Burial:
Mission Burial Park South
San Antonio
Bexar County
Texas, USA
Plot: Block 2, Masonic Garden
Birth: Sep. 24, 1906
Death: Mar. 31, 1996
Family links:
Parents:
Joseph Gomila Cummings (1882 - 1933)
Dorothy Elizabeth Freitag Cummings (1889 - 1965)
Burial:
Mission Burial Park South
San Antonio
Bexar County
Texas, USA
Plot: Block 2, Masonic Garden
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CUMMINGS, FRANKLIN (1823–1874). Franklin Cummings, attorney, developer, and mayor of Brownsville, was born in Portland, Maine, on September 18, 1823, the son of Cyrus Cummings, a Methodist minister. He married Ann Mildred Jones in April 1850 and moved with his bride to Brownsville. He was attracted to the area because of its great potential as a deep-sea port. He was a graduate of Wesleyan University, with an LL.B. degree, and an early partner of Stephen Powers, who established the first law office in Brownsville. In 1851 he was appointed to succeed Powers as postmaster; he held this office for seven years. He was also a judge and one of the early mayors of the city. He was one of the group of men who financed the building of the First Episcopal Church in Brownsville in 1851. Cummings served as county commissioner of Cameron County, as an officer in the Texas State Troops at Fort Brown during the Civil War, and as a member of the Committee of Public Safety after the Cortina raid (see CORTINA, JUAN N.). He was one of the men to whom a charter was issued to build the Rio Grande Railroad, a link between Brownsville and Point Isabel (now Port Isabel). He died in Brownsville in 1874 and was survived by six children, including Joseph Franklin Cummings.BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Betty Bay, Historic Brownsville: Original Townsite Guide (Brownsville, Texas: Brownsville Historical Association, 1980). W. H. Chatfield, The Twin Cities of the Border and the Country of the Lower Rio Grande (New Orleans: Brandao, 1893; rpt., Brownsville: Brownsville Historical Association, 1959). James Heaven Thompson, A Nineteenth Century History of Cameron County (M.A. thesis, University of Texas, 1965).
Eleanor Russell RentfroCitation
The following, adapted from the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, is the preferred citation for this article.
Eleanor Russell Rentfro, "CUMMINGS, FRANKLIN," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fcu10), accessed October 09, 2011. Published by the Texas State Historical Association
CUMMINGS, JOSEPH FRANKLIN (1851–1912). Joseph Franklin Cummings, teacher, son of Ann Mildred (Jones) and Franklin Cummings, was born in Brownsville, Texas, on July 16, 1851. He attended Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut; his uncle, Joseph Cummings, was president of the university. On leaving Wesleyan, he entered West Point, from which he graduated in 1876; he was subsequently assigned to the Third United States Cavalry. He served in the Indian wars of 1876 and 1877 and was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant. After he retired from the army, he was employed in 1888 as a teacher in Galveston. He returned to Brownsville in July 1888 to organize the local public school system. Within two years a new school building was finished, on a site that was part of Washington Park. Because the school was well organized and thoroughly disciplined, Cummings became known as the founder of the Brownsville school system. Later, Cummings Junior High School was named for him. He also organized the first company of the Brownsville Rifles and was made its captain. In 1896 he married Katherine Garriga of Point Isabel (now Port Isabel); she was the sister of Mariano Simon Garriga, Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi. The couple had one son. Cummings died in Washington, D.C., in 1912 and was buried in his mother's family burial plot in Maryland.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
W. H. Chatfield, The Twin Cities of the Border and the Country of the Lower Rio Grande (New Orleans: Brandao, 1893; rpt., Brownsville: Brownsville Historical Association, 1959).
Pierre Joseph Vivier, Jr
Birth: May 18, 1776
Death: Dec. 15, 1840Originally buried at Chiswell Family Cemetery at Chiswell's Inheritance, Poolesville MD.
