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William Cumming State Historical Marker
William Cumming
State Historical Marker

William Cumming State
Historical Marker
Located on the Forsyth County
Courthouse Square, Cumming
(Text)
COLONEL WILLIAM
CUMMING
The town of
Cumming (incorporated 1834) is named in honor of
Col. William
Cumming, distinguished Georgia, born July 27, 1788,
son of Thomas
Cumming and Ann Clay, daughter of Joseph Clay,
of Savannah.
William Cumming graduated from the College of New
Jersey at Princeton
and studied law at Gould's Law School, Litchfield,
Connecticut.
The War of 1812 brought him military prominence. Captain
of the Augusta
Independent Blues in 1812, he was commissioned Major,
U.S.A., in 1813,
and appointed Adjutant General
of the Northern Army
the following
year with the rank of Colonel.
In 1815, however, he resigned
from
the Army and the Board of War, on
which he served. Although
in 1818 he was
appointed Quartermaster General of the Army by President
Monroe and,
in 1847, Major General by President Polk,
he declined
both appointments
and spent the remainder of his
life in Augusta, where
he died February
18, 1863.
A series of
duels in 1822 with Senator George McDuffie of South
Carolina received
nationwide attention and illuminated the larger
political controversy
between proponents of states' rights (Cumming)
and those favoring
a strong central government (McDuffie).
058-3 GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION
1962
Photo: Ed Jackson
© Carl Vinson Institute of Government,
The University of Georgia
Go to Georgia Historic Markers web site
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