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Sherman’s successful completion of the march further strengthened his great friendship with Ulysses S. Grant. Grant had expended much political capital with President Lincoln in helping to convince the chief executive to approve the operation at a time when some of the lieutenant general’s senior staff opposed it. Even though the public record made clear that it initially took Grant a while to become comfortable with the March to the Sea concept, after the war he would loyally insist that he had been “in favor of Sherman’s plan from the time it was first submitted to me.”

Sherman actually passed two tests in Grant’s way of measuring things. The first was his demonstration of professional competence in managing the campaign. The second was the public manner in which he resisted the kinds of boosters who would have had him competing with his friend’s accomplishments. When Sherman’s senator-brother John reported some talk about promoting him to the same rank as Grant, the General would hear none of it. “I will accept no commission that would tend to create a rivalry with Grant,” he declared. “I want him to hold what he has earned and got. I have all the rank I want.” “How few there are who when rising to popular favor as he now is would stop to say a word in defense of the only one between himself and the highest in command,” Grant confided to his wife at this time. “I am glad to say that I appreciated Sherman from the first feeling him to be what he has proven to the world he is.”

While honest in his respect and affection for what he called “the singular friendship of General Grant,” Sherman also noted that the lieutenant general was “almost childlike in his love for me.”

 

Sherman’s generalship for the first portion of the march (Atlanta to Milledgeville) showed him at his thoughtful, self-confident best. Both wings moved under instructions drafted beforehand, with neither encountering anything to cause them to alter the program. Kilpatrick’s mounted command operated with the Right Wing, where it provided invaluable service when Howard’s columns passed closest to Macon. Wheeler’s failure to interdict the Federal procession to any serious
degree owed as much to the dispersion of his forces (thanks to conflicting priorities imposed on him by the Confederate leadership) as it did to the effectiveness of Kilpatrick’s screen. Had the Rebel leaders clustered in Macon used their combined militia-infantry and cavalry with a coherent and targeted plan, Sherman’s dispositions might have proven inadequate to shrug off the blows, but as events played out, the disorganized enemy was never able to do anything more than annoy isolated Federal units.

Once at Milledgeville, Sherman rapidly assessed the condition of his forces as well as the Confederate response, then made adjustments. He clearly expected much more trouble coming out of Augusta than he had registered from Macon. (From contemporary communications, the intensity of the fighting at Griswoldville was very much underreported at the time.) Sherman’s willingness to switch Kilpatrick’s command from the Right Wing to the Left shows the flexibility the General applied to his thinking. While he afterward downplayed any danger from Confederate troops gathered in Augusta, his decision to closely support Kilpatrick’s forays with infantry suggests that he viewed the threat seriously.

The cavalry commander’s inflated claims of success at Waynesboro were accepted without question by army headquarters, and based on that assessment of damage, Sherman left his vulnerable logistical tail open to attack by spreading Kilpatrick’s men thin across the entire rear of the Left Wing. Once again, what might have proven to be a fruitful opening for enemy thrusts coming out of Augusta became no more than a mild bother as Braxton Bragg steadfastly refused to release any infantry from the earthworks protecting his temporary charge. Bragg’s tunnel vision was compounded by Hardee’s decision (firmly seconded by Beauregard) to transfer most cavalry operations to South Carolina, leaving just a few mounted units to harry the Federal logistical tail. It was another opportunity squandered.

(Ironically, Sherman scored a significant success against a target not even on his hit list. On November 21, workers began dismantling the irreplaceable machinery at the Confederate Powder Works in Augusta for transportation out of danger. For the next month no gunpowder was produced there. Everything was returned in early December so that the mill complex was back in business by the end of the year. Still,
for thirty critical days, the South’s largest gunpowder maker was virtually shuttered. Production in November 1864 topped 101,000 pounds; that for December was little more than 13,600 pounds.)

