<h2><SPAN name="XXIX" id="XXIX"></SPAN>XXIX</h2>
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<p><i>Sherman's Meridian Expedition—Capture of
Atlanta—Hood Supersedes Johnston—Hood's Invasion of
Tennessee—Franklin and Nashville—Sherman's March to the
Sea—Capture of Savannah—Sherman to
Lincoln—Lincoln to Sherman—Sherman's March through the
Carolinas—The Burning of Charleston and
Columbia—Arrival at Goldsboro—Junction with
Schofield—Visit to Grant</i></p>
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<p>While Grant was making his marches, fighting his battles, and
carrying on his siege operations in Virginia, Sherman in the West
was performing the task assigned to him by his chief, to pursue,
destroy, or capture the principal western Confederate army, now
commanded by General Johnston. The forces which under Bragg had
been defeated in the previous autumn at Lookout Mountain and
Missionary Ridge, had halted as soon as pursuit ceased, and
remained in winter quarters at and about Dalton, only twenty-eight
or thirty miles on the railroad southeast of Chattanooga where
their new commander, Johnston, had, in the spring of 1864, about
sixty-eight thousand men with which to oppose the Union
advance.</p>
<p>A few preliminary campaigns and expeditions in the West need not
here be detailed, as they were not decisive. One, however, led by
Sherman himself from Vicksburg to Meridian, must be mentioned,
since, during the month of February, it destroyed about one hundred
miles of the several railroads centering at the latter place, and
rendered the whole railroad system <SPAN name="page406" id="page406"></SPAN>of Mississippi practically
useless to the Confederates, thus contributing essentially to the
success of his future operations.</p>
<p>Sherman prepared himself by uniting at Chattanooga the best
material of the three Union armies, that of the Cumberland, that of
the Tennessee, and that of the Ohio, forming a force of nearly one
hundred thousand men with two hundred and fifty-four guns. They
were seasoned veterans, whom three years of campaigning had taught
how to endure every privation, and avail themselves of every
resource. They were provided with every essential supply, but
carried with them not a pound of useless baggage or impedimenta
that could retard the rapidity of their movements.</p>
<p>Sherman had received no specific instructions from Grant, except
to fight the enemy and damage the war resources of the South; but
the situation before him clearly indicated the city of Atlanta,
Georgia, as his first objective, and as his necessary route, the
railroad leading thither from Chattanooga. It was obviously a
difficult line of approach, for it traversed a belt of the
Alleghanies forty miles in width, and in addition to the natural
obstacles they presented, the Confederate commander, anticipating
his movement, had prepared elaborate defensive works at the several
most available points.</p>
<p>As agreed upon with Grant, Sherman began his march on May 5,
1864, the day following that on which Grant entered upon his
Wilderness campaign in Virginia. These pages do not afford space to
describe his progress. It is enough to say that with his double
numbers he pursued the policy of making strong demonstrations in
front, with effective flank movements to threaten the railroad in
the Confederate rear, by which means he forced back the enemy
successively <SPAN name="page407" id="page407"></SPAN>from point to point, until by the middle
of July he was in the vicinity of Atlanta, having during his
advance made only one serious front attack, in which he met a
costly repulse. His progress was by no means one of mere
strategical manoeuver. Sherman says that during the month of May,
across nearly one hundred miles of as difficult country as was ever
fought over by civilized armies, the fighting was continuous,
almost daily, among trees and bushes, on ground where one could
rarely see one hundred yards ahead.</p>
<p>However skilful and meritorious may have been the retreat into
which Johnston had been forced, it was so unwelcome to the Richmond
authorities, and damaging to the Confederate cause, that about the
middle of July, Jefferson Davis relieved him, and appointed one of
his corps commanders, General J.B. Hood, in his place; whose
personal qualities and free criticism of his superior led them to
expect a change from a defensive to an aggressive campaign.
