Difference between revisions of "Thomas Sumter"

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Sumter was considered a spokesman for his state and for the South in general, not only because of his wartime heroism but also from his devotion to state sovereignty and decentralized government. He was a prominent [[Anti-Federalist]] and later [[Democratic-Republican|Jeffersonian Republican]], and toward the end of his life backed South Carolina's doctrine of [[nullification]]. [[Fort Sumter]] in South Carolina was named in his honor.
 
Sumter was considered a spokesman for his state and for the South in general, not only because of his wartime heroism but also from his devotion to state sovereignty and decentralized government. He was a prominent [[Anti-Federalist]] and later [[Democratic-Republican|Jeffersonian Republican]], and toward the end of his life backed South Carolina's doctrine of [[nullification]]. [[Fort Sumter]] in South Carolina was named in his honor.
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==Early Life==
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Thomas Sumter was born near [[Charlottesville, Virginia|Charlottesville]], [[Virginia]] on August 14, 1734, the son of William Sumter, a Welsh immigrant and local miller, and Patience Sumter, whose background is unknown. Not much information is available concerning Sumter's childhood and adolescence; he spent some time in the Virginia backcountry as a sheep herder and a worker in his father's mill, before joining the militia around the time of the outbreak of the [[French and Indian War]]. He may have served in Braddock's expedition to Fort Duquesne in 1755, and was later part of Forbes' campaign of 1758.
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In the autumn of 1761, Sumter enlisted as a sergeant in a mission led by Lieutenant Henry Timberlake to negotiate with the "Over Hill" [[Cherokees]] in what is now eastern [[Tennessee]], who had requested peace after destructive fighting with British regular troops and colonial militia. Sumter distinguished himself during the trip, once swimming nearly half a mile through icy water to retrieve the party's canoe that had drifted away. The mission was successful; three of the Cherokee chiefs, "Ostenaco" ("Mankiller"), "Conne Shote," and "Wooc" agreed to return with the Timberlake party to [[Williamsburg, Virginia|Williamsburg]] in the spring of 1762, and it was soon arranged for them to visit [[England]] to meet with [[King George III]]. Sumter accompanied the chiefs and acted as interpreter in their meetings with the king, before returning to America in the autumn of 1762.
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'''Move to South Carolina'''
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Sumter had borrowed money to take part in the expedition, and soon after his return to Virginia, he was imprisoned for debt, the colonial legislature having refused to reimburse his expenses over the past year. He was only released from jail in 1766, after a fellow ex-soldier gave him some money to settle his debts. Not long thereafter, Sumter migrated south to the hilly region north of the Santee River in South Carolina (sometimes known as the "High Hills of Santee"), where a gift of ₤700 from the Crown for his services enabled him to set up a plantation. In 1767, he married Mary Jameson, and together they opened several businesses, including a store, sawmill, and grist mill.
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Revision as of 18:57, July 10, 2019

Thomas Sumter (1734–1832), sometimes known as "The Gamecock," was a South Carolina soldier and statesman who distinguished himself as a leader of partisan resistance to the British during the American Revolutionary War. He later was a prominent member of the South Carolina legislature and of the U.S. Congress.

Sumter was considered a spokesman for his state and for the South in general, not only because of his wartime heroism but also from his devotion to state sovereignty and decentralized government. He was a prominent Anti-Federalist and later Jeffersonian Republican, and toward the end of his life backed South Carolina's doctrine of nullification. Fort Sumter in South Carolina was named in his honor.

Early Life

Thomas Sumter was born near Charlottesville, Virginia on August 14, 1734, the son of William Sumter, a Welsh immigrant and local miller, and Patience Sumter, whose background is unknown. Not much information is available concerning Sumter's childhood and adolescence; he spent some time in the Virginia backcountry as a sheep herder and a worker in his father's mill, before joining the militia around the time of the outbreak of the French and Indian War. He may have served in Braddock's expedition to Fort Duquesne in 1755, and was later part of Forbes' campaign of 1758.

In the autumn of 1761, Sumter enlisted as a sergeant in a mission led by Lieutenant Henry Timberlake to negotiate with the "Over Hill" Cherokees in what is now eastern Tennessee, who had requested peace after destructive fighting with British regular troops and colonial militia. Sumter distinguished himself during the trip, once swimming nearly half a mile through icy water to retrieve the party's canoe that had drifted away. The mission was successful; three of the Cherokee chiefs, "Ostenaco" ("Mankiller"), "Conne Shote," and "Wooc" agreed to return with the Timberlake party to Williamsburg in the spring of 1762, and it was soon arranged for them to visit England to meet with King George III. Sumter accompanied the chiefs and acted as interpreter in their meetings with the king, before returning to America in the autumn of 1762.

Move to South Carolina

Sumter had borrowed money to take part in the expedition, and soon after his return to Virginia, he was imprisoned for debt, the colonial legislature having refused to reimburse his expenses over the past year. He was only released from jail in 1766, after a fellow ex-soldier gave him some money to settle his debts. Not long thereafter, Sumter migrated south to the hilly region north of the Santee River in South Carolina (sometimes known as the "High Hills of Santee"), where a gift of ₤700 from the Crown for his services enabled him to set up a plantation. In 1767, he married Mary Jameson, and together they opened several businesses, including a store, sawmill, and grist mill.