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LTC Stephen F.
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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on March 11, 1865 General William T. Sherman's Union forces occupied Fayetteville, North Carolina.

William Tecumseh Sherman is a USMA graduate of the class of 1840, American soldier, banker, lawyer and superintendent of the Superintendent & Professor Louisiana State Seminary 1859-1861.
At USMA he is graduate number 1,022 [for comparison I am graduate number 37,403]
Per the USMA Register of Graduates and Former Cadets
William Tecumseh Sherman was commissioned as an artillery officer upon graduation on July 1, 1840
AG Officer Department of California 1847-1849, Brevet Captain; Resigned 1853; Banker 1853-1857; Mag Gen California Militia 1856; Superintendent & Professor Louisiana State Seminary 1859-1861; President Street Railroad, St Louis, 1861; Reappointed Colonel 13 Infantry in 1861; Wounded at Shiloh; MG USA 1864; LT Gen 1866; General commanding Armies of the United States 1869-1883; retired 1884; Hall of Fame for Great Americans 05.
Rest in peace William Tecumseh Sherman.

When Georgia Howled: Sherman on the March
FOR 37 WEEKS IN 1864, GENERAL WILLIAM T. SHERMAN MADE GEORGIA HIS BATTLEGROUND. Georgia Public Broadcasting and the Atlanta History Center have partnered to produce the gripping new documentary “When Georgia Howled: Sherman on the March,” premiering Thursday, September 10 at 8 p.m. on GPB Television. The program is the companion documentary to their Emmy-winning collaboration "37 Weeks: Sherman on the March,” a series of 90-second segments that premiered in April 2014 and commemorated the 150th anniversary of Sherman’s 1864 march into Georgia. IT WAS 37 WEEKS THAT WOULD DETERMINE THE FATE OF A NATION.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8kSUDp2BC0

Images:
1. William Tecumseh Sherman at Federal Fort No. 7, Atlanta, Georgia, c.1865. Courtesy Library of Congress
2. William Tecumseh Sherman 'I am tired and sick of war. Its glory is all moonshine. It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, for vengeance, for desolation. War is hell.'
3. Maj Gen William T. Sherman & his staff; standing, l-to-r Oliver Otis Howard, William Babcock Hazen, Jefferson Columbus Davis, Joseph Anthony Mower; seated, l-to-r John Alexander Logan, William Tecumseh Sherman, Henry Warner Slocum.
4. The Burning of Columbia, South Carolina (1865) by William Waud for Harper's Weekly February 17, 1865

Background from {[https://www.battlefields.org/learn/biographies/william-t-sherman]}
William Tecumseh Sherman
TITLE Major General
WAR & AFFILIATION - Civil War / Union
DATE OF BIRTH – DEATH [February 8, 1820 – February 14, 1891]
William Tecumseh Sherman, although not a career military commander before the war, would become one of "the most widely renowned of the Union’s military leaders next to U. S. Grant.”
Sherman, one of eleven children, was born into a distinguished family. His father had served on the Supreme Court of Ohio until his sudden death in 1829, leaving Sherman and his family to stay with several friends and relatives. During this period, Sherman found himself living with Senator Thomas Ewing, who obtained an appointment for Sherman to the United States Military Academy, and he graduated sixth in the class of 1840. His early military career proved to be anything but spectacular. He saw some combat during the Second Seminole War in Florida, but unlike many of his colleagues, did not fight in the Mexican-American War, serving instead in California. As a result, he resigned his commission in 1853. He took work in the fields of banking and law briefly before becoming the superintendent of the Louisiana Military Academy in 1859. At the outbreak of the Civil War, however, Sherman resigned from the academy and headed north, where he was made a colonel of the 13th United States Infantry.

Sherman first saw combat at the Battle of First Manassas, where he commanded a brigade of Tyler’s Division. Although the Union army was defeated during the battle, President Abraham Lincoln was impressed by Sherman’s performance and he was promoted to brigadier general on August 7, 1861, ranking seventh among other officers at that grade. He was sent to Kentucky to begin the Union task of keeping the state from seceding. While in the state, Sherman expressed his views that the war would not end quickly, and he was replaced by Don Carlos Buell. Sherman was moved to St. Louis, where he served under Henry W. Halleck and completed logistical missions during the Union capture of Fort Donelson. During the Battle of Shiloh, Sherman commanded a division, but was overrun during the battle by Confederates under Albert Sydney Johnston. Despite the incident, Sherman was promoted to major general of volunteers on May 1, 1862.

