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Sherman's march to the sea

  1. A movement of the Union army troops of General William Tecumseh Sherman from Atlanta , Georgia , to the Georgia seacoast, with the object of destroying Confederate supplies. The march began after Sherman captured, evacuated, and burned Atlanta in the fall of 1864. His men, numbering about sixty thousand, destroyed railroads, factories, cotton gins, houses, livestock, and anything else that might be useful to the South in the war.


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Notes

Northerners celebrated Sherman's march with the song “Marching through Georgia.” Southerners remembered it bitterly.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Following the nearly simultaneous Union victories of July 1863 at Vicksburg, Miss., and Gettysburg, Pa., Chattanooga tightened the noose on the Confederacy, opening the door to Sherman’s march to the sea in 1864 and the end of the Confederacy.

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In 1864, Hood, temporarily promoted to full general status, launched his Tennessee Campaign to slow General William T. Sherman’s March to the Sea.

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The regiment fought in major battles such as the Battle of Shiloh, the Siege of Vicksburg, the Siege of Atlanta and Sherman’s March to the Sea, and during its three years in service, the regiment lost 524 men, including 345 who died in battle and/or died of wounds from battle and 179 who died of disease.

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That includes Puerto Rico, where the destruction caused by Hurricane Maria in 2017 made Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman’s March to the Sea in 1864 look like an ice cream run.

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Mattis studied Sherman’s March to the Sea at the end of the Civil War, looking for insight on how “to always keep enemies on the horns of a dilemma, left or right, front or back.”

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