Sherman's goal was to split the southern Confederacy in half. To do this he and his troops burned bridges, supplies, crops and anything that could be deemed useful by the Confederate army.
To attack the Southern economy, burning farms and wrecking railroads, to starve the Confederate armies in the field.
He didn't. If you refer to Sherman he believed in total war and to burn his way to Atlanta to force Confederate forces to surrender.
To attack the farms and railroads that kept the Confederate armies supplied. Also it was a punitive raid that demonstrated the folly of seceding from the USA.
Sherman's neckties refer to the tactic used by Union General William Tecumseh Sherman during his "March to the Sea" in the American Civil War, where he would destroy Confederate railroads by bending the iron rails into twisted shapes resembling neckties. This strategy aimed to disrupt the South's supply lines and transportation infrastructure, significantly weakening their ability to sustain military operations. Sherman's destruction of railroads contributed to the overall strategy of total war, which demoralized the Confederate population and hastened the end of the war.
General Sherman and his superior General Grant believed it was necessary to destroy civilian property that may have been used to supply Confederate troops. In this way, it would weaken the Southern armies.
Because he was paid be John Adams to seek and destroy all of the Natzes.
He marched through Georgia to destroy the farms and railroads that supported(helped) the Confederate armies in the field.
Sherman's goal was to split the southern Confederacy in half. To do this he and his troops burned bridges, supplies, crops and anything that could be deemed useful by the Confederate army.
To attack the Southern economy, burning farms and wrecking railroads, to starve the Confederate armies in the field.
Sherman in Georgia - to destroy the Southern farms and railroads, wreck the economy, and help to starve the Confederate troops in the field.
Because the Union had to invade the South and destroy the Confederate armies in order to strike down the secession.
He didn't. If you refer to Sherman he believed in total war and to burn his way to Atlanta to force Confederate forces to surrender.
A punitive raid on the rich farmland of Georgia, to ruin the economy and starve the Confederate troops in the field.
US General Sherman followed a course often called a "scorched earth" policy as he swept through Georgia. The intent was to destroy anything that might be later used by the Confederacy to continue the war effort. Retreating Confederate forces also had to destroy railroads, munition depots and any thing Sherman could use to his advantage.
To attack the farms and railroads that kept the Confederate armies supplied. Also it was a punitive raid that demonstrated the folly of seceding from the USA.
To wreck the railroads in order to ruin the Southern economy, and to burn the farms in order to starve the Confederate troops in the field.