Gen. William T. Sherman‘s infamous “March to the Sea” is covered almost antiseptically in American history texts. Yet, ...
T. Sherman Collection,” which goes live at 9 a.m. Tuesday, features personal effects of Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman ranging from his wartime sword and uniform rank insignia to a family Bible ...
U.S. Army Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman's 1864 "March to the Sea" was not a "total war" campaign against the Confederacy as ...
The general’s campaign through the South is known for its brutality against civilians. For the enslaved who followed his army ...
Grant and his wife, Julia Grant, at Grant's Tomb in New York City. On December 21, 1864, Union Gen. William T. Sherman completed his Civil War "march to the sea" across the South and arrived in ...
Campaign "Old Shady" campaigned with and was the cook for Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman. Sherman ... and the Grand Forks City Band. "He wasn't a wealthy man and he was an African American man ...
Correspondence of the New-York Times. TimesMachine is an exclusive benefit for home delivery and digital subscribers. About the Archive This is a digitized version of an article from The Times’s ...
Fought over three days in March 1865, the Battle of Bentonville in Johnston County, North Carolina, is considered the last ...
This book details Gen. William T. Sherman’s 1864 march from Atlanta to Savannah, Georgia, highlighting its impact on the Civil War and the self-emancipation of enslaved people who joined his army.
In 1881, Gen. William T. Sherman established the School of Application for Cavalry and Infantry. That school evolved into the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College which is still at Fort ...