Online Encyclopedia

THOMAS SUMTER (1i36–1832)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 85 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS SUMTER (1i36–1832)  ,
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American soldier, was born in Hanover county, Virginia, on the 14th of
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July 1736 . He served in the Virginia militia during the French and
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Indian War and was
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present at Braddock's defeat (1755) . Some time after 1762 he removed to South Carolina . He is best known for his service during the War of Independence, but he saw little active service until after the fall of
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Charleston in May 1780 . In July 1780 he became a brigadier-general of state troops . During the remainder of the war he carried on a partisan
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campaign, and earned the
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sobriquet of the " Gamecock." He failed in an attack upon Rocky Mount (Chester county) on the 1st of August 1780, but on the 6th defeated 500
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Loyalists and regulars at
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Hanging Rock (Lancaster county), and on the 15th intercepted and defeated a
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convoy with stores between Charleston and Camden . His own regiment, however, was almost annihilated by Lieut.-Colonel Banastre Tarleton (1754–1833) at Fishing Creek (Chester county) on the 18th . A new force was soon recruited, with which he defeated Major James Wemys at Fishdam (Union county) on the
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night of the 8th–9th of November, and repulsed Tarleton's attack at Blackstock (Union county) on the 20th, when he was wounded . In
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January 1781 Congress formally thanked him for his services . He was a member of the state convention which ratified the Federal constitution for South Carolina in 1788, he himself opposing that instrument; of the
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national House of Representatives in 1789–1793 and again in 1797–1801, and of the
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United States Senate from 1801 to 1810 . At the time of his
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death at South Mount, South Carolina, on the 1st of
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June 1832, he was the last surviving general officer of the War of Independence . See
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Edward McCrady, The
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History of South Carolina in the Revolution (2 vols., New York, 1901-1902) .

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