Reinterment on November 28, 1895.
Married Ann Newton (Chiswell) Jones on December 23, 1806.
Father of:
- Sarah Ann Newton Jones [1808-1879]
- Mary Eleanor Jones [1810-1873]
- Edward Jones [1812-1835]
- Joseph Chiswell Jones [1814-1846]
- William Waters Jones [1817-1844]
- Margaret Chiswell Jones [1819-?]
- John Augustus Jones [1821-1896]
- Ann Mildred Jones [1824-1909]
- Leonidas Jones [1827-1902]
- Elizabeth Jones [1831-1894]
Family links:
Parents:
Edward Jones (1737 - 1790)
Sarah White Jones (1741 - 1816)
Spouse:
Ann Newton Chiswell Jones (1786 - 1857)*
Children:
Sarah Ann Newton Jones Dawson (1808 - 1879)*
Mary Eleanor Jones Chiswell (1810 - 1873)*
Edward Jones (1812 - 1835)*
William Waters Jones (1817 - 1844)*
Mary Margaret Chiswell Jones Mcleod (1819 - 1890)*
John Augustus Jones (1821 - 1896)*
Ann Mildred Jones Cummings (1824 - 1909)*
Leonidas Jones (1827 - 1902)*
Elizabeth Jones (1831 - 1894)*
*Point here for explanation
Burial:
Monocacy Cemetery
Beallsville
Montgomery County
Maryland, USA
Plot: Row D, Lot 12 Lower, Site 6b
Birth: Nov. 15, 1786
Poolesville
Montgomery County
Maryland, USA
Death: Jan. 5, 1857
Montgomery County
Maryland, USADaughter of Joseph Newton Chiswell [1747-1837] and Eleanor Chiswell (White) Chiswell [1750-1831]
Married Joseph James Wilkerson Jones on December 23, 1806
Mother of:
- Sarah Ann Newton Jones [1808-1879]
- Mary Eleanor Jones [1810-1873]
- Edward Jones [1812-1835]
- Joseph Chiswell Jones [1814-1846]
- William Waters Jones [1817-1844]
- Margaret Chiswell Jones [1819-?]
- John Augustus Jones [1821-1896]
- Ann Mildred Jones [1824-1909]
- Leonidas Jones [1827-1902]
- Elizabeth Jones [1831-1894]Originally buried at Chiswell Family Cemetery at Chiswell's Inheritance, Poolesville MD.
Reinterment on November 28, 1895.
Birth: Apr. 2, 1747
Death: Apr., 1837Son of Stephen Newton Chiswell and Sarah Odell Newton.
Husband of Eleanor Chiswell White.
Children:
1. Elizabeth Smith Chiswell
2. Mary Robertson Chiswell
3. Sarah Newton Chiswell
4. William Augustus Chiswell
5. Ann Newton Chiswell
6. Stephen Newton Chiswell
7. Hester White Chiswell
8. John Augustus Chiswell
9. Rachel Chiswell
10. Eleanor White Chiswell
11. Margaret Chiswell
Maj. Gen. William Luther Sibert
MG WILLIAM L. SIBERT
(1860-1935)
Major General William L. Sibert was born in Gadsden, Alabama on October 12, 1860. After attending the University of Alabama from 1879 to 1880, he entered the U.S. Military Academy and was appointed a Second Lieutenant of Engineers on June 15, 1884. Only the top 10 percent of each graduating class were commissioned in the Engineers – it was then the premier branch of the U.S. Army.
After graduating from the Engineer School of Applications now known as Engineer Officer Basic Course in 1887, General Sibert held several responsible positions with the Engineers in the United States and overseas. Normally, engineer duties covered a wide variety of different tasks ranging from building posts and forts to building coastal fortifications to the development of various types of government building programs such as rivers and harbors.