After the battle of Shiloh, Sherman led troops during the battles of Chickasaw Bluffs and Arkansas Post, and commanded XV Corps during the campaign to capture Vicksburg. At the Battle of Chattanooga Sherman faced off against Confederates under Patrick Cleburne in the fierce contest at Missionary Ridge. After Ulysses S. Grant was promoted to commander of all the United States armies, Sherman was made commander of all troops in the Western Theatre, and began to wage warfare that would bring him great notoriety in the annals of history.

By 1864 Sherman had become convinced that preservation of the Union was contingent not only on defeating the Southern armies in the field but, more importantly, on destroying the Confederacy's material and psychological will to wage war. To achieve that end, he launched a campaign in Georgia that was defined as “modern warfare”, and brought “total destruction…upon the civilian population in the path of the advancing columns [of his armies].” Commanding three armies, under George Henry Thomas, James B. McPherson, and John M. Schofield, he used his superior numbers to consistently outflank Confederate troops under Joseph E. Johnston, and captured Atlanta on September 2, 1864. The success of the campaign ultimately helped Lincoln win reelection. After the fall of Atlanta, Sherman left the forces under Thomas and Schofield to continue to harass the Confederate Army of Tennessee under John Bell Hood. Meanwhile, Sherman cut off all communications to his army and commenced his now-famous “March to the Sea," leaving in his wake a forty to sixty mile-wide path of destruction through the heartland of Georgia. On December 21, 1864 Sherman wired Lincoln to offer him an early Christmas present: the city of Savannah.

I am tired and sick of war. Its glory is all moonshine. It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, for vengeance, for desolation. War is hell.
- William Tecumseh Sherman

Following his successful campaign through Georgia, Sherman turned his attentions northward and began marching through the Carolinas, chasing the Confederates under the command of Joseph E. Johnston. He continued his campaign of destruction, in particular targeting South Carolina for their role in seceding from the Union first. He captured Columbia, South Carolina, on February 17, 1865, setting many fires which would consume large portions of the city. He went on to defeat the forces of Johnston in North Carolina during the Battle of Bentonville, and eventually accepted the surrender of Johnston and all troops in Georgia, Florida, and the Carolinas on April 26, 1865, becoming the largest surrender of Confederate troops during the war.
After the war, Sherman remained in the military and eventually rose to the rank of full general, serving as general-in-chief of the army from 1869 to 1883. Praised for his revolutionary ideas on "total warfare," William T. Sherman died in 1891.'

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LTC Stephen F.
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The Conquerors 8 Sherman's March to the Sea (History Documentary)
Documentary in a series on the great conquerers of history. Produced by Greystone Television, History Channel and Invictus Films in 2005.
The Conquerors - 8: Shermans March to the Sea (History Documentary)- Part 2 Mysteries of India Tour Package | Go Collette | Asia Guided Travel- Part 2.
FOR 37 WEEKS IN 1864, GENERAL WILLIAM T. SHERMAN MADE GEORGIA HIS BATTLEGROUND. Georgia Public Broadcasting and the Atlanta History Center have partnered to produce the gripping new documentary.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEv_fFLiPEk

Images:
1. Maj Gen William Tecumseh Sherman.
2. Eleanor Boyle Ewing Sherman, wife of William T. Sherman - portrait by G.P.A. Healy (1868)
3. 1866 painted portrait of William T. Sherman, by George P. A. Healy
4. William T Sherman and his 9-year-old son Willie Sherman who died of Yellow fever in Memphis for which he contracted on the steamer Atlantic.

Background from {[https://www.biography.com/military-figure/william-tecumseh-sherman]}
William Tecumseh Sherman Biography
(1820–1891)
UPDATED:FEB 5, 2020ORIGINAL:AUG 8, 2014
William Tecumseh Sherman was a U.S. Civil War Union Army leader known for "Sherman's March," in which he and his troops laid waste to the South.
Who Was William Tecumseh Sherman?
William Tecumseh Sherman's early military career was a near disaster, having to be temporarily relieved of command. He returned at the Battle of Shiloh to victory and then gathered 100,000 troops destroying Atlanta and devastating Georgia in his March to the Sea. Often credited with the saying, "war is hell," he was a major architect of modern total war.

