott Hancock, and Andrew A. Humphreys, had the deserved reputation of being the one of best in the Eastern Theater. Sumner, who was the oldest of the generals in the Army of the Potomac, led his corps throughout the Peninsula Campaign and the Seven Days Battles.

McClellan originally formed a poor opinion of Sumner during the Battle of Williamsburg on May 5, 1862. During McClellan's absence, Sumner directed the inconclusive battle, which failed to impede the Confederate withdrawal up the Peninsula, and McClellan wrote to his wife, "Sumner had proved that he was even a greater fool than I had supposed & had come within an ace of having us defeated."[3] At the Battle of Seven Pines, however, Sumner's initiative in sending reinforcing troops across the dangerously rain-swollen Chickahominy River prevented a Union disaster. He received the brevet of major general in the regular army for his gallantry at Seven Pines. Despite this honor, during the Union retreat of the Seven Days, McClellan expressed reluctance to name a second in command during his absences, knowing that Sumner was the most senior corps commander. Sumner was wounded in the arm and hand at the Battle of Glendale.

In the fall of 1862, at the Battle of Antietam, Sumner was the center of controversy. A morning attack he ordered Brig. Gen. John Sedgwick's division to launch into the West Woods was devastated by a Confederates counterattack; Sedgwick's men were forced to retreat in great disorder to their starting point with over 2,200 casualties. Sumner has been condemned by most historians for his "reckless" attack, his lack of coordination with the other corps commanders, accompanying Sedgwick's division personally and losing control of his other attacking division, failing to perform adequate reconnaissance prior to launching his attack, and selecting an unusual line of battle formation that was so effectively flanked by the Confederate counterattack. Historian M.V. Armstrong's recent scholarship, however, has determined that Sumner did perform appropriate reconnaissance and his decision to attack where he did was justified by the information available to him.[4]

When Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside succeeded to the command of the Army of the Potomac, he grouped the corps in "grand divisions" and appointed Sumner to command the right grand division. In this capacity, the old cavalry soldier took part in the disastrous Battle of Fredericksburg, in which the II Corps suffered heavy casualties in frontal assaults against fortified Marye's Heights.

Soon afterwards, on Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker's appointment to command the army, Sumner was relieved at his own request. He was then appointed commander of the Department of the Missouri, although he was not to take command until the following spring. He traveled to his daughter's home in Syracuse, New York, where he suffered a fatal heart attack on March 21, 1863.

[edit] Grave

Sumner is buried in Section 8, Lot 1 of Oakwood Cemetery in Syracuse. Part of the Teall family plot, the gravesite has some structural problems and issues of disrepair. The Onondaga Country Civil War Round Table is currently raising funds to repair the grave and the general area.

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Warner, p. 489.
  2. ^ Eicher, pp. 716-17. The two other line-officer brigadier generals in the regular army as of March 1861 were John Wool and William S. Harney; Joseph E. Johnston, Quartermaster General of the Army, resigned on April 22 to join the Confederate States Army.
  3. ^ Armstrong, p. xvi.
  4. ^ Armstrong, pp. 39-55.

[edit] External links

[edit] Documents at the Library of Congress

Preceded by
none
Commander of the II Corps (ACW)
March 13, 1862 - October 7, 1862
Succeeded by
Darius N. Couch
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