Henry Johnson Brodhead Cummings (May 21, 1831 – April 16, 1909) was a lawyer,
Civil War officer, editor and publisher, and one-term
Republican Congressman from
Iowa's 7th congressional district.
Born in
Newton, New Jersey, Cummings attended public schools in
Muncy, Pennsylvania as a child. He was editor of a newspaper in
Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania in 1850, studied law and was
admitted to the bar in 1855. He moved to
Winterset, Iowa in 1856 and served as
prosecuting attorney for
Madison County, Iowa from 1856 to 1858.
At the outbreak of the Civil War, Cummings enlisted in the
Union Army in July 1861, and was made
captain of Company F of the
4th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment. He accepted the commission of
colonel of the
39th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment on September 12, 1862 and was
honorably discharged on December 22, 1864. Afterward, he became editor and proprietor of the
Winterset Madisonian.In 1876 he was elected as a Republican to succeed
John A. Kasson as the representative of Iowa's 7th congressional district in the
United States House of Representatives. He served in the
45th United States Congress from 1877 to 1879. Running for re-election in 1879, he was defeated in the general election by
Greenback Party candidate
Edward Hooker Gillette.
Cummings died in Winterset on April 16, 1909, and was interred in Winterset Cemetery.
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