Early Life
One of 11 children, Sherman was born to a prominent family in Lancaster, Ohio, on February 8, 1820. His father, Charles, was a successful lawyer and an Ohio Supreme Court justice. When Sherman was 9 years old, his father died suddenly, leaving the family with few finances. He was raised by a family friend, Thomas Ewing, a senator from Ohio and a prominent member of the Whig Party. There has been much speculation on Sherman's middle name. In his memoirs, he wrote that his father gave him the name William Tecumseh because he admired the Shawnee chief.

Early Military Career
In 1836, Senator Ewing secured Sherman an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point. There, he excelled academically, but had little respect for the demerit system. He never got himself into deep trouble, but had numerous minor offenses on this record. Sherman graduated in 1840, sixth in his class. He first saw action against the Seminole Indians in Florida and had numerous assignments through Georgia and South Carolina, where he became acquainted with many of the Old South's most respected families.

Sherman's early military career was anything but spectacular. Unlike many of his colleagues who saw action during the Mexican-American War, Sherman spent this time stationed in California as an executive officer. In 1850, he married Eleanor Boyle Ewing, the daughter of Thomas Ewing. With his lack of combat experience, Sherman felt that the U.S. Army was a dead-end, thusly resigning his commission in 1853. He stayed in California during the glory days of the gold rush as a banker, but that ended in the Panic of 1857. He settled in Kansas to practice law, but without much success.

In 1859, Sherman was headmaster at a military academy in Louisiana. He proved to be an effective administrator and popular with the community. As sectional tensions rose, Sherman warned his secessionist friends that a war would be long and bloody, with the North eventually winning. When Louisiana left the Union, Sherman resigned and moved to St. Louis, wanting nothing to do with the conflict. Though a conservative on slavery, he was a strong supporter of the Union. After the firing on Fort Sumter, he asked his brother, Senator John Sherman, to arrange a commission in the Army.

Service in the Civil War
In May 1861, Sherman was appointed colonel in the 13th U.S. Infantry, and was assigned command of a brigade under General William McDowell in Washington, D.C. He fought in the First Battle of Bull Run, in which Union troops were badly beaten. He was then sent to Kentucky and became deeply pessimistic about the war, complaining to his superiors about shortages while exaggerating the enemy's troop strength. He was eventually put on leave, considered unfit for duty. The press picked up on his troubles and described him as "insane." It is believed Sherman suffered from a nervous breakdown.

In mid-December 1861, Sherman returned to service in Missouri and was assigned rear-echelon commands. In Kentucky, he provided logistical support for Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant's capture of Fort Donelson in February 1862. The following month, Sherman was assigned to serve with Grant in the Army of West Tennessee. His first test as a commander in combat came at Shiloh.

Likely fearing renewed criticism of appearing overly alarmed, Sherman initially dismissed intelligence reports that Confederate General Albert Sidney Johnston was in the area. He took little precaution shoring up picket lines or sending out reconnaissance patrols. On the morning of April 6, 1862, the Confederates struck with Hell's own fury. Sherman and Grant rallied their troops and pushed back the rebel offensive by day's end. With reinforcements arriving that night, Union troops were able to launch a counter-attack the next morning, scattering Confederate troops. The experience bonded Sherman and Grant to a lifelong friendship.

Sherman remained in the West, serving with Grant in the long campaign against Vicksburg. However, the press was relentless in its criticism of both men. As one newspaper complained, the "Army was being ruined in mud-turtle expeditions, under the leadership of a drunkard [Grant] whose confidential adviser [Sherman] was a lunatic." Eventually, Vicksburg fell and Sherman was given command of three armies in the West.

