The Most Unlikely Soldiers In The US Civil War

The Most Unlikely Soldiers In The US Civil War

Khalid Elhassan - December 6, 2023

The Most Unlikely Soldiers In The US Civil War
Generals Sherman and Grant, with President Lincoln. Flickr

Making Georgia Howl

By the autumn of 1864, the Civil War had dragged on for more than three bloody years, with a horrendous and steadily mounting toll in blood and treasure. Both the Union Army’s commander, Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant, and his friend General William T. Sherman, realized that the conflict could only end if the Confederacy lost its ability to wage war. So Sherman planned an operation comparable to modern scorched earth campaigns. He and his army would strike out from Atlanta and march along a broad front across the heart of Georgia.

They would live off the land, and destroy all infrastructure that was useful to the Confederate war effort. 62,000 Bluecoats marched out of Atlanta, which they left a burnt ruin. They divided into two columns, abandoned their supply lines, and plunged into the Peach State. As Sherman put it, he wanted to “make Georgia howl“, and howl it did. Union forces advanced along a sixty mile front, wrecked military targets along the way, destroyed industry and infrastructure, lived off the land, and – against Sherman’s orders – looted civilian property. The march conclusively demonstrated that the Confederacy was a hollow shell, unable to protect its heartland or citizens.

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