8 February 1820 A.D. GEN William “Uncle Billy” Tecumseh Sherman Born
8 February 1820 A.D. GEN William “Uncle Billy” Tecumseh Sherman
Born
Editors. “1820 – Future Civil War General, William Tecumseh Sherman is born in Lancaster,
Ohio.” This Day in U.S. Military History. N.d. https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/02/08/february-8/. Accessed 6 Feb 2015.
1820 – Future Civil War
General, William Tecumseh Sherman is born in Lancaster, Ohio. His father
died when he was young. Widowed and unable to care for the entire family, his
mother sent brother Thomas to be raised by an aunt and William became a foster
child to Thomas Ewing, his father’s friend. Cump, as he was known, later
married Mr. Ewing’s daughter, Ellen. Educated at the U.S. Military Academy at
West Point, he graduated in 1840. During the Mexican War, Sherman was posted in
San Francisco. He resigned his commission in 1853 to become a partner in a bank
there. Prior to the outbreak of hostilities between the North and the South, William
Tecumseh Sherman was Superintendent of the Louisiana State Seminary and
Military Academy at Alexandria, Louisiana. After the war, the school moved to
Baton Rouge, Louisiana and became Louisiana State University (LSU). Talk of the
secession from the Union was rampant, yet the motto of the seminary was “By the
liberality of the General Government of the United States, the Union – esto
perpetua.” On January 18, 1861, Sherman resigned his position stating that he
preferred to maintain his allegiance to the Constitution as long as a fragment
of it survived. On the 25th of February, Sherman left Louisiana and returned to
Ohio. He remained in Lancaster for a month and then moved his family to St.
Louis, Missouri where he was elected President of the Fifth Street Railroad. On
May 8, 1861, Sherman wrote to the Secretary of War, offering his services not
for three months, but for three years. He did not want to become a political
general and on June 20, 1861 accepted the grade of Colonel in the Thirteenth
Regular Infantry. He assumed command of a brigade in the First Division of
McDowell’s army under the command of Brigadier-General Daniel Tyler. His
brigade, stationed at a stone bridge during the battle of First Manassas(Bull
Run), was routed by devastating Confederate cannon fire. In August, 1861,
Sherman and George H. Thomas were promoted to Brigadier General and were
assigned to the Department of the Cumberland under the command of
Brigadier-General Robert Anderson. Anderson was in command of Ft Sumter when P.T.
Beauregard opened fire upon it, beginning the war. Sherman had previously
served under Anderson, and it was Anderson that requested that Sherman be
transferred to his command. In October, 1861, Sherman relieved Anderson.
Filling quotas for Kentucky volunteers was extremely difficult. The State was
split on their beliefs and where their allegiance should be placed. Later that
month, Sherman told Secretary of War Cameron that if he had 60,000 men, he
would drive the enemy out of Kentucky, and if he had 200,000 men, he would
finish the war in that section. When Cameron returned to Washington, he
reported that Sherman required 200,000 men. The report was given to newspapers
and a cry of indignation arose from the public. A writer of one of these
newspapers even went as far as saying that Sherman must be “crazy” in demanding
such a large force. The public accepted this insinuated statement as a valid
one, thus writers have always declared that he was crazy. Due to the pressure
of the press and politicians that believed the insinuation, on November 12,
1861, Brigadier-General Don Carlos Buell relieved Sherman of his command, and
Sherman was assigned to the Department of the West, in St. Louis, Missouri
under Major-General Halleck. After moving to Missouri, newspapers and gossip
continued to harass him with reports that he was insane and that he was not fit
to command, demanding his recall. He was in a state of depression from all the
harassment, but not mentally incompetent. Halleck, in a letter to Sherman’s
foster father stated, “I have seen newspaper squibs charging him with being
“crazy”, etc. This is the grossest injustice. I do not however, consider such
attacks worthy of notice.” On February 13, 1862, Sherman assumed the command of
the post at Paducah Kentucky relieving U.S. Grant of that position. On March
11, 1862, Halleck was assigned to command the Department of the Mississippi and
Major-General U.S. Grant to command the army in the field. The organization and
the name given to this army was the Army of the Tennessee. Sherman was placed
in command of the Fifth Division of this army. In July 1862, Sherman was
assigned to command the District of Memphis. Later that year Sherman failed to
seize the Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg, but was with Grant in the campaign
that finally ended in the capture of that city in July 1863. Sherman was given
command of the Army of the Tennessee in the fall of 1863. In the spring of
1864, Sherman was made supreme commander of the armies in the West and was
ordered by Grant to “create havoc and destruction of all resources that would
be beneficial to the enemy.” With a grand aggregate of 98,797 troops and 254
cannons, on May 4, 1864, Sherman began the Atlanta Campaign for which he is
most (in)famous. Sherman wanted to split the Confederacy, and began planning
his March to the Sea. He kept his most seasoned veterans, 60,000 in all and
sent the rest of the troops back to Nashville to be under the command of
Major-General George Thomas. With four Corps of troops in two columns, in
November 1864, Sherman began his infamous March to the Sea. Prior to leaving
from Atlanta, he set fire to munitions factories, railroad yards, clothing
mills, and other targets that could be resourceful to the Confederacy. Sherman
never intended to burn the whole city, but the fire got out of hand and spread
throughout the city. With the four Corps in two columns, Sherman cut a swath 60
miles wide marching towards Savannah, destroying anything that could aid or be
resourceful to the enemy. On December 23, 1864, Sherman sent a telegram to
Lincoln stating that he was presenting him the city of Savannah as a Christmas
gift. General Joe Johnston surrendered to Sherman on April 17, 1865 at Raleigh,
North Carolina. After the war, Sherman was commissioned Lieutenant General in
the regular army, and after Grant was elected was promoted to the grade of full
general and given command of the entire U. S Army. He retired in 1883.
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