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The Scourge of War

The Life of William Tecumseh Sherman

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
William Tecumseh Sherman, a West Point graduate and veteran of the Seminole War, became one of the best-known generals in the Civil War. His March to the Sea, which resulted in a devastated swath of the South from Atlanta to Savannah, cemented his place in history as the pioneer of total war. In The Scourge of War, preeminent military historian Brian Holden Reid offers a deeply researched life and times account of Sherman. By examining his childhood and education, his business ventures in California, his antebellum leadership of a military college in Louisiana, and numerous career false starts, Holden Reid shows how unlikely his exceptional Civil War career would seem. He also demonstrates how crucial his family was to his professional path, particularly his wife's intervention during the war. He analyzes Sherman's development as a battlefield commander and especially his crucial friendships with Henry W. Halleck and Ulysses S. Grant. In doing so, he details how Sherman overcame both his weaknesses as a leader and severe depression to mature as a military strategist. Central chapters narrate closely Sherman's battlefield career and the gradual lifting of his pessimism that the Union would be defeated. After the war, Sherman became a popular figure in the North and the founder of the school for officers at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, known as the "intellectual center of the army." Holden Reid argues that Sherman was not hostile to the South throughout his life and only in later years gained a reputation as a villain who practiced barbaric destruction, particularly as the neo-Confederate Lost Cause grew and he published one of the first personal accounts of the war. A definitive biography of a preeminent military figure by a renowned military historian, The Scourge of War is a masterful account of Sherman' life that fully recognizes his intellect, strategy, and actions during the Civil War.
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    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2020

      In this compelling and lucid reassessment of William Tecumseh Sherman (1820-91), Reid (King's Coll. London; America's Civil War) dispels the myths and misreadings of the commanding general of the Union Army and, later, secretary of war, recasting him as a man of wide intellectual interests who understood that winning demanded strategic vision and assiduous planning. Reid's Sherman grew from an officer unsure of himself to a confident general at once bold in thought, meticulous in planning, and deft and decisive in action. This proved essential in Sherman's famous marches through Georgia and the Carolinas that were, in design and execution, an essential demonstration of the Union's military power. Reid considers the operational aspects of war-making, especially logistics, which Sherman mastered, as well as the importance of Sherman's skill in inspiring common purpose among his troops. The author concludes that Sherman was a leader who understood and respected the political and military needs of the day. VERDICT Sometimes argumentative but always insightful, this study of Sherman ranks among the best renderings of the man and the conduct of the Civil War, and will help readers reconsider Sherman's character and the discipline necessary to succeed in war.--Randall M. Miller, St. Joseph's Univ., Philadelphia

      Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2020
      A thoroughgoing biography of William Tecumseh Sherman (1820-1891), the steely, intellectually gifted Civil War general. Did Sherman really say "War is hell"? His son said that his father's true statement, made to the mayor of a devastated Atlanta in 1864, was "War is cruelty and you cannot refine it." Either way, Sherman knew whereof he spoke. Graduating from West Point near the top of his class academically but knocked down by demerits--"He dressed carelessly," writes noted Civil War historian Reid, "saluted slovenly or not at all, and used his disregard of the rules as a means of winning laddish approbation from his peers"--Sherman entered the service as an artilleryman but was pushed into the commissary corps. There he learned to dig deep into every logistical consideration of how a war should be executed: what supplies were needed and where, how many wagons it would take to get them there, how many bullets would be fired, and so forth. That mastery served him well as an officer who suffered several depressing defeats during the Civil War, including a near disaster in the siege of Vicksburg. Nonetheless, he became one of Ulysses S. Grant's favored officers, succeeding him after the war as chief general of the U.S. Army. Reid looks closely at Sherman's analytical skills while taking issue with certain popular depictions of him. For example, Sherman has been accounted a heartlessly cruel avenger in Southern depictions of his March to the Sea, where in truth "the absence of violence...needs to be underlined," at least as far as civilians were concerned. Reid also acquits his subject of the razing of South Carolina's capital, which he holds was the result of an accidental fire that "overwhelmed Columbia's small firefighting capacity." Despite occasionally dry prose, the author's capable blending of biographical facts with larger issues makes his study particularly valuable. The most complete and wide-ranging of recent biographies of Sherman, of interest to all students of the Civil War.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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