A site
by Brenda Pierce - unless otherwise noted items transcribed here by same.
TRAIL OF FURY
Disaster!
Sherman's March to the Sea
November-December, 1864
Sherman Cut Brutal Swath From Atlanta to the Atlantic
Editor's Note: While Sherman's historic March to the Sea was not an act of
God, like flood or storm, it was easily the worst disaster ever suffered by
Georgia. In future years, Sherman would become a notorious legend in
Southerners' minds and his march a benchmark for natural calamities. Beginning
today, The Journal reviews the infamous March to the Sea and 16 other calamities
which might be called "the worst since Sherman". Monday's
installment details the 1898 hurricane, the last in a series of savage storms
that claimed thousands of lives along the Georgia-South Carolina coast.
Editor: Mike Christensen
On a late December day in 1864, a yound indiana soldier sat in camp outside
Savannah and wrote to his family.
"We have covered a strip 60 miles wide on our trip here," Pvt. Ted
Upson scribbled, "and although there may be a few houses left, there are
mighty few fences and from what I saw of it, I don't think it would be a good
place for a poor man to start a farm or a factory".
Upson was one of 62,000 Union solders who had followed Maj. Gen. William
Tecumseh Sherman from Atlanta to the Atlantic. They left a 10 million acre
wasteland of smoldering ruins, barren fields, mangled railroads and destitute
people.
They were the most destructive force to visit Georgia before or since. The
March to the Sea would become the yardstick for all future disasters.
Unlike whirling hurricanes or the erratic thunder of tornadoes, the march was
carefully planned to cripple Georgia, a calculated roundhouse blow to the rich
breadbasket of the Confederacy.
:This may seem a hard species of warfare," Sherman wrote, "but it
brings the sad realities of war home to those who have directly or indirectly
instrumental in involving us in its attendant calamities.
Sherman, with his seamed, rugged face and ever-present cigar, had been leading
Union troops and sending men to their deaths since the first battle of Manassas
in July 1861.
The battles which marked his path from Chattanooga to Atlanta had cost Sherman
tens of thousands of casualties. After nearly 3 years of war, the Union
Soldiers who marched behind "Uncle Billy" into Atlanta in early
September had seen more misery and brutality than most men could stand in a
lifetime.
"Although it is the Sabbath day, we do not realize it. No church bell
resounds through the air," wrote Captain John Carr of the 100th Indiana
Infantry from his camp outside Atlanta. "In this army, we have no
sabbath day."
Carr's unit was part of the 15th Corps, Sherman's old command and one of the
four assigned to the upcoming march across Georgia. His remaining troops
had been shipped back to Tennessee. Embarking on uncharted waters, Sherman
wanted only his toughest, most seasoned men with him.
From the vantage point of today, the March to the Sea seems like an easy country
stroll, for that is almost how it turned out. But Sherman himself was far
from sure he would ever see Savannah.
For several weeks he was deep in enemy territory, cut off from orders,
information or reinforcement. Newspapers at home and abroad were quick to
point out unsettling precedents for his march, such as Napoleon's vain trek into
Russia. Once he leveled the industrial and railroad center of Atlanta, Sherman
planned to divide his army into two
This article written after 1973 - unknown date -
Transcribed by Brenda Pierce
Continued --
In 36 days from Atlanta to Savannah,Maj. General William T. Sherman and his
62,204 Union troups staged a catastrophe unequaled in Georgia history.
Sherman himself estimated that his month long trip to the coast cost Georgia
$100 million dollars. Of that, 80 percent was pure destruction.
The Union army lost 103 of its own officers and men and sufered 428 wounded and
278 missing. Bit it killed a substantially larger number of Confederate
soldiers and captaured 1,338 of them.
Marching thru 40 of the state's richest counties, the Union soldiers smashed
Georgia's industrial strength and demolished her east-west railroad network.
It began November 9 when Sherman organized his forces into two wings. It
ended Dec 23 after Sherman telegraphed President Lincoln - "I beg to
present to you as a Christmas gift the city of Savannah --