Evolving toward "Total War"
In February, 1864, Sherman launched a campaign from Vicksburg, Mississippi, to destroy the rail center at Meridian and clear Confederate resistance from central Mississippi. Three railroad lines intersected at Meridian, which was located between Jackson, the state’s capital, and the cannon foundry and manufacturing center in Selma, Alabama. Time was of the essence, so Sherman’s army cut supply lines from Vicksburg and foraged off the land. The Confederates, under General Leonidas Polk, put up some resistance, but his 10,000 troops were no match for the 45,000 Union juggernaut. As Sherman moved west from Vicksburg, he employed feint tactics to keep Polk’s forces at bay protecting Mobile, Alabama. On February 11, 1864, Sherman’s army attacked and destroyed the railroad center at Meridian, then dispersed detachments in four directions destroying railroad tracks, bridges, trestles and any train equipment in their way. This was a prelude to Sherman’s “march to the sea” in Georgia and an important milestone in the evolution of strategy in the Civil War’s relentless ascent toward “total war.”

In early September 1864, under heavy siege, Confederate Lt. Gen. John Bell Hood and his men were forced to evacuate Atlanta destroying as many supplies and munitions as they could before Sherman took Atlanta and ultimately burned what was left of it to the ground. With 60,000 men, he began his celebrated "March to the Sea," ripping through Georgia with a 60-mile-wide path of total destruction. Sherman understood that to win the war and save the Union, his Army would have to break the South's will to fight. Everything was ordered to be destroyed in this military strategy, known as "total war."

When Grant became president in 1869, Sherman took over as general commander of the U.S. Army. One of his duties was to protect the construction of the railroads from attack by hostile Indians. Believing the Native Americans were an impediment to progress, he ordered total destruction of the warring tribes. Despite his harsh treatment of Native Americans, Sherman spoke out against unscrupulous government officials who mistreated them on the reservations.

Life After War and Death
In February 1884, Sherman retired from the Army. He lived in St. Louis before moving to New York in 1886. There he devoted his time to theater, amateur painting and speaking at dinners and banquets. He declined to run for the presidency, saying, "I will not accept if nominated, and will not serve if elected."

Sherman died on February 14, 1891, in New York City. According to his wishes, he was buried at Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis. President Benjamin Harrison ordered all national flags to be flown at half-staff. Though vilified in the South as a demon who perpetuated atrocities on civilians, historians give Sherman high marks as a military strategist and quick-witted tactician. He changed the nature of war and recognized it for what it was: "War is hell."

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LTC Stephen F.
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Sean Chick's William Tecumseh Sherman, Part 3: The Two Marches
In this video, Sherman earns his place in the history books. Now the commander of the western theater, Sherman captures Atlanta and then makes a bold decision to march to the sea. After he arrived at Savannah and linked up with the navy, Sherman then marched through the Carolinas. These great deeds came at a time when Grant's Overland Campaign had bogged down at Petersburg. Arguably, Sherman's bold decision to march to the sea and then into the Carolinas shaved a year or more off of the bloodiest conflict in American history.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbif6k-Uba8

Images:
1. William Tecumseh Sherman photograph by Granger
2. 1888 photograph by Napoleon Sarony served as a model for the engraving of the first Sherman postage stamp issued in 1893.
3. 1893 USA 8c Sherman, Lilac, Scott number 225
4. 1937 USA 3c Sherman, Grant, Sheridan Scott number 787

battleofchampionhill.org account The Ultimate Grief William T. Sherman
Background from {[http://battleofchampionhill.org/history/sherman.htm]}
The Ultimate Grief: William T. Sherman
Unknown to most, Sherman faced the ultimate grief in life only months after the Siege of Vicksburg. The story of Sherman is one of military triumph followed by personal tragedy.
by Rebecca Blackwell Drake
To Southerners, the name General William Tecumseh Sherman conjures up images of the meanest of the mean and the devil incarnate. Unlike Grant and McPherson, Sherman showed no compassion for human life. His trail was one of death and destruction. By the end of the war, he found himself literally despised and hated by Southerners - a reputation that has never diminished with time.

