William Sherman Essays

  • Biography of William Tecumseh Sherman

    1443 Words  | 3 Pages

    William Tecumseh Sherman was born on February 8th in the year 1820 in Lancaster Ohio. His father was Charles Sherman, a well-known lawyer and an Ohio Supreme Court Justice. Sherman was one out of eleven children born to Mr. and Mrs. Sherman. In 1829 his father died when Sherman was only 9. He went to live with a family friend. This family friend was Thomas Ewing, an Ohio Senator and a Whig member. With Sherman’s connections, mostly Thomas Ewing, got him an appointment into West Point Military Academy

  • William Sherman and the Desolation March.

    664 Words  | 2 Pages

    use trying to reform it. The crueler it is, the sooner it will be over.” - William Sherman If the question was raised "Who is the most hated and despised man in the history of Georgia" the response would unanimously be William Tecumseh Sherman. The reason being? Well, only because waged a 6 month campaign ravaging anything Georgian in his path. Known to be one of the most merciless Generals in U.S history, William Sherman was born to a prominent family in Lancaster, Ohio, on February, 8, 1820,

  • General William T. Sherman

    2168 Words  | 5 Pages

    a General named William T. Sherman. During the period of the war (1861-1865), General Sherman went full circle from being forced to retire on trumped up charges that he was insane, to becoming a key player in bringing this bloody war to a close. He entered the annals of military history as one of the greatest and most distinguished generals of all time. William T. Sherman was born to Charles N. Sherman and Mary Hoyt Sherman in Lancaster, Ohio, on February 8, 1820. General Sherman can trace his family

  • Abraham Lincoln's War Aims Compared to William Sherman and Walt Whitman

    733 Words  | 2 Pages

    witnessing the operations of wounded soldiers and also the horrific scenes of death and amputation. His views were very much different than those of Abraham Lincoln and though not evident, were still noticeable in his writings. Last, none other than William T. Sherman himself, a Federal Army General, disclosed letters sent between him and the Confederate General, J. B. Hood and also letters sent between him and the mayor of Atlanta, James M. Calhoun. In them, he expresses his opinions about the war which

  • William Tecumseh Sherman Outline

    566 Words  | 2 Pages

    General William Tecumseh Sherman The leader of 100,000 troops, became the most hated man in Georgia but honored in Lancaster, Ohio. William Tecumseh Sherman was known as a major architect of modern war. William Sherman was a strong military leader who changed the course of the Civil War. William Tecumseh Sherman was born in a family in Lancaster, Ohio, on February, 8, 1820, one of 11 children. When William was 9 years old, his father died suddenly. Because his mother was now widowed, she sent William

  • William Tecumseh Sherman A Good Officer

    808 Words  | 2 Pages

    a good officer should use their tactics to lead their soldiers to victory. William Tecumseh Sherman was an officer during this time as the Union was going through generals’ right and left. Was he the last choice available or did he perhaps deserve the job? Major General William Tecumseh Sherman was a good officer because he was competent in the face of battle, was respected his leaders and demanded respect from

  • Comparing the Views of Plato and Abraham Lincoln on the Civil War

    1281 Words  | 3 Pages

    War and Reconsrtuction, 2nd ed., edited by Michael Perman. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1998. Plato, The Republic. In Classics of Moral and Political Theory, 2nd ed., edited by Michael L. Morgan. Indianapolis: Hackett, 1996. Sherman, William. "General William T. Sherman Explains How the War Has Changed, September 1864," in Major Problems in the Civil War and Reconsrtuction, 2nd ed., edited by Michael Perman. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1998. The Civil War. Produced and Directed by Ken Burns

  • Ethnics of Shermans March

    1273 Words  | 3 Pages

    Your Name Teacher Name Class and Section Date Ethics of Sherman’s March General William Techumseh Sherman’s March through Georgia and South Carolina was the turning point in the American Civil War. After heavy fighting in Tennessee and Kentucky General Sherman requested permission to take a large force of men on a campaign to the Atlantic Ocean through North and South Carolina, Georgia, then turning North back through the Carolinas and Virginia. The goal of the campaign was to divide the Confederate

  • Fort McAllister

    1514 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Savannah Campaign was one of the many battles waged by Major General William Tecumseh Sherman in his total war concept to destroy and devastate the Confederacy’s support. With the destruction of the rail and commercial center at Atlanta, General Sherman set his sights on Savannah with an intent to further cripple the state and ensure Union victory. In order to accomplish this task, there was one obstacle that his forces must overcome. This obstacle was Fort McAllister, a massive earthwork whose

  • The Savannah Campaign: The Cause Of The Civil War?

