William Tecumseh Sherman led the March to the Sea through Georgia. [Threw is the past tense of the verb Throw. Through is the preposition.]
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General William Tecumseh Sherman led the notorious "March to the Sea" through Georgia during the American Civil War. Starting in Atlanta in November 1864, Sherman and his Union forces marched through the state, destroying infrastructure and civilian property as they went. The goal of the campaign was to cripple the Confederacy's ability to wage war and ultimately hasten the end of the Civil War.
Freed slaves followed the march of Sherman's army through Georgia.
Slavery led to the Civil War.
Colonel Elijah Clarke led Georgia militia
William T. Sherman was a Union general in the Civil War. He was most famous for his "March to the Sea" in Georgia that effectively split the Confederacy in two and disrupted supply and logistic lines.
In the American Civil War, a variety of events led to Lee's final surrender at Appomattox Court House. Most importantly, Lee's army had been surrounded. Moreover, Union troops were also in control in the Deep South, with General Sherman's "March to the Sea" having ravaged Georgia and threatening to do the same to other portions of the South.