"This volume presents General Sherman's own memoir of the march through Georgia, first published in 1875, with letters to his wife, never before printed in their complete form, and many contemporary drawings, photographs and maps"--Jacket.
In 1864 William Tecumseh Sherman made Civil War history with his infamous March to the Sea across Georgia. More than a century later, Jerry Ellis set out along the same route in search of the past and his southern and Cherokee heritage.
"Well researched, endlessly informed, and compulsively readable, Marching Through Georgia is everything a work of popular history ought to be." — Civil War Times Illustrated In this engrossing work of history, Lee Kennett brilliantly ...
Explores the possibilities of alternative history by changing the participants and the stakes in World War II
Six generations of his family had made war for the Domination of the Draka.
In the coming campaign, Slocum would head a larger command, and Brigadier General Alpheus S. Williams, commander of the 1st Division, would lead the corps. A Connecticut native and Michigan resident, Williams was another Mexican War ...
Excerpt from Marching Through Georgia: Pen-Pictures of Every-Day Life in General Sherman's Army, From the Beginning of the Atlanta Campaign Until the Close of the War This volume does not pretend to be a tactical history of the campaigns of ...
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Merrill , James M. , William Tecumseh Sherman , New York : Rand McNally , 1971 . Miers , Earl Schenck , The General Who Marched to Hell : William Tecumseh Sherman and His March to Fame and Infamy , New York : Knopf , 1951 .