The Rev.
Charles Cummings
(pre 1746 - 1812)
The Rev. Charles Cummings, son of John and Sara, was born in Ireland. Through
the influence of his brother, James, who was the captain of a merchant vessel,
Charles came to America at the age of eighteen. He entered Carlisle College,
Pa., at which he was graduated, and then went to Lancaster County, Va., where
he was employed as a tutor and studied theology with the noted preacher, the
Rev. James Waddell. He was licensed to preach the gospel by the Presbytery of
Hanover at Tinkling Spring, April 17, 1766. On October 15, 1766, the Rev. Mr.
Cummings received three calls and accepted the one to Maj. Brown's Meeting
House in Augusta and filled it until June 2, 1772, when he accepted a call from
the congregations of Ebbing Spring and Sinking Spring on Holston in Washington
County, where he remained until his death in March 1812.
When he came to Holston he was about forty years of age.
He performed a great deal of missionary labor through an extensive district of
the country, beyond his own large field. In the expedition against the
Cherokees in 1776, Mr. Cummings accompanied the forces from Holston, and
preached at the different stations now included in the State of Tennessee; and
in this way was the first minister of the gospel in that State.
Summers' Southwest Virginia says that Mr. Cummings is accredited with the honor
of having drafted the Fincastle resolutions which were adopted Jan. 20, 1775;
and that he assisted in drafting the petition from the Presbytery of Hanover to
the General Assembly of Virginia asking for the separation of Church and State,
in October 1776.
He married on February 13, 1766, Millicent Carter, daughter of Thomas Carter,
Gentlemen, of Lancaster County, who was born in Lancaster, Aug 9, 1743. The
Rev. Charles and Millicent Carter Cummings had the following children: John
Cummings, born August 24, 1767, never married; Thomas Cummings, born Oct. 1,
1768. He was educated for the ministry, but died young, unmarried; Sarah
Cummings, born March 15, 1770; Mary Cummings, born Dec. 15, 1771; James
Cummings, born November 9, 1773, died August 1, 1840; Charles Cummings, born
May 10, 1776, never married;, Millicent Cummings, born Jan. 27, 1778; Nancy
Cummings, born November 30, 1779, died in childhood; Robert Cummings, born May
16, 1781; Elizabeth Cummings, born April 16, 1783, died in infancy; George
Cummings, born May 14, 1784, died in infancy; William Cummings, born October 7,
1788, never married. [From The Descendants of Captain Thomas Carter, by Joseph
L. Miller (1912)]
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Parson
Charles Cummings aka "The Fighting Parson" In 1754 only six families were living in the early settlement west of New
River. Two of these were in Pulaski, two on Cripple Creek in Wythe County, one in Smyth County and the Burke family in what
is now Tazewell County. The Indians gave the settlers so much trouble that any further attempts to settle was given up until
after the French and Indian War. A small fort, called Black's Fort, was built when the settlers moved into the Valley around where
Abingdon stands. Like most of its kind, it was built of logs, and a few log cabins were built within the stockade. Here to
these cabins within the fort came the settlers whenever the warning reached them that the Indians were coming. Near the fort lived Parson
Cummings, called the Fighting Parson. He was an Irishman who had come to the Valley from Lancaster, Pennsylvania. He fought
against the Cherokee Indians in 1776 with Colonel Christian. He first settled in Fincastle, but soon drifted farther south.
It was he who drafted the Fincastle Resolutions on January 20, 1775 and served on the Committee of Safety for Washington County. On one occasion,
when the settlers were residing within the fort, food became very scarce. Someone had to go back into the clearing and bring
in supplies. Parson Cummings and a few other men started off with a wagon to get them. They had not gone far when they reached
Piper's Hill. A party of Indians surprised the little band and one of them was killed. Everyone made a dash for the bushes.
The Parson was very stout and he was wearing a large powdered wig which was considered in those days necessary to the cloth.
This made him more conspicuous and of course a target for the Indians. One Indian ran after him, brandishing his tomahawk. The Parson
dodged under a bush and as he left it, his wig was caught by a low hanging limb. The Indian took for granted that it was the
Parson's head and made a bound to get it. When he took it in his hands, he was surprised to find no head there! He was disgusted
and angry and threw it upon the ground exclaiming, "D--d lie," and doggedly gave up the chase. And thus the Parson escaped.
The man who was killed was later buried in Abingdon and one may read his name, "William Creswell, July 4, 1776" on the crude
stone which marks his grave. Dragon Canone was the name of the Cherokee Indian who led his warriors against the white militia.
Both white and red men fought with tomahawks and both hid behind trees. Sometimes this brave militia went forth to battle
without any higher commanding officer than captain. Three such officers were John Campbell, James Shelby and James Thompson. Let us look
for a moment at what those settlers were denied. They did not have flour or salt until an order was made: "Jan. 29, 1777. Ordered that
William Campbell, William Edmundson, John Anderson and George Blackburn be appointed commissioners to hire wagons to bring
up the county salt, allotted by the Governor and council, and to receive and distribute the same agreeably to said order of
the council." Later
on Colonel Arthur Campbell rode with seven hundred mounted soldiers against the Cherokees. History gives him the credit of
being the first to experiment in attacking Indians on horseback. He destroyed fourteen of their towns and burnt fifty thousand
bushels of their corn after giving his men enough for their own horses.
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First Pastor of Sinking Springs Presbyterian Church
The "Call" to Ebbing Springs Church
Parson Cummings Cabin in Abingdon, VA
Fightin' Parsons' Pale Ale
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