c.1890 3c.1892 2

Obediah Summers (December 27, 1844 – March 15, 1896) was born into slavery in Clay County, Missouri, and his master paid for him to take his place in the Confederate army as a “servant”. Obediah was captured in 1862, and then enlisted in the Union army. He later became a minister, and served as the California State Legislature as its first black chaplain.

Civil War

Obediah was forced to act as a “servant” for a Confederate officer. He was captured in 1862, and rather than return to Missouri a slave, enlisted in the Union army. Summers enlisted in the Union army on January 18th, 1864, in Wyandotte, Kansas. He served as a private in Company A of the 18th Regiment of the United States Colored Troops. From a Mountain View Cemetery newsletter article by Dennis Evanosky:

Obediah was on the battlefield on December 16, 1864, during the last major battle of the Civil War at Nashville. His regiment was part of the First Colored Brigade from the District of the Etowah, under Major General James B. Steedman. The 14th, 16th, 17th, 18th, and 44th U.S. Colored Infantry regiments made up the brigade commanded by Thomas J. Morgan. Steedman charged Morgan with attacking the Confederate Army’s right flank. Morgan gave Major L. D. Joy, Obediah’s commanding officer, the responsibility of defending the 20th Indiana Battery on the battlefield.

After sharing in the Union victory, Obediah’s regiment accompanied the First Colored Brigade into Alabama. The brigade was disbanded on January 12, 1865.

Obediah mustered out on February 21st, 1866, in Huntsville, Alabama.

According to Mountain View Cemetery by Dennis Evanosky, the Emancipation Proclamation only applied to slaves in the Confederacy, not in border states like Missouri where Obediah lived. “As a result, Obediah’s owner, Lina W. Roberts, was able to apply for compensation—$300—when Obediah joined the Union Army. The federal government suspended the law allowing for such compensation in 1867 and denied all such claims.”

Ministry

Obediah later became a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. He married Elizabeth Banks (Summers) in 1871 and worked for the church in Nebraska in 1884. Obediah transferred to California, where he was put in charge of the Marysville circuit. In 1891-1892, he was pastor of the Bethel African Methodist Church in San Francisco. 2 He also served as the California State Legislature’s first black chaplain.

Summers built two homes for his family that still stand on 32nd Street in Oakland. Voter registration records show his family living at 1109 - 32nd Street. Records indicate he had a scar on his left thumb, and stood 5′8½″ tall.

Death and Burial

Summers was the presiding elder of the California Conference A.M.E. church. On March 8, 1896, he was to conduct the services at First African Methodist Episcopal Church. He died a week later, on March 15, 1896.

Summers is buried in Mountain View Cemetery in the Grand Army of the Republic plot. He wasn’t originally buried in the GAR plot, but plot 39 with a misspelled headstone. Obediah’s great granddaughter Myrna Adams petitioned to have his remains moved. On October 1, 2005, a ceremony was held to celebrate Obediah's life and service with the reinterment in the GAR plot.

Obediah Summers grave, 2014
CC SA-BY Our Oakland
Myrna Adams, Obediah Summers’ granddaughter, joins family member in honoring her grandfather at his grave in Mountain View Cemetery. Members of the Sons of the Union Veterans of the Civil War conducted re-interment ceremonies on the day this black Civil War veteran came home to rest with his fellow Union soldiers. 1

great-great grandson @ 45.30.88.38

Links and References

  1. Mountain View Cemetery by Dennis Evanosky, History is All Around Us (via archive.org)
  2. Good Work of Obadiah Summers San Francisco Chronicle April 11, 1892
  3. Episodes of the Civil War George Washington Herr Bancroft Company 1890