he served in the union as a general
William Jennings Bryan was the real-life prosecuting attorney for the Scopes Trial. In the play Inherit the Wind, William Jennings Bryan is portrayed as Matthew Harrison Brady, the attorney against Cates.
He was a pillar of support to Grant in the earlier campaigns, so when Grant became General-in-Chief, he rewarded Sherman with the top job in Tennessee. Later heallowed him to turn East across Georgia, even though it ran directly counter to the official war-plan.ANSWER:The major role Sherman played, and the one the South will never forget is his march from "Atlanta to the Sea." Sherman's march through Georgia began on November 15, 1864, when he left Atlanta in flames. His army, numbering about 62,000 men, would sweep over a 50 mile front across the state, with very little opposition.Advance troops scouted an area. The men that followed stripped houses, barns, and fields and destroyed everything they could not use. Sherman hoped that the horrible destruction would break the South's will to continue the war. Sherman would occupy Savannah, on December 21, 1864.From Savannah, Sherman moved north toward South Carolina. There, on the breeding ground of the Southern independence movement, his army seemed bent on revenge. They burned and looted on a scale even worse than Georgia. When Charleston surrendered, it was spared. Although Sherman tried to prevent it, Columbia, the state capital, was burned. Sherman and his troops would move on to North Carolina, and complete their mission in Virginia.
'I wish I were in Dixie' was so popular that a Union Army band was actually willing to play it for the amusement of Confederates camped within earshot, on the other side of the Rappahannock, during the winter retreat. 'As we were marching through Georgia' caught on in a big way after the war, and they would strike it up as a welcome to Sherman wherever he appeared, for the rest of his life. (He got heartily sick of it!)
General Sherman was ordered to take an Army from Tennessee through the heart of the Confederacy and ordered to destroy the ability of the South to continue the war. He took his forces through Atlanta and to most of the major cities of Georgia and South Carolina. His forces did not bring adequate food and basic supplies, so foraging and looting became commonplace. His forces destroyed the major railway center at Atlanta and destroyed most of the manor houses which were owned by slave owners. General Sherman's strategy was one of total war, in which every person or thing which is not for you is considered to be against you, and is then destroyed. The largest Southern Armies were in Virginia fighting Grant's advance, so most of the opposition for Sherman came from local militias and smaller formations of regular Army. Today, Sherman is remembered for unlimited devastation.
It was crucial to the dominance of the Mississippi. Also, Eastern Tennessee was generally pro-Union, and Lincoln regarded Tennessee as a state that could be retrieved from the Confederacy. Western Tennessee was the scene of the first signficant battles - Fort Henry, Fort Donelson, Shiloh - which brought U.S. Grant to prominence for the first time. Later the state would see three battles at Chattanooga, and then a long campagn by Sherman, whose orders were to destroy the Army of Tennessee under Joseph E. Johnston. That army was finally sent into headlong retreat, not by Sherman himself, buthi subordinateGeorge Thomas. It was the only time a Confederate army had been routed and fragmented in battle.
Sherman was a Union general and he lead a campaign that came in from the north-west and and went along a giant curve crossing most of the central Confederacy and razing several cities before he reached the eastern seaboard.
As Union General William T. Sherman was conducting raids into Mississippi, he became concerned with the exploits of Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest. General Forrest's cavalry was putting great pressure on Sherman's supply and communication lines. To eliminate this threat, Sherman sent General Samuel Sturgis to put an end to this problem. The result was not favorable. Sturgis had a force of 8,500 troops and encountered General Forrest's 3,500 men in Lee County Mississippi.Sturgis was ambushed in a manner of speaking and forced to retreat. Forrest was able to capture Union troops, and huge supplies of arms and ammunition. Union losses amounted to 2,000 casualties, to Forrest's 400 casualties.
Anthony Sherman plays for the Kansas City Chiefs.
William Bestick debuted on June 20, 1872, playing for the Brooklyn Eckfords at Union Grounds; he played his final game on July 9, 1872, playing for the Brooklyn Eckfords at Union Grounds.
William Rexter debuted on September 25, 1875, playing for the Brooklyn Atlantics at Union Grounds; he played his final game on September 25, 1875, playing for the Brooklyn Atlantics at Union Grounds.
Anthony Sherman plays Running Back for the Kansas City Chiefs.
It was the United States Colored Troops in 1864.
William can play guitar
In the Battle of Antietam, the geography of the area, including the presence of Antietam Creek and the nearby hills, influenced the outcome as it provided natural defenses for the Union forces. In the Battle of Gettysburg, the geography of the battlefield, with its elevated positions like Cemetery Ridge and Culp's Hill, allowed the Union to establish strong defensive positions and hold off Confederate advances, contributing to their victory. In the Battle of Vicksburg, the geography of the surrounding terrain, including bluffs along the Mississippi River and difficult access points, made it challenging for the Confederates to break the Union siege, leading to the eventual surrender of Vicksburg and a Union victory.
History themed Plays: * King Henry IV Part 1 - play by William Shakespeare * King Henry IV Part 2 - a Shakespearean play * King Henry V - play by William Shakespeare * King Henry VI Part 1 - play by William Shakespeare * King Henry VI Part 2 - a Shakespearean play * King Henry VI Part 3 - a Shakespearean play * King Henry VIII - play by William Shakespeare * King John - play by William Shakespeare * Richard II - play by William Shakespeare * Richard III - play by William Shakespeare Tragedy themed Plays: * Antony and Cleopatra - play by William Shakespeare * Coriolanus - a Shakespearean play * Hamlet - play by William Shakespeare * Julius Caesar - play by William Shakespeare * King Lear - play by William Shakespeare * Macbeth - play by William Shakespeare * Othello - play by William Shakespeare * Romeo and Juliet - play by William Shakespeare * Timon of Athens - a Shakespearean play * Titus Andronicus - a Shakespearean play Comedy themed Plays: * Alls Well That Ends Well - play by William Shakespeare * As You Like It - play by William Shakespeare * Comedy of Errors - play by William Shakespeare * Cymbeline - a Shakespearean play * Love's Labour's Lost - a Shakespearean play * Measure for Measure - play by William Shakespeare * Merchant of Venice - play by William Shakespeare * Merry Wives of Windsor - play by William Shakespeare * Midsummer Nights Dream - play by William Shakespeare * Much Ado About Nothing - play by William Shakespeare * Pericles, Prince of Tyre - a Shakespearean play * Taming of the Shrew - play by William Shakespeare * The Tempest - play by William Shakespeare * Troilus and Cressida - a Shakespearean play * Twelfth Night - play by William Shakespeare * Two Gentlemen of Verona - a Shakespearean play * Winter's Tale - a Shakespearean play
no
William who!