General Sherman

1864 : Atlanta falls to General Sherman

On this day in 1864, Union Army General William Tecumseh Sherman lays siege to Atlanta, Georgia, a critical Confederate hub, shelling civilians and cutting off supply lines. The Confederates retreat, destroying the city's munitions as they go. On 15 November of that year, Sherman's troops burned much of the city before continuing their march through the South. Sherman's Atlanta campaign was one of the most decisive victories of the Civil War.

William Sherman, born 8 May 1820, in Lancaster, Ohio, attended West Point and served in the army before becoming a banker and then president of a military school in Louisiana. When the Civil War broke out in 1861 after 11 Southern slave states seceded from the Union, Sherman joined the Union Army and eventually commanded large numbers of troops, under General Ulysses S. Grant, at the battles of Shiloh (1862), Vicksburg (1863) and Chattanooga (1863). In the spring of 1864, Sherman became supreme commander of the armies in the West and was ordered by Grant to take the city of Atlanta, then a key military supply centre and railroad hub for the Confederates.

Sherman's Atlanta campaign began on 4 May 1864, and in the first few months his troops engaged in several fierce battles with Confederate soldiers on the outskirts of the city, including the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, which the Union forces lost. However, on 1 September, Sherman's men successfully captured Atlanta and continued to defend it through mid-November against Confederate forces led by John Hood. Before he set off on his famous March to the Sea on 15 November, Sherman ordered that Atlanta's military resources, including munitions factories, clothing mills and railway yards, be burned. The fire got out of control and left Atlanta in ruins.

Sherman and 60,000 of his soldiers then headed toward Savannah, Georgia, destroying everything in their path that could help the Confederates. They captured Savannah and completed their March to the Sea on 23 December 1864. The Civil War ended on 9 April 1865, when the Confederate commander-in-chief, General Robert E. Lee, surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia.

After the war, Sherman succeeded Grant as commander-in-chief of the U.S. Army, serving from 1869 to 1883. Sherman, who is credited with the phrase "war is hell," died on 14 February 1891, in New York City. The city of Atlanta swiftly recovered from the war and became the capital of Georgia in 1868, first on a temporary basis and then permanently by popular vote in 1877.
 
As an aside....

For most of Sherman's 1864 campaign, his opposing general was Joseph E Johnston. After the war, Johnston served as a pallbearer at Sherman's funeral, caught pneumonia as a result, and quickly followed Sherman to the grave.
 
Your Civil War as always been of interest to me, We know that Civil war's are no good for any country, Perhaps the reasons for it makes it of great interest.


:smile:

Forgot to say I like your Gunner Badge, When I was a younger man living in London they were my team, spent many a happy Saturday afternoons at Highbury
 
I don't know masses about the American Civil war so please anyone correct me if i'm wrong but surely it was not a Civil War but the Confederate War of Independence?
 
Well my thoughts are a war of independence is where one part of an established country (or an empire) fights for the right to govern itself. Whereas a civil war is 2 (or more) different parties fight for control over a united country.

Perhaps the Civil War definition seems more palatable to the American conscience
 
Depends on which side you are on. To the North, it was a Civil War. The goal was a unified country. The South wanted States Rights to supercede Federal Rights. So, secession was their answer. The goal to govern themselves. A War of Independence.

Of course this is a greatly simplified explanation of the core of the war.
 
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