Sumner family

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The Sumner Family is a prominent political and agricultural family based throughout the eastern United States in what was formally known as the Thirteen Colonies, primarily in Massachusetts, Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia. The family, who accumulated power through the generational efforts of statesmen,[1] military leaders, and planters[2] can trace its ancestry back to Oxfordshire, England. The Sumner Family as it is known today emigrated to the United States throughout the mid to late 1600s, while a branch of the family maintained itself in England and obtained high ranking positions in the Church of England such as John Bird Sumner who went on to become the Archbishop of Canterbury from 1848 to 1862.

Descendants of the family who emigrated to the United States proved to be successful statesmen and military leaders with many of those family members becoming early settlers of areas such as Dorchester, Massachusetts, now part of Boston, along with settlements and plantations along the James River in the Virginia Colony, such as Nansemond.[3]

Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner who is primarily remembered for being brutally assaulted by Representative Preston Brooks of South Carolina as he sat writing at his desk in the Senate Chamber on May 22, 1856.[4]

Prominent individuals include:

The Massachusetts Sumners
The Virginia Sumners
  • Jethro Sumner, A General of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War[2]
The Warwickshire Sumners







References

  1. ^ "U.S. Senate: The Caning of Senator Charles Sumner". www.senate.gov. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
  2. ^ a b Powell, William (1971). Dictionary of North Carolina Biography (V ed.). p. 476.
  3. ^ Paulk, Jessie H. & Delma (August 2017). The First Families of South Georgia Volume Thirteen Sumner Family. PAULK RESEARCH. LLC. ISBN 978-1938637421.
  4. ^ "U.S. Senate: Charles Sumner: A Featured Biography". www.senate.gov. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
  5. ^ Tate, Thomas K. General Edwin Vose Sumner, USA: A Civil War Biography. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. pp. 10, 16–17, 20, 22. ISBN 978-0-7864-7258-1 – via Google Books.