- Alfred Cumming (general)
Alfred Cumming (January 30, 1829 – December 5, 1910) was a brigadier general for the Confederacy in the
American Civil War .Early life
Born in
Augusta, Georgia , he was the son ofHenry Harford Cumming , a cotton magnate, and Julia Ann Cumming. At twenty, he graduated fromWest Point , ranking 35th in his class of 43. In the prewarUnited States Army , he served mainly in the West, including two years inLouisiana as an aide to Brig. Gen.David E. Twiggs . Later he accompaniedAlbert Sidney Johnston 's expedition toUtah Territory , where he aided his uncle, Alfred Cumming (theGovernor of Utah ) in theUtah War .Civil War
In January 1861, he resigned a captaincy in the
10th United States Infantry to accept the Lieutenant Colonelcy of the Augusta Volunteer Battalion. He soon resigned that position to become major of the 1st Georgia Infantry. By June, he was the Lieutenant Colonel of the10th Georgia Regiment and four months later its colonel, succeedingLafayette McLaws . He served with distinction during thePeninsula Campaign of 1862, including the Battle of Yorktown, theBattle of Savage's Station , and theBattle of Malvern Hill , where he was wounded. His performance earned him the command of anAlabama brigade prior to theMaryland Campaign .On September 14, 1862, Cumming's brigade came up quickly to support troops under Brig. Gen.
Howell Cobb , forced back from Crampton's Gap by a Federal offensive. His promptness helped keep the Union advance from its objective,Harpers Ferry . He was awarded a brigadier general's star six weeks later. Afterward, Cumming went west: first to Mobile, then in April 1863 toMississippi as a subordinate to Lt. Gen.John C. Pemberton . He led a brigade in Maj. Gen.Carter L. Stevenson 's division at Champion's Hill and in the actions outside Vicksburg. Captured and paroled with the city's garrison, he reorganized Stevenson's old brigade atDecatur, Georgia , in the fall of 1863 and led it gallantly atMissionary Ridge .He was conspicuous in many actions during the
Atlanta Campaign , winning praise for several successful and unsuccessful attacks. At Jonesboro, he was disabled by another wound.Postbellum
In postwar years, he farmed in
Floyd County, Georgia . before moving toRome, Georgia , and then to his native city. He pursued a minor public career, including service on the American Military Commission toKorea in 1888.Cumming died in
Rome, Georgia , and was buried inSummerville Cemetery .ee also
References
*findagrave|8966 Retrieved on 2008-04-02
* [http://battleofchampionhill.org/history/cummings.htm Letter from Alfred Cumming to Stephen D. Lee]Persondata
NAME= Cumming, Alfred
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SHORT DESCRIPTION= Confederate Army general
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