Sherman’s equanimity was showing cracks by the time he confronted Savannah’s formidable defenses. Fort McAllister was assaulted without any thought given to less costly alternatives. Luck was again riding with Sherman as the Rebel defenses proved more theoretical than actual. Smart, potentially murderous preparations had been made, but here Union courage and determination overwhelmed any positional advantages enjoyed by the Rebels.

The completely unexpected news that Grant wanted him to break off operations short of finishing the job further upset Sherman’s equilibrium. His thinking on the capture of Savannah veered all across the spectrum. At first he was prepared to tighten his grip in order to starve the garrison into submission. Then, when Grant’s bombshell message was received, he considered a quick assault heedless of the casualties. Sherman finally settled on a third option—a direct assault combined with a strong move against Hardee’s sole link with Charleston, before the Confederate officer saved him the trouble.

Throughout the march, Sherman demonstrated the ethical inconsistency of a person whose strong general principles had to personally confront individuals affected by those policies. His sparing of cotton holdings in Milledgeville, and the varying degree of sympathy he showed to families he encountered along the way, speak to a moral drift that doesn’t match the traditional image of stone-faced devastator. Except on those cases where his acutely personal standard of right and wrong was violated, Sherman never sanctioned destruction outside the limits he had established. Yet he had accepted from the outset that damage would occur that he could not control. Much to the discomfort of those near him who expected a rigid consistency, Sherman embraced the seeming contradictions, assuaging his conscience by blaming southerners for their complicity and deeming himself powerless in the random destructiveness of the storm he had unleashed.

Most of these rough spots were progressively forgotten by Sherman as he later wrote and talked about the March to the Sea. As well written as they are, his
Memoirs
grant him a degree of insight and calm reasoning that is not always borne out by more contemporary correspondence and actions. Sherman eventually distilled his recollections
into a summary overview that trimmed off the dross, leaving only hard certainties. His thoughts were clearly expressed in a speech he gave at a reunion of the Army of the Tennessee (Howard’s wing) that took place in Des Moines, Iowa, on September 30, 1875. On that occasion he delivered what in many ways were his valedictory thoughts on the campaign that would forever define him and set his place in history.

The “March to the Sea,” as it is called, is a kind of an epoch in the history of the country, and occupies a prominent place in our memories. But this march began early. When you moved from Vicksburg to [Fort] Donelson, in a very early period of the war, you were moving to the sea…. And so the grand march went on till we found ourselves in Atlanta, in possession of a town. Now, up to that time it had been the policy of all to sow peace and prosperity wherever our armies trod. Indeed, we were playing into the hands of our enemies. We made up the roads after us…. We had tried kindness, but it seemed to be entirely lost. The stern rule of war must be applied to those who deserved the switch, and we did it. We had gone on stage line, on wagon line, and on railroad. We had hundreds of miles of roads to defend, consuming and absorbing our own strength, and it became necessary to stop that right there…. It must have entered into the minds of many that this was the time when something could be done. I therefore say that I determined to send back enough of that army which was then at my command to enable Gen. Thomas to defeat Hood and let Tennessee live, while the rest of us should go on to crush in that body of our enemies which was there before us between the two great conquering armies of the Union…. Now, gentlemen, that March to the Sea, so beautiful and poetical, was an example for armies. We went to the sea with some opposition, it is true, but well provided for, suffering but little; but in so doing we transgressed the rules of war that armies should not be more than 100 miles from their head-quarters…. But we had a journey of 300 miles to take, and we determined to make it and to subsist on our friends and enemies while making it. Now, so far as this is concerned, it is a subject rather of mirth than of serious moment. Georgia was at that time regarded, not only here but all over the world, as the arch stone of the South. That once destroyed, and the Southern Confederacy dwindled down to the little space between the Savannah River and
Richmond. The consequences of this march were felt all over the country. All acknowledged that when Savannah should be taken the road to Richmond was clear, and that the war was at an end. And I appeal to those who remained at home if they did not feel that victory was near—if their hearts did not throb more warmly, and if their whole nature was not stirred to its very depths when they heard that the Army had reached Savannah? It was felt that the solution of this great problem of our civil war was assured, and that the people of the United States could not only vindicate their laws but could punish the traitors. The thoughts arising here overflow—spread like the waves of the sea, circling wider and wider till they inclose the whole field of our toils. Certain it is that this march was great in its conception and in its execution grand—that the blow was struck at the right moment and in the right direction.

