I would say Sherman's "march" to the sea-through the heart of Georgia. After the war he admitted that his military conduct in Georgia surely qualified as war crimes.(read "When in the Course of Human Events" by Charles Adams.
General Sherman.
containment strategy
Punitive raids on the civilian mainstay of the Confederacy.
McClellan's hesitations and slackness in carrying on his offensive plans, who allowed the Confederates to cheat and outmaneuver him. The superior strategy developed by Robert E. Lee, who succeeded in keeping at bay and defeat the Army of the Potomac as tactically, winning 6 battles out of seven as well strategically , forcing the Federals to retreat and give up the campaign.
The Anaconda Plan
The new strategy was based on total war on the Confederacy.
union is a strategy.
I don't know :( thats im asking yall
I don't know :( thats im asking yall
union leader who led the peninsula campaign?
The Total War strategy of Sherman in hid March to the Sea and Sheridan in his Shenandoah Campaign greatly hastened the collapse of the South by destroying the means by which the civilian economy supported the military. It eliminated the South's supplies (food, clothing, arms, ammunition), transportation, communications, and manufacturing capability, leading to the demoralization of southern troops and civilians, and a complete collapse of the southern economy.
The two Union officers who believed in and demonstrated the effectiveness of the strategy of total war were General Ulysses Grant and General William Sherman. Grant's Overland Campaign in 1864 and Sherman;s March to The Sea in 1864 were examples of total war by two military leaders.
General Sherman.
The Union!
The Taft-Hartley Act limited high dues for union membership as well as union contributions to political campaign funds.
The Taft-Hartley Act limited high dues for union membership as well as union contributions to political campaign funds.
the strategy that the union used was called the anaconda plan the anaconda plan was that the union would surround the confederate on all sides