William Tecumseh Sherman
Unknown to most people, Sherman faced the ultimate grief in life only months after the Siege of Vicksburg. The story of Sherman is one of military triumph followed by personal tragedy.
In September of 1863, following the victory of the Union army in Vicksburg, Sherman made his camp near Bovina - at a site on the Big Black River His headquarters was a plantation known as Woodburne, the home of Reverend James A. Fox. Thinking that it would be a good time to reunite with his family, he sent home for his wife, Ellen, and their four children: Minnie [12], Lizzie [11], Willy [9] and Tom [7]. For the children, it was a wonderful time. They all lived in tents and enjoyed the companionship of the Union soldiers. The 13th U.S. Infantry Regiment even made Willy an honorary sergeant. They taught him the manual of arms, and included him in their guard details and formal parades. Willy loved to pretend that he was a real soldier and often accompanied his father on inspection tours of the army.
"I have a healthy camp," Sherman wrote to his foster father, Thomas Ewing, "and I have no fear of yellow or other fevers." As fate would have it, Sherman spoke too soon. In late September, as the family boarded the steamboat Atlantic to begin their journey back up the Mississippi River and home to Ohio, Sherman noticed that Willy did not look well. The boy was very quiet and his cheeks were flushed. Surgeon E. O. F. Roler of the 55th Illinois was consulted and he sadly diagnosed young Willy as having yellow fever.
The trip to Memphis could only be described as terrible. Willy suffered from high fever, diarrhea and other symptoms associated with the illness. The family refused to accept the prognosis and hovered over his bedside. Arriving in Memphis, the semiconscious boy was carried by ambulance to the Gayoso Hotel and seen by the best of physicians. The situation was grim and a Catholic chaplain was summoned to administer the last rites. As Willy floated in and out of consciousness, he realized that he was dying.
He told the priest that he was quite willing to die if it was God's will, but that he did not want to leave his father and mother. With this revelation, Ellen and William Sherman began to weep. Willy reached out and caressed their faces then closed his eyes and slipped away. He died at 5 p.m. on October 3, 1863.
For General Sherman, the death of his son was unbearable. Young Willy had been his favorite. First, he blamed himself for bringing the family to Mississippi and exposing them to a camp fever. Next, unable to deal with reality, he slipped into depression.
On October 6th, after placing his family on the steamer to return home, Sherman found himself alone at the Gayoso Hotel preparing to return to Vicksburg and the continuation of the war. From the hotel he wrote his wife a letter of total despair: "I have got up early this morning to steal a short period in which to write you, but I can hardly trust myself. Sleeping, waking, every-where I see poor little Willy. His face and form are so deeply imprinted on my memory as were deep seated the hopes I had in his future. Why, oh why, should this child be taken from us, leaving us full of trembling and reproaches? Though I know we did all human beings could do to arrest the ebbing tide of life, still I will always deplore my want of judgement in taking my family to so fatal a climate at so critical a period of the year….To it must be traced the loss of that child on whose future I had based all the ambition I ever had."
Several days later, in the midst of a military matter, Sherman wrote to Admiral David Porter saying, "I lost recently my little boy by sickness incurred during his visit to my camp on Big Black. He was my pride and hope of life, and his loss has taken from me the great incentive to excel, and now I must work on purely and exclusively for love of country and professional pride."
Sherman never ceased to blame himself for the death of his son. He literally went insane with grief. Historians now consider the fact that Sherman's madness, the burning and killing throughout Mississippi, continuing on to the March to the Sea, was the result of his insurmountable loss. Reflecting on Sherman's cruelties, Margie Bearss, wife of the famous historian, Edwin C. Bearss, wrote, "Did perhaps the death of Willy start a chain reaction of fires and desolation in Mississippi that the winds of more than a century have not entirely hidden? Did Sherman hold Mississippi 'that sickly region' responsible for his death? Who knows. Yet, we do know that between the end of the Vicksburg Campaign and the beginning of the Meridian Expedition, only a few months' time, his concept of warfare changed and he began his own version of the 'total war' for which he became well-known."
Sherman continued to mourn Willy for the rest of his life. One year before his own death in February of 1891, he left detailed instructions for his eventual burial. His last request before his death was to be buried in Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis, "alongside my faithful wife and idolized soldier boy."
And so it was. Only in death did General Sherman ever find peace.
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LTC John Griscom
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I lived about 40 minutes from his childhood home. It was cool to see.

I also love the story that he did not pass through Augusta GA on his March to the sea because he had a previous love interest who lived there even though Augusta was a large city with lots of munitions production etc.
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