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  1. 17 de sept. de 2014 · Major General William Tecumseh Sherman was a contradiction embodied. He eliminated Atlanta's war making potential and brought sheer destruction to Georgia, then offered generous surrender terms. His vision of hard war brought the Confederacy to its knees, but forestalled thousands of battlefield and civilian deaths.

  2. William Tecumseh Sherman (Lancaster, 8 de fevereiro de 1820 - Nova Iorque, 14 de fevereiro de 1891) foi um soldado, empresário, educador e escritor norte-americano. Como general no Exército da União durante a Guerra de Secessão obteve a reputação de estrategista militar brilhante.

  3. William Tecumseh Sherman retired from the military in 1884, nearly 50 years after he had entered West Point. Still popular, he disappointed those who thought he should run for president, ...

  4. 12 de ene. de 2024 · William Tecumseh Sherman died in New York City on February 14, 1891, of unspecified causes. Following a funeral at his home on February 19, Sherman’s body was transported to St. Louis, Missouri, where his son Thomas Ewing Sherman, a Jesuit priest, presided over a second funeral on February 21.

  5. William Tecumseh Sherman ['wiliəm tɘ'kʌmsei 'ʃə:rmən] (Lancaster, Ohio, 1820. február 8. – New York, N.Y, 1891. február 14.) amerikai tábornok, üzletember, író és oktató. Az amerikai polgárháború (1861–1865) alatt vezérőrnagy rendfokozatban szolgált az északiak hadseregében. Eredményeiért kitüntetésekkel jutalmazták, de a felperzselt föld taktikája miatt ...

  6. William Tecumseh Sherman was born in 1820 in Lancaster, Ohio. He graduated from West Point in 1840 and saw action in the Mexican War. After leaving the military in 1853, Sherman pursued failed ventures in banking and law before resuming his military career. When the Civil War broke out, Sherman was serving as superintendent of the state ...

  7. 31 de may. de 2024 · Commanding the 15th Army Corps during the Vicksburg campaign. Born in Ohio in 1820 and orphaned when he was nine, William Tecumseh Sherman would attend West Point, where he was considered “one of the brightest and most popular fellows,” yet much like his friend, Ulysses S. Grant, success would elude him…until Civil War descended on the ...