Responding to this expectation, Hood almost immediately took the
offensive, and made vigorous attacks on the Union positions, but
met disastrous repulse, and found himself fully occupied in
guarding the defenses of Atlanta. For some weeks each army tried
ineffectual methods to seize the other's railroad communications.
But toward the end of August, Sherman's flank movements gained such
a hold of the Macon railroad at Jonesboro, twenty-five miles south
of Atlanta, as to endanger Hood's security; and when, in addition,
a detachment sent to dislodge Sherman was defeated, Hood had no
alternative but to order an evacuation. On September 3, Sherman
telegraphed to Washington:</p>
<p>"Atlanta is ours, and fairly won.... Since May 5 we have been in
one constant battle or skirmish, and need rest."<SPAN name="page408" id="page408"></SPAN></p>
<p>The fall of Atlanta was a heavy blow to the Confederates. They
had, during the war, transformed it into a city of mills,
foundries, and workshops, from which they drew supplies,
ammunition, and equipments, and upon which they depended largely
for the manufacture and repair of arms. But perhaps even more
important than the military damage to the South resulting from its
capture, was its effect upon Northern politics. Until then the
presidential campaign in progress throughout the free States was
thought by many to involve fluctuating chances under the heavy
losses and apparently slow progress of both eastern and western
armies. But the capture of Atlanta instantly infused new zeal and
confidence among the Union voters, and from that time onward, the
reëlection of Mr. Lincoln was placed beyond reasonable
doubt.</p>
<p>Sherman personally entered the city on September 8, and took
prompt measures to turn it into a purely military post. He occupied
only the inner line of its formidable defenses, but so strengthened
them as to make the place practically impregnable. He proceeded at
once to remove all its non-combatant inhabitants with their
effects, arranging a truce with Hood under which he furnished
transportation to the south for all those whose sympathies were
with the Confederate cause, and sent to the north those who
preferred that destination. Hood raised a great outcry against what
he called such barbarity and cruelty, but Sherman replied that war
is war, and if the rebel families wanted peace they and their
relatives must stop fighting.</p>
<p>"God will judge us in due time, and he will pronounce whether it
be more humane to fight with a town full of women, and the families
of a brave people at our back, or to remove them in time to places
of safety among their own friends and people."<SPAN name="page409" id="page409"></SPAN></p>
<p>Up to his occupation of Atlanta, Sherman's further plans had
neither been arranged by Grant nor determined by himself, and for a
while remained somewhat undecided. For the time being, he was
perfectly secure in the new stronghold he had captured and
completed. But his supplies depended upon a line of about one
hundred and twenty miles of railroad from Atlanta to Chattanooga,
and very near one hundred and fifty miles more from Chattanooga to
Nashville. Hood, held at bay at Lovejoy's Station, was not strong
enough to venture a direct attack or undertake a siege, but chose
the more feasible policy of operating systematically against
Sherman's long line of communications. In the course of some weeks
both sides grew weary of the mere waste of time and military
strength consumed in attacking and defending railroad stations, and
interrupting and reëstablishing the regularities of provision
trains. Toward the end of September, Jefferson Davis visited Hood,
and in rearranging some army assignments, united Hood's and an
adjoining Confederate department under the command of Beauregard;
partly with a view to adding the counsels of the latter to the
always energetic and bold, but sometimes rash, military judgment of
Hood.</p>
<p>Between these two Hood's eccentric and futile operations against
Sherman's communications were gradually shaded off into a plan for
a Confederate invasion of Tennessee. Sherman, on his part, finally
