General Sherman Deported Women from the South
THE STORY OF THE ROSWELL MILL WORKERS DEPORTATION
The 400 Roswell missing women of 1864
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In July 1864, approximately 400 mill workers in Georgia - nearly all women, were taken prisoner by the Union Army. They were then put on trains headed North, and few of them ever made their way back home. They would be referred to as Factory Hands or Roswell Women in the Official Records.Image: Roswell Mill Women
During the summer of 1864, the Union Army under the leadership of General William Tecumseh Sherman advanced toward Atlanta, Georgia. The two armies faced off at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain (June 27, 1864). Sherman discovered that the Confederate forces were too well entrenched so he cut his losses and continue toward Atlanta. The Chattahoochee River stood in his way.
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I tell people this story and almost no one knows about it. The fire stil burns in some of us.
ReplyDeleteBut they were terrorists, doncha' know.............? :)
DeleteThank you for the interesting and sad article. First I have
ReplyDeleteheard of this. I wonder how long the monument in Mill
Village Park dedicated to these unfortunate women will
stand. I now know where the barbarism grew from and it
just goes on and on. Sherman was a Frankenstein.
A monster.
Delete