Inscription
The March to the Sea. On November 15, 1864, during the Civil War, U.S. forces under Gen. William T. Sherman set out from Atlanta on the March to the Sea, a military campaign designed to destroy the Confederacy's ability to wage war and break the will of its people to resist. After destroying Atlanta's industrial and business (but not residential) districts, Sherman's 62,500 men marched over 250 miles, reaching Savannah in mid-December.
Contrary to popular myth, Sherman's troops primarily destroyed only property used for waging war - railroads, train depots, factories, cotton gins, and warehouses. Abandoning their supply base, they lived off the land, destroying food they could not consume. They also liberated thousands of enslaved African Americans in their path.
Sherman's "hard hand of war" demoralized Confederates, hastening the end of slavery and the reunification of the nation. 2014.15
Location
Sources
More markers in Fulton
Alpharetta Business District
Alpharetta, GA
ALPHARETTA BUSINESS DISTRICT.
Alpharetta First United Methodist Church
Alpharetta, GA
ALPHARETTA FIRST UNITED METHODICT CHURCH circa 1834.
Atlanta's Outer Line
ATLANTA'S OUTER LINE.
Atlanta Woman's Club
Atlanta, GA
ATLANTA WOMAN'S CLUB.
Attack from the West
Atlanta, GA
ATTACK FROM THE WEST.