matured his judgment that instead of losing a thousand men a month
merely defending the railroad, without other advantage, he would
divide his army, send back a portion of it under the command of
General Thomas to defend the State of Tennessee against the
impending invasion; and, abandoning the whole line of railroad from
Chattanooga to Atlanta, and cutting entirely loose <SPAN name="page410" id="page410"></SPAN>from his
base of supplies, march with the remainder to the sea; living upon
the country, and "making the interior of Georgia feel the weight of
war." Grant did not immediately fall in with Sherman's suggestion;
and Sherman prudently waited until the Confederate plan of invading
Tennessee became further developed. It turned out as he hoped and
expected. Having gradually ceased his raids upon the railroad,
Hood, by the end of October, moved westward to Tuscumbia on the
Tennessee River, where he gathered an army of about thirty-five
thousand, to which a cavalry force under Forrest of ten thousand
more was soon added.</p>
<p>Under Beauregard's orders to assume the offensive, he began a
rapid march northward, and for a time with a promise of cutting off
some advanced Union detachments. We need not follow the fortunes of
this campaign further than to state that the Confederate invasion
of Tennessee ended in disastrous failure. It was severely checked
at the battle of Franklin on November 30; and when, in spite of
this reverse, Hood pushed forward and set his army down before
Nashville as if for attack or siege, the Union army, concentrated
and reinforced to about fifty-five thousand, was ready. A severe
storm of rain and sleet held the confronting armies in forced
immobility for a week; but on the morning of December 15, 1864,
General Thomas moved forward to an attack in which on that and the
following day he inflicted so terrible a defeat upon his adversary,
that the Confederate army not only retreated in rout and panic, but
soon literally went to pieces in disorganization, and disappeared
as a military entity from the western conflict.</p>
<p>Long before this, Sherman had started on his famous march to the
sea. His explanations to Grant were so convincing, that the
general-in-chief, on November 2, <SPAN name="page411" id="page411"></SPAN>telegraphed him: "Go on as
you propose." In anticipation of this permission, he had been
preparing himself ever since Hood left him a clear path by starting
westward on his campaign of invasion. From Atlanta, he sent back
his sick and wounded and surplus stores to Chattanooga, withdrew
the garrisons, burned the bridges, broke up the railroad, and
destroyed the mills, foundries, shops and public buildings in
Atlanta. With sixty thousand of his best soldiers, and sixty-five
guns, he started on November 15 on his march of three hundred miles
to the Atlantic. They carried with them twenty days' supplies of
provisions, five days' supply of forage, and two hundred rounds of
ammunition, of which each man carried forty rounds.</p>
<p>With perfect confidence in their leader, with perfect trust in
each others' valor, endurance and good comradeship, in the fine
weather of the Southern autumn, and singing the inspiring melody of
"John Brown's Body," Sherman's army began its "marching through
Georgia" as gaily as if it were starting on a holiday. And, indeed,
it may almost be said such was their experience in comparison with
the hardships of war which many of these veterans had seen in their
varied campaigning. They marched as nearly as might be in four
parallel columns abreast, making an average of about fifteen miles
a day. Kilpatrick's admirable cavalry kept their front and flanks
free from the improvised militia and irregular troopers of the
enemy. Carefully organized foraging parties brought in their daily
supply of miscellaneous provisions—corn, meat, poultry, and
sweet potatoes, of which the season had yielded an abundant harvest
along their route.</p>
<p>The Confederate authorities issued excited proclamations and
orders, calling on the people to "fly to arms," and to "assail the
invader in front, flank, and <SPAN name="page412" id="page412"></SPAN>rear, by night and by day."
