Sherman’s
strategy of subduing Americans in the South who desired political
independence and a more perfect Union included setting stark starvation
and destruction loose upon the land to convince them otherwise. Before
beginning his Meridian, Mississippi campaign in early 1864, he wrote his
wife, “We will take all provisions, and God help the starving
families.”
Bernhard Thuersam, Chairman
North Carolina War Between the States Sesquicentennial Commission
"Unsurpassed Valor, Courage and Devotion to Liberty"
"The Official Website of the North Carolina WBTS Sesquicentennial"
Ethnic Cleansing in America Circa 1862
“Copied from the “Washington Evening Star”:
United
States Commissioner A.J. Williams, of Cleveland, Ohio, a member of the
Loyal Legion, recently gave out for publication the following letter
written by Gen. Sherman to his brother, Senator John Sherman, in 1862.
Memphis, Tenn., Aug. 13, 1862
My Dear Brother,
“
. . . At last I got here and found the city contributing gold, arms,
powder, salt and everything the enemy wanted. It was a smart trick on
their part thus to give up Memphis that the desire of gain to our
Northern merchants should supply them with the things needed in war. I
have one man under sentence of death for smuggling arms across the
lines, and hope Mr. Lincoln will approve it.
But
the mercenary spirit of our people is too much and my orders are
reversed and I am ordered to encourage the trade in cotton, and all
orders prohibiting gold, silver and notes to be paid for it are annulled
by orders from Washington. But what are the lives of our soldiers to
the profits of the merchants?
After
a whole year of bungling, the country has at last discovered that we
want more men. Now 1,300,000 men are required when 700,000 was deemed
absurd before.
Of
course I will approve the confiscation act, and would be willing to
revolutionize the government so as to amend that Article of the
Constitution which forbids the forfeiture of land to the heirs. My full
belief is, we must colonize the country de novo, beginning with
Kentucky and Tennessee, and should remove 4,000,000 of our people at
once south of the Ohio River, taking the farms and plantations of the
Rebels.
I deplore the war as much as ever, but if the thing has to be done, let the means be adequate.
Don’t
expect to overrun such a country or subdue such a people in one, two or
five years. It is the task of half a century. We must colonize and
settle as we go South . . . enemies must be killed or transported to
some other country.
Your affectionate brother, W.T. Sherman”
(Gen.
Sherman’s Colonization Scheme, His Comment on Men and Measures in
August 1862, Confederate Veteran, November 1896, pg. 37)
"Total war".... (Such an effing bastard)!!
ReplyDelete:)
DeleteMr. Lincoln determined that he could not defeat the Confederates with ethical and legal measures. Thus he positioned murders and butchers to attack the civilian population, destroy the food supply, burn the crops, and loot the plantations. Sherman was probably the worst of of the terrorists as this letter indicates, but Lincoln and Grant were as guilty.
ReplyDeleteNo argument here.
Delete