    1651 Words  | 4 Pages

    civil war but one battle in particular had more importance than the others did. The Battle at Fort Macalister, a Battle led by General William Babcock Hazen ensured the success of the Savannah Campaign and led to the eventual seizure of the city itself. General William Babcock Hazen commanded the Fifteenth Corps, Army of the Tennessee , the unit that General Sherman ultimately chose to take Fort Macalister. General Hazen after graduating from West Point in 1855 at the age of 25 was posted to Indian

  • Analysis Of John Knowles 'A Separate Peace'

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    The great General William Tecumseh Sherman once stated, war is hell. His statement doesn’t only reach the minds of soldiers going into war, but it also reaches the citizens all throughout the world when their country is in war, regardless of whether they are up in the action or are safe at home or attending school. In the historical fiction literary piece, A Separate Peace written by John Knowles, we travel to the time of World War Two and experience the journey of many young men attending the Devon

  • Why The North Won The Civil War Analysis

    1274 Words  | 3 Pages

    Why the North Won the Civil War, edited by David Herbert Donald, is a short collection of six essays. Each essay argues from a different perspective as to why the Confederate States of America could not defeat the Union in the American Civil War. The factors considered for Confederate defeat include: economics, military strategy, diplomacy, ideology, and politics. In the end, the most convincing argument is given by Richard N. Current regarding economics. Henry Steele Commager’s essay “The Defeat

  • Collapse of the Confederacy from 1864-65

    1274 Words  | 3 Pages

    variety of reasons. These issues by and large involved the military along with a dire political and economic situation. The transfer of General Ulysses S. Grant, from the West, with his “aggressive” new war strategy, in addition to, Union General William T. Sherman’s "March to the Sea," and eventual capture of Atlanta, Georgia in the East, allowed the Northern military to strengthen the grip of their Anaconda Plan. The Confederate Gen. John B. Hood, pursuing his wasteful Tennessee campaign in the

  • War Rages On in Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel

    904 Words  | 2 Pages

    who dwell there. Esquivel cleverly uses the backdrop of the war to explore the individual lives and their struggle to attain the revolution's goal for themselves; independence. "War is Hell," a famous, yet simple quote from General William T. Sherman in another great civil war, is accurate in this story as Tita the youngest daughter of Mama Elena finds that her own life is hell, while living under the rule of her tyrannical mother. Though her mother keeps Tita from marrying the

  • All Quiet On The Western Front War Analysis

    721 Words  | 2 Pages

    butt his head against the wall” (Enrich ___). When an explosion finally occurs, it results in a Frenchman having “his body drop clean away” leaving “only his hands...hanging in the wire” (Enrich ___). ____________________________. As General William Sherman once said, “It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heird the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, and desolation. War is hell.” War takes not only the lives of many, but the spirit and youth of

  • Why The Confederacy Lost The Civil War: Why The Confederacy Lost The Civil War

    1142 Words  | 3 Pages

    Why the Confederacy Lost was written to exam why the Confederacy lost the Civil War, to look beyond the commonly stated argument that overwhelming numbers and resources not only promised but were the reason for Northern victory. The desire was to find and look closer at other errors made, different possible reasons that would contribute to the loss of the Confederacy. Looking to go deeper into the influences that are often overlooked, or not given their fair share of credit. Editor Gabor S. Boritt

  • The Romanticization of War

    1375 Words  | 3 Pages

    “War is Hell.” The often quoted phrase by General William Tecumseh Sherman is an appropriate objection to romanticized ideals of war. General Sherman understood that in order to be victorious, he must make war as horrible as possible for the enemy so that he may not wish to continue fighting. All too often the popular media produces works of fiction such as movies, books, and television shows that idealize war (Gabriel, 46). The Red Baron is a World War I film drama that tries to tackle this issue

  • Hughsey Childes And Minnie Whitney Summary

    565 Words  | 2 Pages

    From Hughsey Childes’ and Minnie Whitney’s different stories of the state of sharecropping and farming in the African American communities, we find things that are revealed about the Reconstruction period after the Civil War, as well as the similarities and differences between the two’s experiences. Hughsey’s oral history tells is a secondary source about a man who had been a sharecropper. His statement tells us that the sharecropper, who “couldn’t read or write”, was given very little to live on

  • Ulysses S. Grant

    886 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ulysses S Grant was an iconic figure in the Civil War and was well known for his astounding feats throughout the war.(World book Advanced) While Ulysses S. Grant is the name he is most commonly known as, his real name is Hiram Ulysses Grant and the S. stands for nothing.(Ulysses S. Grant Homepage) Ulysses graduated from West Point with high marks in Horsemanship and Mathematics, but he had poor grades in classes like French. Grant fell in love with his roommate's sister Julia Dent, but sadly he was

  • Why the North Won the American Civil War

    1271 Words  | 3 Pages

    Why the North Won the American Civil War Union officer William Tecumseh Sherman observed to a Southern friend that, "In all history, no nation of mere agriculturists ever made successful war against a nation of mechanics. . . .You are bound to fail." While Sherman's statement proved to be correct, its flaw is in its assumption of a decided victory for the North and failure to account for the long years of difficult fighting it took the Union to secure victory. Unquestionably, the war was won