But no rising occurred that in any way checked the constant
progress of the march. The Southern whites were, of course, silent
and sullen, but the negroes received the Yankees with
demonstrations of welcome and good will, and in spite of Sherman's
efforts, followed in such numbers as to embarrass his progress. As
he proceeded, he destroyed the railroads by filling up cuts,
burning ties, heating the rails red hot and twisting them around
trees and into irreparable spirals. Threatening the principal
cities to the right and left, he marched skilfully between and past
them.</p>
<p>He reached the outer defenses of Savannah on December 10, easily
driving before him about ten thousand of the enemy. On December 13,
he stormed Fort McAllister, and communicated with the Union fleet
through Ossabaw Sound, reporting to Washington that his march had
been most agreeable, that he had not lost a wagon on the trip, that
he had utterly destroyed over two hundred miles of rails, and
consumed stores and provisions that were essential to Lee's and
Hood's armies. With pardonable exultation General Sherman
telegraphed to President Lincoln on December 22:</p>
<p>"I beg to present to you as a Christmas gift the city of
Savannah, with one hundred and fifty heavy guns and plenty of
ammunition. Also about twenty-five thousand bales of cotton."</p>
<p>He had reason to be gratified with the warm acknowledgment which
President Lincoln wrote him in the following letter:</p>
<p>"MY DEAR GENERAL SHERMAN: Many, many thanks for your Christmas
gift, the capture of Savannah. When you were about leaving Atlanta
for the Atlantic coast I was anxious, if not fearful; but feeling
<SPAN name="page413" id="page413"></SPAN> that you were the better judge, and
remembering that 'nothing risked, nothing gained,' I did not
interfere. Now, the undertaking being a success, the honor is all
yours, for I believe none of us went farther than to acquiesce. And
taking the work of General Thomas into the count, as it should be
taken, it is, indeed, a great success. Not only does it afford the
obvious and immediate military advantages, but in showing to the
world that your army could be divided, putting the stronger part to
an important new service, and yet leaving enough to vanquish the
old opposing force of the whole—Hood's army—it brings
those who sat in darkness to see a great light. But what next? I
suppose it will be safe if I leave General Grant and yourself to
decide. Please make my grateful acknowledgments to your whole army,
officers and men."</p>
<p>It was again General Sherman who planned and decided the next
step of the campaign. Grant sent him orders to fortify a strong
post, leave his artillery and cavalry, and bring his infantry by
sea to unite with the Army of the Potomac before Petersburg.
Greatly to Sherman's satisfaction, this order was soon revoked, and
he was informed that Grant wished "the whole matter of your future
actions should be left entirely to your own discretion." In
Sherman's mind, the next steps to be taken were "as clear as
daylight." The progress of the war in the West could now be
described step by step, and its condition and probable course be
estimated with sound judgment. The opening of the Mississippi River
in the previous year had cut off from the rebellion the vast
resources west of the great river. Sherman's Meridian campaign in
February had rendered useless the railroads of the State of
Mississippi. The capture of Atlanta and the march to the sea had
ruined the railroads of Georgia, cutting off another <SPAN name="page414" id="page414"></SPAN>huge
slice of Confederate resources. The battles of Franklin and
Nashville had practically annihilated the principal Confederate
army in the West. Sherman now proposed to Grant that he would
subject the two Carolinas to the same process, by marching his army
through the heart of them from Savannah to Raleigh.</p>
<p>"The game is then up with Lee," he confidently added, "unless he
comes out of Richmond, avoids you, and fights me, in which case I
should reckon on your being on his heels.... If you feel confident
that you can whip Lee outside of his intrenchments, I feel equally
confident that I can handle him in the open country."</p>
<p>Grant promptly adopted the plan, and by formal orders directed
Sherman to execute it. Several minor western expeditions were
organized to contribute to its success. The Union fleet on the
coast was held in readiness to coöperate as far as possible
with Sherman's advance, and to afford him a new base of supply, if,
at some suitable point he should desire to establish communications
with it. When, in the middle of January, 1865, a naval expedition
captured Fort Fisher at the mouth of Cape Fear River, an army corps
under General Schofield was brought east from Thomas's Army of the
Tennessee, and sent by sea to the North Carolina coast to penetrate
into the interior and form a junction with Sherman when he should
arrive.</p>
<p>Having had five weeks for rest and preparation, Sherman began
the third stage of his campaign on February 1, with a total of
sixty thousand men, provisions for twenty days, forage for seven,
and a full supply of ammunition for a great battle. This new
undertaking proved a task of much greater difficulty and severer
hardship than his march to the sea. Instead of the genial autumn
weather, the army had now to face <SPAN name="page415" id="page415"></SPAN>the wintry storms that blew
in from the neighboring coast. Instead of the dry Georgia uplands,
his route lay across a low sandy country cut by rivers with
branches at right angles to his line of march, and bordered by
broad and miry swamps. But this was an extraordinary army, which
faced exposure, labor and peril with a determination akin to
contempt. Here were swamps and water-courses to be waded waist
deep; endless miles of corduroy road to be laid and relaid as
course after course sank into the mud under the heavy army wagons;
frequent head-water channels of rivers to be bridged; the lines of
railroad along their route to be torn up and rendered incapable of
repair; food to be gathered by foraging; keeping up, meanwhile a
daily average of ten or twelve miles of marching. Under such
conditions, Sherman's army made a mid-winter march of four hundred
and twenty-five miles in fifty days, crossing five navigable
rivers, occupying three important cities, and rendering the whole
railroad system of South Carolina useless to the enemy.</p>
<p>The ten to fifteen thousand Confederates with which General
Hardee had evacuated Savannah and retreated to Charleston could, of
course, oppose no serious opposition to Sherman's march. On the
contrary, when Sherman reached Columbia, the capital of South
Carolina, on February 16, Hardee evacuated Charleston, which had
been defended for four long years against every attack of a most
powerful Union fleet, and where the most ingenious siege-works and
desperate storming assault had failed to wrest Fort Wagner from the
enemy. But though Charleston fell without a battle, and was
occupied by the Union troops on the eighteenth, the destructive
hand of war was at last heavily laid upon her. The Confederate
government pertinaciously adhered to the policy of burning
accumulations of <SPAN name="page416" id="page416"></SPAN>cotton to prevent it falling into Union
hands; and the supply gathered in Charleston to be sent abroad by
blockade runners, having been set on fire by the evacuating
Confederate officials, the flames not only spread to the adjoining
buildings, but grew into a great conflagration that left the heart
of the city a waste of blackened walls to illustrate the folly of
the first secession ordinance. Columbia, the capital, underwent the
same fate, to even a broader extent. Here the cotton had been piled
in a narrow street, and when the torch was applied by similar
Confederate orders, the rising wind easily floated the blazing
flakes to the near roofs of buildings. On the night following
Sherman's entrance the wind rose to a gale, and neither the efforts
of the citizens, nor the ready help of Sherman's soldiers were able
to check the destruction. Confederate writers long nursed the
accusation that it was the Union army which burned the city as a
deliberate act of vengeance. Contrary proof is furnished by the
orders of Sherman, leaving for the sufferers a generous supply of
food, as well as by the careful investigation by the mixed
commission on American and British claims, under the treaty of
Washington.</p>
<p>Still pursuing his march, Sherman arrived at Cheraw March 3, and
opened communication with General Terry, who had advanced from Fort
Fisher to Wilmington. Hitherto, his advance had been practically
unopposed. But now he learned that General Johnston had once more
been placed in command of the Confederate forces, and was
collecting an army near Raleigh, North Carolina. Well knowing the
ability of this general, Sherman became more prudent in his
movements. But Johnston was able to gather a force of only
twenty-five or thirty thousand men, of which the troops Hardee
brought from Charleston formed the <SPAN name="page417" id="page417"></SPAN>nucleus; and the two minor
engagements on March 16 and 19 did little to impede Sherman's
advance to Goldsboro, where he arrived on March 23, forming a
junction with the Union army sent by sea under Schofield, that had
reached the same point the previous day.</p>
<p>The third giant stride of Sherman's great campaign was thus
happily accomplished. His capture of Atlanta, his march to the sea
and capture of Savannah, his progress through the Carolinas, and
the fall of Charleston, formed an aggregate expedition covering
nearly a thousand miles, with military results that rendered
rebellion powerless in the central States of the Southern
Confederacy. Several Union cavalry raids had accomplished similar
destruction of Confederate resources in Alabama and the country
bordering on East Tennessee. Military affairs were plainly in a
condition which justified Sherman in temporarily devolving his
command on General Schofield and hurrying by sea to make a brief
visit for urgent consultation with General Grant at his
headquarters before Richmond and Petersburg.</p>
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