on all the details. How much more likely will be the difference in 
a great battle covering a vast space of broken ground, when each 
division, brigade, regiment, and even company, naturally and honestly 
believes that it was the focus of the whole affair! Each of them won the 
battle. None ever lost. That was the fate of the old man who unhappily 
commanded. 
In this edition I give the best maps which I believe have ever been 
prepared, compiled by General O. M. Poe, from personal knowledge
and official surveys, and what I chiefly aim to establish is the true 
cause of the results which are already known to the whole world; and it 
may be a relief to many to know that I shall publish no other, but, like 
the player at cards, will "stand;" not that I have accomplished 
perfection, but because I can do no better with the cards in hand. Of 
omissions there are plenty, but of wilful perversion of facts, none. 
In the preface to the first edition, in 1875, I used these words: "Nearly 
ten years have passed since the close of the civil war in America, and 
yet no satisfactory history thereof is accessible to the public; nor should 
any be attempted until the Government has published, and placed 
within the reach of students, the abundant materials that are buried in 
the War Department at Washington. These are in process of 
compilation; but, at the rate of progress for the past ten years, it is 
probable that a new century will come before they are published and 
circulated, with full indexes to enable the historian to make a judicious 
selection of materials" 
Another decade is past, and I am in possession of all these publications, 
my last being Volume XI, Part 3, Series 1, the last date in which is 
August 30, 1862. I am afraid that if I assume again the character of 
prophet, I must extend the time deep into the next century, and pray 
meanwhile that the official records of the war, Union and Confederate, 
may approach completion before the "next war," or rather that we, as a 
people, may be spared another war until the last one is officially 
recorded. Meantime the rising generation must be content with 
memoirs and histories compiled from the best sources available. 
In this sense I offer mine as to the events of which I was an eye-witness 
and participant, or for which I was responsible. 
WILLIAM T. SHERMAN, General (retired). 
St. Louis, Missouri, March 30, 1885. 
 
MEMOIRS OF GENERAL WILLIAM T. SHERMAN. 
 
CHAPTER I 
. 
FROM 1820 TO THE MEXICAN WAR. 
1820-1846.
According to Cothren, in his "History of Ancient Woodbury, 
Connecticut," the Sherman family came from Dedham, Essex County, 
England. The first recorded name is of Edmond Sherman, with his 
three sons, Edmond, Samuel, and John, who were at Boston before 
1636; and farther it is distinctly recorded that Hon. Samuel Sherman, 
Rev. John, his brother, and Captain John, his first cousin, arrived from 
Dedham, Essex County, England, in 1634. Samuel afterward married 
Sarah Mitchell, who had come (in the same ship) from England, and 
finally settled at Stratford, Connecticut. The other two (Johns) located 
at Watertown, Massachusetts. 
From Captain John Sherman are descended Roger Sherman, the signer 
of the Declaration of Independence, Hon. William M. Evarts, the 
Messrs. Hoar, of Massachusetts, and many others of national fame. Our 
own family are descended from the Hon. Samuel Sherman and his son; 
the Rev. John, who was born in 1650-'51; then another John, born in 
1687; then Judge Daniel, born in 1721; then Taylor Sherman, our 
grandfather, who was born in 1758. Taylor Sherman was a lawyer and 
judge in Norwalk, Connecticut, where he resided until his death, May 4, 
1815; leaving a widow, Betsey Stoddard Sherman, and three children, 
Charles R. (our father), Daniel, and Betsey. 
When the State of Connecticut, in 1786, ceded to the United States her 
claim to the western part of her public domain, as defined by her Royal 
Charter, she reserved a large district in what is now northern Ohio, a 
portion of which (five hundred thousand acres) composed the 
"Fire-Land District," which was set apart to indemnify the parties who 
had lost property in Connecticut by the raids of Generals Arnold, Tryon, 
and others during the latter part of the Revolutionary War. 
Our grandfather, Judge Taylor Sherman, was one of the commissioners 
appointed by the State of Connecticut to quiet the Indian title, and to 
survey and subdivide this Fire-Land District, which includes the 
present counties of Huron and Erie. In his capacity as commissioner he 
made several trips to Ohio in the early part of this century, and it is 
supposed that he then contracted the disease which proved fatal. For his 
labor and    
    
		
	
	
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