 

MILITARY DIVISION OF THE MISSISSIPPI

 

Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman, commanding

 

ARMY HEADQUARTERS

 

Lieut. Col. Charles Ewing, inspector general

 

Capt. Lewis M. Dayton, adjutant general

 

Capt. Orlando M. Poe, chief of engineers

 

Capt. Thomas G. Baylor, chief ordnance officer

 

Brevet Brig. Gen. Langdon C. Easton, chief quartermaster

 

Col. Amos Beckwith, chief commissary

 

Dr. John Moore, chief medical director

 

Maj. J. C. McCoy, aide-de-camp

 

Maj. Henry Hitchcock, aide-de-camp

 

Capt. Joseph C. Audenried, aide-de-camp

 

Capt. George W. Nichols, aide

 

ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE (RIGHT WING)

 

Maj. Gen. Oliver O. Howard

 

PONTONIERS

 

1st Missouri Engineers

 

Lieut. Col. William Tweeddale

 

FIFTEENTH ARMY CORPS
[15,894]

 

Maj. Gen. Peter J. Osterhaus

 

FIRST DIVISION

 

Brig. Gen. Charles R. Woods

 

FIRST BRIGADE

 

Col. Milo Smith

 

12th Indiana

Maj. Elbert D. Baldwin

26th Iowa

Maj. John Lubbers

27th Missouri

Col. Thomas Curly

29th Missouri

Lieut. Col. Joseph S. Gage

31st/32nd Missouri Battalion

Maj. Abraham J. Seay

76th Ohio

Col. William B. Woods

 

SECOND BRIGADE

 

Brig. Gen. Charles C. Walcutt (w)

Col. James S. Martin

 

26th Illinois

Capt. George H. Reed

40th Illinois

Lieut. Col. Hiram W. Hall

103rd Illinois

Maj. Asias Willson

97th Indiana

Col. Robert F. Catterson

Capt. George Elliott

100th Indiana

Maj. Ruel M. Johnson

6th Iowa

Maj. William H. Clune

46th Ohio

Lieut. Col. Isaac N. Alexander

 

THIRD BRIGADE

 

Col. James A. Williamson

 

4th Iowa

Lieut. Col. Samuel D. Nichols

9th Iowa

Capt. Paul McSweeney

25th Iowa

Col. George A. Stone

30th Iowa

Lieut. Col. Aurelius Roberts

31st Iowa

Lieut. Col. Jeremiah W. Jenkins

 

SECOND DIVISION

 

Brig. Gen. William B. Hazen

 

FIRST BRIGADE

 

Col. Theodore Jones

 

55th Illinois

Capt. Charles A. Andress

116th Illinois

Lieut. Col. John E. Maddux

127th Illinois

Capt. Charles Schryver

6th Missouri

Lieut. Col. Delos van Deusen

8th Missouri

Capt. John W. White

30th Ohio

Capt. Emory W. Muenscher

57th Ohio

Maj. John McClure

 

SECOND BRIGADE

 

Col. Wells S. Jones (w)

Col. James S. Martin

 

111th Illinois

Col. James S. Martin

Maj. William M. Mabry

83rd Indiana

Lieut. Col. George H. Scott

37th Ohio

Lieut. Col. Louis von Blessingh

47th Ohio

Col. Augustus C. Parry

53rd Ohio

Capt. David H. Lasley

54th Ohio

Lieut. Col. Israel T. Moore

 

THIRD BRIGADE

 

Col. John M. Oliver

 

