General William Tecumseh Sherman

March to the Sea


 
 

November 9, 1864 General William Tecumseh Sherman issues the first orders (Special Orders No. 120), from Kingston, Georgia (Bartow County) directly related to his "March to the Sea." Over the next few days the city of Rome will be destroyed and track from Atlanta to Chattanooga will be torn up, some transported to Tennessee for later use, some twisted into Sherman's hairpins or Sherman's neckties and left by the side of the railroad.
   
November 12, 1864 Corse requests permission to destroy the towns of Cedartown, Van Wert and Buchanan, south of Rome. Sherman tells Corse to wait, effectively sparing the towns.
   
November 13, 1864 Confederate Cavalry commander Joseph "Fightin' Joe" Wheeler arrives in Jonesboro, Georgia.
   
November 13, 1864 Downtown Marietta destroyed by Union Cavalry General Judson Kilpatrick.
   
November 13, 1864 Federal troops destroy Acworth, Georgia.
   
November 14, 1864 Sherman arrives at his Atlanta headquarters with some 45,000 troops. Some 15,000 more join him in the city.
   
November 15, 1864 Right Wing leaves East Point, heading to the southeast towards Stockbridge, where they spend the night. Sweeping the front of the Right Wing, Judson Kilpatrick skirmishes with men under Joseph Wheeler in Jonesboro. Wheeler pulls back to Griffin.
   
November 15, 1864 City of Atlanta burned under orders from General Sherman during the March to the Sea. A special battering ram was used to destroy the stone and brick railroad depot. Because of the city's size, it took the Union Cavalry nearly a day to complete the task, beginning this evening and completing the task the following afternoon.
   
November 16, 1864 Right Wing spends the night in McDonough.
   
November 16, 1864 Sherman leaves Atlanta having reorganized his men into two "wings" of two corps apiece. The Left Wing is commanded by Henry Slocum, the Right Wing by O. O. Howard. Sherman's strategic plan is for the Left Wing to make a feint on Augusta while the Right Wing makes a feint at Macon, forcing the remaining Confederate troops to be split between the two towns.
   
November 17, 1864 Kilpatrick engages Wheeler near Forsyth ahead of the Right Wing of Sherman's Army. Right Wing spends the night in Jackson and Indian Springs, Georgia
   
November 17, 1864 Lithonia's railroad depot, track, and some homes are destroyed by the Left Wing
   
November 18, 1864 Joseph Wheeler arrives to defend Macon. Along with Howell Cobb, William Hardee and G. P. T. Beauregard, the city had about 10,000 men to defend it.
   
November 18, 1864 Forward elements of the Left Wing reach Social Circle.
   
November 18, 1864 Union troops pass through Covington, Georgia.
   
November 19, 1864 Left Wing arrives in Rutledge. General John Geary is detached from the main column and ordered to make a feint on Augusta. He encounters resistance at Buckhead and burns bridges over the Oconee River and destroys a rail depot in the town.
   
November 20, 1864 Investigating the lack of a Union attack, Joseph Wheeler heads northeast of Macon into the Right Wing of Sherman's army. The army had bypassed Macon.
   
November 20, 1864 Henry Slocum spares Madison, Georgia (Morgan County). Joshua Hill, who knew Sherman's brother John, was the last Confederate senator to leave Washington D. C., and had met Sherman during the Atlanta Campaign, rode out to meet Slocum and ask that the town be spared destruction. Slocum granted the request, ordering the town be spared. In spite of the order the town was heavily looted.
   
November 21, 1864 William Hardee orders militia from Macon under the command of P. J. Phillips to advance to Augusta to assist in defending the arsenal there.
   
November 22, 1864  Battle of Griswoldville. General P. J. Phillips advances into the Right Wing of Sherman's Army and attacks the battle-hardened veterans with militia. The result is a disasterous, pointless loss for the Confederates.
   
November 23, 1864 Union troops arrive in Milledgeville early in the morning, having spent the previous night on the outskirts to the north of the state capital.
   
November 25, 1864 Confederate Cavalry under "Fighting Joe" Wheeler attack a Union Cavalry detachment in Sandersville (Washington County).
   
November 26, 1864 Warehouses and Tennille railroad depot (Washington County) burned.
   
November 26, 1864 Washington County Courthouse burned by Union soldiers.
   
November 28, 1864 Battle of Buckhead Creek.
   
December 3, 1864 Sherman's Left Wing attempts to liberate the prisoner of war compound, Camp Lawton, north of Millen, Georgia, only to find it empty. Its 10,229 prisoners had been moved to temporary quarters in Thomasville (Thomas County) and Blackshear (Pierce County). Sherman orders the depot and a nearby hotel in Millen burned. Today the site is part of Magnolia Springs State Park
   
December 4, 1864 Statesboro, Georgia, is the first major town visited by the Right Wing of Sherman's Army in almost two weeks.
   
December 4, 1864 Battle of Waynesborough
   
December 13, 1864 Sherman captures Fort McAllister. Two miles east of the fort his men make contact with the waiting Union fleet marking the end of the March to the Sea
   
December 21, 1864 William Tecumseh Sherman captures Savannah
   
   
My Source: Our Georgia History