Thomas Osmond Summers was born the 11 October 1812 in Swanage, Dorset, England.[2] Summers was orphaned at six year old and cared for by his Calvinist grandmother[3][2] His only sister also died around this time.[2] At age seven, along with his brother, he moved under the care of a great aunt named Sarah Havilland, who had a lasting influence on him.[2] She taught Summers in the doctrine and the practices of the Congregational church, until she died in 1828.[2] Following her death, he was placed in the guardianship of three deacons of the Independent Church who taught him the catechism, selected Bible passages for memorizing, and saw that he attended church five times each Sunday, and at mid-week services.[4] In 1830, he emigrated to the United States.[2] In 1832, he joined Ebenezer Methodist Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C.[5] In 1833, he had a conversion experience.[5] In 1834, he was licensed to preach, and admitted as a member on trial to the Baltimore Conference.[5]
Career
In 1835, Summers was appointed to the Augusta circuit in rural Virginia.[5] He gained a reputation on the circuit as the preeminent experts in hymnody.[6] In 1837, He was ordained deacon in 1837 and was appointed to the Baltimore City station church.[6] In 1839, he was ordained elder and appointed to the West River Circuit in Texas.[6] In 1840, he established a Methodist community on Galveston Island in Texas.[7] In 1844, he moved to the Alabama Conference, and married Miss N. B. Sexton.[6] He also served as a Methodist clergyman in Mississippi.[8]
In 1850, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee and worked as a book editor for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.[9][10] From 1851 to 1856, he served as the editor of the Sunday School Visitor.[9] In 1855, he relocated to Nashville, as general editor of the Southern Christian Advocate and also supervising all of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South's Sunday School publications.[11] From 1858 to 1861, he served as editor of the Quarterly Review of the Methodist Church, South.[9] From 1868 to 1878, he was the editor of the Nashville Christian Advocate.[12]
Summers published over 500 books from church history to medicine.[13] However, the actual number is difficult to determine because he often did not indicate his own authorship.[14]
In 1856, a few years before the American Civil War of 1861-1865, and together with William Andrew Smith (1802–1870), the President of his alma mater Randolph–Macon College, he published an essay about domestic slavery in the United States.[17] Later, in The Ladies' Repository, he justified punishment of the sinful as tough love.[16] Throughout the Civil War, Summers continued to publish materials for Confederate soldiers, lamenting once that his poor eyesight prevented him from serving in the Confederate army.[18]
Summers died after collapsing during a meeting of General Conference on the 6th of May,1882 in Nashville, Tennessee.[20] He is buried in the Bishop’s Grave (also known as Bishop’s Monument) on Vanderbilt’s campus alongside Bishop Joshua Soule, Bishop William McKendree, Bishop Holland Nimmons McTyeire, his wife Amelia, and Chancellor Landon Garland.[21]
Works
Books
Summers, Thomas O. (1850). Christian patriotism (Sermon). Charleston, SC: Printed by C. Canning.
Summers, Thomas O. (1851). Holiness a treatise on sanctification, as set forth in the New Testament. Richmond, Louisville: J. Early, for the Methodist Episcopal church, South.