48th Illinois

Maj. Edward Adams

90th Illinois

Lieut. Col. Owen Stuart

99th Indiana

Lieut. Col. John M. Berkey

15th Michigan

Lieut. Col. Frederick S. Hutchinson

70th Ohio

Lieut. Col. Henry L. Philips

 

THIRD DIVISION

 

Brig. Gen. John E. Smith

 

FIRST BRIGADE

 

Col. Joseph B. McCown

 

63rd Illinois

Lieut. Col. James Isaminger

93rd Illinois

Lieut. Col. Nicholas C. Buswell

48th Indiana

Lieut. Col. Edward J. Wood

59th Indiana

Lieut. Col. Jefferson K. Scott

4th Minnesota

Col. John E. Tourtellotte

 

SECOND BRIGADE

 

Bvt. Brig. Gen. Green. B. Raum

 

56th Illinois

Capt. James P. Files

10th Iowa

Lieut. Col. Paris P. Henderson

10th/26th Missouri

Col. Benjamin D. Dean

80th Ohio

Lieut. Col. Pren Metham

 

FOURTH DIVISION

 

Brig. Gen. John M. Corse

 

FIRST BRIGADE

 

Brig. Gen. Elliott W. Rice

 

52nd Illinois

Maj. Wesley Boyd

Lieut. Col. Jerome D. Davis

66th Indiana

Lieut. Col. Roger Martin

2nd Iowa

Lieut. Col. Noel B. Howard

7th Iowa

Lieut. Col. James C. Parrott

 

SECOND BRIGADE

 

Col. Robert N. Adams

 

12th Illinois

Lieut. Col. Henry van Sellar

66th Illinois

Lieut. Col. Andrew K. Campbell

81st Ohio

Maj. William C. Henry

 

THIRD BRIGADE

 

Lieut. Col. Frederick J. Hurlbut

 

7th Illinois

Lieut. Col. Hector Perrin

50th Illinois

Capt. Henry Horn

57th Illinois

Capt. Frederick A. Battey

39th Iowa

Maj. Joseph M. Griffiths

 

ARTILLERY BRIGADE

 

Maj. Charles J. Stolbrand

 

1st Illinois Light Artillery: Battery H Capt. Francis De Gress

1st Michigan Light Artillery: Battery B Capt. Albert F. R. Arndt (w)

1st Missouri Light Artillery: Battery H Lieut. John F. Brunner

Wisconsin Light Artillery: 12th Capt. William Zickerick

 

SEVENTEENTH ARMY CORPS
[11,732]

 

Maj. Gen. Frank P. Blair Jr.

 

FIRST DIVISION

 

Maj. Gen. Joseph A. Mower

 

FIRST BRIGADE

 

Brig. Gen. John W. Fuller

 

64th Illinois

Capt. Joseph S. Reynolds

18th Missouri

Lieut. Col. Charles S. Sheldon

27th Ohio

Capt. James Morgan

39th Ohio

Capt. Daniel Weber

 

SECOND BRIGADE

 

Brig. Gen. John W. Sprague

 

35th New Jersey

Col. John J. Cladek

43rd Ohio

Col. Wager Swayne

63rd Ohio

Maj. John W. Fouts

25th Wisconsin

Lieut. Col. Jeremiah M. Rusk

 

THIRD BRIGADE

 

Col. John Tillson

 

10th Illinois

Lieut. Col. McLain F. Wood

25th Indiana

Maj. James S. Wright

32nd Wisconsin

Col. Charles H. De Groat

 

THIRD DIVISION

 

Brig. Gen. Mortimer D. Leggett

 

FIRST BRIGADE

 

Brig. Gen. Manning F. Force

 

30th Illinois

Lieut. Col. William C. Rhoads

31st Illinois

Lieut. Col. Robert N. Pearson

45th Illinois

Maj. John O. Duer

12th Wisconsin

Lieut. Col. James K. Proudfit

16th Wisconsin

Maj. William F. Dawes

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