In 1899, General Sibert was assigned as the Chief Engineer of the 8th Army Corps and the Chief Engineer and General Manager of the Manila and Dagupan Railroad during the Philippine Insurrection. He held these positions until 1900 when he returned to the United States to work for seven years with the engineers in charge of river and harbor districts and headquarters in Louisville and Pittsburgh. From 1907 through 1914, General Sibert was a member of the Isthmian Canal commission and was responsible for the building of a number of critical parts of the Panama Canal. He built the Gatun Locks and Dam, the West Breakwater in Colon, and the channel from Gatun Lake to the Pacific Ocean.
On March 15, 1915, General Sibert was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General and on June 28, 1918, he was advanced to the rank of Major General. As a General Officer, General Sibert was the first Commanding General of the 1st Infantry Division "the Big Red One" – in France in 1917. After training the division for combat, he returned to the United States in January 1918 to become the commanding General of the Southeastern Department at Charleston, South Carolina.
General John J. Pershing had persuaded the War Department to create a Chemical Warfare Service (CWS), and he was asked to name a general officer with both ability and seniority to hold the new CWS. General Pershing immediately sent the name of MG Sibert to the War Department to fill that position.
After having ran the CWS from may 1918 to February 1920, Major General Sibert retired from active duty. He is considered the “father of the Chemical Corps” because he was the first commander of the CWS. He guided the corps through some of its earliest problems and always managed to find a solution.
During his retirement, General Sibert served with distinction in the civilian world. Among his accomplishments were the modernization of the docks and waterways in Mobile, Alabama and service on a presidential commission that led to the building of Hover Dam.
General Sibert was first married to Mary Margaret Cummings in September 1887. The couple produced five sons and one daughter. After his wife's death in 1915, General Sibert married Juliette Roberts in June 1917. She died 15 months later, and in 1922 he married Evelyn Clyne Bairnsfather of Edinburg Scotland.
General Sibert retired to Bowling Green, Kentucky. He died on October 16, 1935 and is buried in Bowling Green. Thus ended the remarkable career of the father of the Chemical Corps.
Credit to:
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http://www.chemical-corps.org/honors/sibertbio.htm
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------Name: Gen. William L. Sibert
Titles & Terms:
Event: Death
Event Date: 1935
Event Place: Bowling Green, Warren, Kentucky
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Father: William Joshua Sibert
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Mother: Marietta Ward
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Spouse: Evelyn Bairnofather Sibert
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Volume/Page/Certificate Number: 26095
Film Number: 1913140
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William Luther Sibert
Major General, United States Army
The founder of a distinguished American military family. His two sons, Edwin Luther Sibert and Franklin Cummings Sibert, each retired as Major Generals in the Army and two grandsons and a great-grandson have been in the Army.
An 1884 graduate of West Point, he was an engineer, who built bridges in the Midwest; saw service in the Philippines and assisted in building the Panama Canal (for the latter he was promoted to Brigadier General and given the Thanks of Congress on march 4, 1915).After commanding the 1st Division in France during World War I, he returned to the United States and served as Director of Chemical Warfare Service.
He retired from the Army in 1920 and from 1923 to 1933 was manager of the Alabama State Docks Commission, which constructed the Ocean Terminal at Mobile. In 1928 Congress appointed him Chairman of a board to investigate and report on the Boulder Dam Project.
He died at Bowling Green, Kentucky, in 1935 at the age of 75, and was buried in Section 6 of Arlington National Cemetery.
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William Luther Sibert of Alabama
Appointed from Alabama, Cadet, United States Military Academy 1July 1880 (7)
Commissioned Second Lieutenant of Engineers, 15 June 1884
First Lieutenant, 7 April 1888
Captain, 31 March 1896
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SIBERT, WILLIAM L
MAJOR GEN US ARMY RET
VETERAN SERVICE DATES: Unknown
DATE OF DEATH: 10/18/1935
DATE OF INTERMENT: 10/18/1935
BURIED AT: SECTION 6 SITE 5016
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY