
audiobook
by William T. (William Tecumseh) Sherman
VOLUME II - CHAPTER XVI. - ATLANTA CAMPAIGN-NASHVILLE AND CHATTANOOGA TO BENEBAW. - MARCH, APRIL, AND MAY, 1864.
[PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL.]
Produced by David Widger. Additional proofing was done by Bryan Sherman
CHAPTER XVII. - ATLANTA CAMPAIGN—BATTLES ABOUT KENESAW MOUNTAIN. - JUNE, 1864.
CHAPTER XVIII. - ATLANTA CAMPAIGN—BATTLES ABOUT ATLANTA - JULY, 1864.
CHAPTER XIX. - CAPTURE OF ATLANTA. - AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER, 1864
CHAPTER XX - ATLANTA AND AFTER—PURSUIT OF HOOD. - SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER, 1864.
CHAPTER XXI. - THE MARCH TO THE SEA FROM ATLANTA TO SAVANNAH. - NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER, 1864.
CHAPTER XXII. - SAVANNAH AND POCOTALIGO. - DECEMBER, 1884, AND JANUARY, 1885.
CHAPTER XXIII. - CAMPAIGN OF THE CAROLINAS. - FEBRUARY AND MARCH, 1865.
In this candid memoir, a senior Union commander recounts the hectic weeks of March and April 1864, when he assumed control of the Military Division of the Mississippi after General Grant departed for the Eastern theater. He describes the sprawling jurisdiction that stretched from the Ohio to Arkansas, and the delicate task of reshuffling senior officers—some disgraced, others restless—while trying to keep the army’s momentum alive. The narrative captures his conversations with Grant, the War Department, and other key figures as they grapple with political pressures and personal ambitions.
The general’s focus quickly turns to the massive logistical challenge of securing supply routes and communications across a conquered South, laying the groundwork for a major offensive into Georgia. He details the painstaking organization of troops, the coordination of river transports, and the uneasy anticipation of the upcoming campaigns against Confederate forces. Throughout, his observations reveal the blend of strategic planning and human frailty that defined the Union’s war effort at this critical juncture.
Language
en
Duration
~17 hours (997K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1820–1891
Best known as one of the Union Army’s most forceful Civil War commanders, this memoirist writes with blunt confidence, sharp observation, and a lifelong soldier’s sense of duty. His story opens a direct window onto war, leadership, and the making of modern America.
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