Preface
Introduction
Part 1: Formtive Years, 1822-1861
Chapter 1: Origin and Evolution of the Sherman Species,
1600-1840
Chapter 2: Leaping the Mark: Soldier or Civilian? 1840-1852
Chapter 3: Unfortunate Civilian, 1853-1861
Part 2: Working His Way, March 1861-March 1864
Chapter 4: Brigade Commander, March-August 1861
Chaper 5: Departmental Commander--and Disaster, August-December
1861
Chapter 6: Divisional Commander, January-July 1862
Chapter 7: Corps Commander, July-December 1862
Chapter 8: From Corps Command to Army Command, January-December
1863
Chapter 9: Army Command, October 1863-March 1864
Part 3: Command of the Military Division of the Mississippi
Chapter 10: First Contact, March-May 1864
Chapter 11: Over the Chattahoochee, May-July 1864
Chapter 12: Slogging on to Atlanta, July-September 1864
Chapter 13: Marching on to Savannah, September-December 1864
Chapter 14: Marching to Victory, December 1864-April 1865
Part 4: Things Will Never Be the Same Again: The Reckoning
Chapter 15: Indian Fighter and Reluctant Negotiator, 1865-1869
Chapter 16: Commanding General of the Army, 1865-1884
Chapter 17: Retirement of a Kind, 1884-1891
Conclusion: Weighed in the Balance and Not Found Wanting
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Brian Holden Reid is Professor of American History and Military Institutions at King's College London. He is the author of Robert E. Lee: Icon of a Nation, The Civil War and the Wars of the Nineteenth Century, and America's Civil War: The Operational Battlefield, 1861-1863, among other books. In 2019, he was awarded the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize from the Society for Military History for his contributions to the field.
"...leaves the readers wanting more..." -- Jennifer M. Murray, The
Annals of Iowa
"[T]his deeply researched and deftly argued investigation will
likely prove to be the definitive one for the foreseeable
future....[Holden] Reid carefully connects Sherman's personality
traits to his military strengths and weaknesses." -- Gordon Berg,
History Net
"Brian Holden Reid offers us a wide-ranging biography that serves
the field well by placing Sherman within the larger military,
political, and intellectual forces of the nineteenth centuryDLin
the process helping to restore an oftmaligned historical figure to
his rightful place as a supreme military thinker." -- Zachery A.
Fry, Military History Review
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....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. -- Library Journal
"In this thoroughly researched and beautifully crafted work, a
master historian has produced a strikingly original book, keenly
sensitive to context and brimming with insights. Surely it is
destined to become the standard biography of this iconic general,
debunking many myths and enlarging our understanding of the man,
his times, his wars, and his contribution to saving the United
States at its most vulnerable time. If you can read one book about
the military
aspects of the American Civil War, make it this one." --Richard H.
Kohn, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"Deeply researched, nuanced in judgment, and compellingly readable,
this is military biography at its best. With both microscope and
panoramic lens, Brian Holden Reid gives focus to Sherman's complex
character, the interplay of his intellect and action, and his
shrewd grasp of operational logistics and strategy, while also
assessing his place within the broad stream of modern military
development. An outstanding achievement." --Richard Carwardine,
Rothermere
American Institute, Oxford University
"Comprehensively researched and convincingly presented, this work
by a leading British scholar of the Civil War brings a fresh
perspective to a complex subject. Combining a powerful intellect
with a capacity to learn from experience, Sherman understood with
stark clarity war's central feature: inherent destructiveness,
physical and psychological. In demonstrating his response, Holden
Reid comes as close to a definitive military biography of Sherman
as we are
likely to see." --Dennis Showalter, author of Instrument of War:
The German Army, 1914-18
"Brian Holden Reid, one of the most accomplished military
historians in the world, has written a rich, incisive biography of
William Tecumseh Sherman. Drawing on his expansive background in
military history, he is able to offer analyses that are original,
perceptive, and refreshing. The Scourge of War is a must read for
Civil War and military historians." --Joseph T. Glatthaar, author
of American Military History: A Very Short Introduction
"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."--Kirkus
"Filled with historical insight and commentary... Sherman's
strikingly individualistic personality shines throughout this
crisply written biography and Reid's refined opinions are
welcome."--Civil War News
"In this compelling and lucid reassessment of William Tecumseh
Sherman, Reid dispels the myths and misreadings of the commanding
general of the Union Army... 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."--Library Journal
"Magisterial... Writing with impressive scholarship and an intimate
grasp of Civil War tactics and strategy, Mr. Reid, who teaches
history at King's College London, explodes these persistent
fictions and delivers a subtle portrait of one of the most
sophisticated military men in U.S. history... In this fine
rendering of a bold and complicated life, Mr. Reid has, in short,
given us a remarkable man whose name has long been a household word
but whom we may never
have really known before."--Fergus M. Bordewich, Wall Street
Journal
"An insightful and fair portrait of a famed but controversial Civil
War general."--Booklist
"Military history with a twist... A complicated portrait of a
complex man in a nation at war."
--History Today
"[Reid's] deeply researched and deftly argued investigation will
likely prove to be the definitive one for the foreseeable
future."--America's Civil War Magazine
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