But Sherman’s reign is not without controversy, and he clashes frequently with Secretaries of War John Rawlins and William Belknap. Escaping official Washington as much as his rank allows, Sherman relocates his headquarters to St. Louis.

  To the modern eye, one of Sherman’s most regrettable decisions involves the obliteration of the free-roaming herds of western buffalo, the loss of which Sherman believes will force the Indian tribes to submit to government control.

  He is outraged by the massacre at the Little Big Horn, and the death of George Armstrong Custer emboldens Sherman to increase the army’s aggressive violence against warring tribes. But through it all, Sherman continues to offer moderate views on the expansion of white settlers into Indian lands. It is yet another distinct contradiction that rivals the reputation he had established during the Civil War.

  In 1880, Sherman addresses a public forum in Columbus, Ohio, where he states, “There is many a boy here today who looks on war as all glory, but boys, it is all hell.” Thus is his most famous quote given birth.

  In 1881, Sherman recognizes the need for properly trained and educated military officers, and he establishes what is now the Command and General Staff College, at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

  He retires in 1884, and lives out his remaining years in New York City. But he cannot escape the public eye, and is a highly regarded public speaker, so much so that he is pressed to run for national office. To those who insist on including his name as a presidential candidate in 1884, he replies, “I will not accept if nominated and will not serve if elected.” His negative view of politics most certainly is a reflection of the bitter conflicts he endured with official Washington, most notably Edwin Stanton, throughout the final weeks of the war.

  His wife, Ellen, remains a devout Catholic, and his son Thomas seeks the priesthood, a decision Sherman angrily dismisses. The friction this causes is a stain on his family bond that is never reconciled.

  Sherman dies in New York City in 1891, at age seventy-one. He is buried in Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri.

  —

  In 1875, Sherman’s memoir was published, which provided ample ammunition to those who supported him and those who despised him. Regardless of which side one takes (and few are in the middle), there is one indisputable fact: Through the first two years of the Civil War, the South and its generals gained advantages that could have won them the war. After the combined disasters of Gettysburg and Vicksburg, in July 1863, a Northern victory became inevitable. Though the Southern armies might have continued to fight, it was by the overwhelming superiority of Northern resources that the end came as it did. But in this author’s opinion, two men, Ulysses Grant and William T. Sherman, brought the war to an end far more quickly, and far more decisively, than any other Federal commander could have done. William T. Sherman understood that war causes pain, and that the greater pain one inflicts, the more rapidly a war can be brought to a close. In that, he succeeded brilliantly.

  Dedicated to Patrick Falci and Joan McDonough, and Colonel Keith Gibson and Pat Gibson, who, throughout the entire process of researching and writing my seven books on the Civil War, were always there with support, assistance, and a kind word

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  A PARTIAL LIST OF PRIMARY SOURCES

  William T. Sherman, USA

  Ulysses S. Grant, USA

  Joseph E. Johnston, CSA

  Henry M. Hitchcock, USA

  Thomas D. Duncan, CSA

  Cyrus F. Boyd, USA

  Sam R. Watkins, CSA

  John Beatty, USA

  Joshua K. Callaway, CSA

  Augustus L. Chetlain, USA

  William B. Hazen, USA

  Ira Blanchard, USA

  Dolly Sumner Lunt Burge, CSA

  Thomas W. Osborn, USA

  George W. Pepper, USA

  Jacob Ritner, USA

  George B. Guild, CSA

  My most sincere thanks to the historians whose published works proved extremely helpful in the telling of this story:

  John G. Barrett

  Mark L. Bradley

  Burke Davis

  Mark H. Dunkelman

  John P. Dyer

  John M. Gibson

  Nathaniel Cheairs Hughes, Jr.

  Katharine M. Jones

  Charles F. Larimer

  John F. Marszalek

  Samuel J. Martin

  Kevin Rawlings

  Craig L. Symonds

  Noah Andre Trudeau

  My deepest appreciation to the following, who contributed invaluable assistance and information, including unpublished, and often, previously unknown material:

  John Belfrage, Pierce, Colorado

  Kirk Bradley, Sanford, North Carolina

  Patrick Falci, Rosedale, New York

  Colonel Keith Gibson, Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Virginia

  Nancie Gudmestad, Shriver House Museum, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

  James Izzell, Bennett Place State Historic Site, Durham, North Carolina

  Evalyn E. Kearns, Atlanta, Georgia

  Emma McSherry, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

  T. J. Miller, Bennett Place State Historic Site, Durham, North Carolina

  Kim A. O’Connell, Arlington, Virginia

  Ryan Reed, Bennett Place State Historic Site, Durham, North Carolina

  William Rutledge, Jr., Fort Collins, Colorado

  Stephanie Shaara, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

  William G. Stanley, Aiken, South Carolina

  Donny Taylor, Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site, Four Oaks, North Carolina

  Edward W. Vollersten, Monticello, Florida

  Matthew Watros, Newfield, New York

  BY JEFF SHAARA

  A Blaze of Glory

  A Chain of Thunder

  The Smoke at Dawn

  The Fateful Lightning

  Gods and Generals

  The Last Full Measure

  Gone for Soldiers

  Rise to Rebellion

  The Glorious Cause

  To the Last Man

  Jeff Shaara’s Civil War Battlefields

  The Rising Tide

  The Steel Wave

  No Less Than Victory

  The Final Storm

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  credit: Olivia Cowden

  JEFF SHAARA is the New York Times bestselling author of The Smoke at Dawn, A Chain of Thunder, A Blaze of Glory, The Final Storm, No Less Than Victory, The Steel Wave, The Rising Tide, To the Last Man, The Glorious Cause, Rise to Rebellion, and Gone for Soldiers, as well as Gods and Generals and The Last Full Measure—two novels that complete the Civil War trilogy that began with his father’s Pulitzer Prize–winning classic, The Killer Angels. Shaara was born into a family of Italian immigrants in New Brunswick, New Jersey. He grew up in Tallahassee, Florida, and graduated from Florida State University. He lives in Gettysburg.

  www.jeffshaara.com

  To inquire about booking Jeff Shaara for a speaking engagement, please contact the Penguin Random House Speakers Bureau at [email protected].

 


 

  Jeff Shaara, The Fateful Lightning

 


 

 
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