William Sherman.
His punitive raids are known to have shortened the war.
He was the South's ( Confederates ) General . He lead the confederates during the Civil War .
carpetbaggers
Robert E. Lee
The two parts of the Civil War were the Northern invasion of the South and the Southern invasion of the North.
John Reagan was the Confederate Postmaster General. He was part of the South during the Civil War.
It was a devastated zone, with low prices and low wages, exploited by Northern 'Carpetbaggers'.
It was a devastated zone, with low prices and low wages, exploited by Northern 'Carpetbaggers'.
The South was devastated in all ways, whereas the North prospered.
The South was devastated in all ways, economically, physically and emotionally.
During the Civil War, the men were busy fighting. The South sold their cotton to England and the Union was blockading the coast to prevent that. Also General Sherman burned everything in his path to prevent the South from having food or supplies to fight. The South was devastated by the war.
During the Civil War, the men were busy fighting. The South sold their cotton to England and the Union was blockading the coast to prevent that. Also General Sherman burned everything in his path to prevent the South from having food or supplies to fight. The South was devastated by the war.
There was no industry in the south to speak of, and so the north prospered with its mills and industries, while the south was devastated
Yes, because nearly all the battles were in the South, and the war wrecked the Southern economy, bringing great privations. But these privations included starvation for Union prisoners in Southern camps, so it devastated Northern families too.
was the key general of the south during the civil war
Atlanta was captured by Union forces during the American Civil War in September 1864. General William Tecumseh Sherman led the Union Army of the Tennessee in a series of battles against Confederate General John Bell Hood's forces. The capture of Atlanta was a significant turning point, boosting Northern morale and contributing to President Abraham Lincoln's reelection. Sherman's subsequent "March to the Sea" further devastated the Confederate South.
Copperhead
William Sherman Sherman was the Northern General. Hood replaced Johnston for the South.