William Tecumseh Sherman, one of the most prominent of the Union's Civil War generals and for many years thereafter Commanding General of the Army, was born at Lancaster, Ohio, on Feb. 8, 1820, the third son and sixth child of Charles Robert and Mary Hoyt Sherman. His father, a noted Ohio lawyer and judge, had been born and educated at Norwalk, Connecticut. Admitted to the Connecticut bar before he turned twenty-one, Charles Sherman practiced law at Bridgeport for a year. Shortly after his marriage on May 8, 1810, to Mary Hoyt, the daughter of Isaac and Mary Raymond Hoyt of Norwalk, he set out to seek his fortune in Ohio, then a wilderness menaced by hostile Indians. After finally deciding upon Lancaster for his permanent residence, he returned Norwalk for his wife and infant son, Charles. The couple eventually had eleven children.
Appointed Collector of the United States' Revenues for Ohio on Nov. 9, 1813, and a Judge of the Ohio Supreme Court on Jan. 8, 1823, he died on June 24, 1829, while riding the circuit.
The disruption of the Sherman family, occasioned by the untimely death of their father and the consequent distribution of most of the eleven children among friends, relatives and neighbors, saw young "Cump," as he was known affectionately throughout his life, move several doors up the street where he was informally adopted into the family of Thomas Ewing, then a leading member of the Ohio bar and a close friend of the Shermans. It was within the fold of the Ewing family at the insistence of Maria Boyle Ewing, a devout Roman Catholic, that he received the baptismal name William, having been named Tecumseh after the famous Shawnee chief by his father. Appointed to West Point in 1836 by Ewing, then United States Senator from Ohio, he attended the Academy from July 1, 1836, until July 1, 1840. Subsequently assigned to field service with the Third Artillery in Florida, he was raised to the rank of first lieutenant in 1841. Later service at Fort Morgan, Mobile Bay, Alabama, and at Fort Moultrie near Charleston, South Carolina, where he remained for nearly five years, gave him ample opportunity to become acquainted with the South and its people- knowledge which stood him in good stead during the Civil War. After brief recruiting duties at Pittsburgh and Zanesville in 1846 upon the outbreak of the Mexican War, he was assigned to duty in California where, much to his dislike, he was compelled to sit out the battles then raging in Mexico. Upon his return to the States in 1850, on May 1, after an engagement of seven years, he married Ellen Boyle Ewing (Oct. 4, 1824-Nov. 28, 1888), the daughter of his mentor, Thomas Ewing, then Secretary of the Interior in the Cabinet of President Zachary Taylor. The couple eventually had eight chilren:
After service for a year and a half at St. Louis and New Orleans as a captain in the subsistence department, he resigned his commission on Sept. 6, 1853, in order to return to California and establish a branch bank of Lucas and Symonds at San Fransisco for his close friend, Major Henry S. Turner. When a severe depression forced that branch to close its doors in the spring of 1857, he proceeded to New York where, for a few months, he represented the parent firm. After the failure of the firm itself, he joined his brothers-in-law, Thomas and Hugh Boyle Ewing, in the practice of law at Leavenworth, Kansas. Unsuccessful in law, in 1859 he secured a position as superintendent of a new military academy, the Louisiana State Seminary of Learning -- predecessor of Louisiana State University, about to be opened at Alexandria, Louisiana. Although successful in his efforts to establish the Academy on a firm foundation, his overriding love of the Union nevertheless compelled him to resign his post on Jan. 18, 1861, in face of the imminent secession of Louisiana.
Following brief employment as president of a street railway in St. Louis, he rejoined the regular army with the rank of colonel in May, 1861. After being relieved of his command in Kentucky, where his realistic appraisal of the difficulties facing the Union forces and his anxiety for the well-being of the raw recruits committed to his care caused him to oppose the wishes of his superiors and the public at large for a rapid advance into Confederate territory, he subsequently distinguished himself at the battle of Shiloh (April, 1862) and in the campaign that led to the surrender of Vicksburg (July, 1863). Already a major-general of volunteers, the ability he demonstrated during the later campaign earned him the rank of brigadier-general in the regular army. In May, 1864, as supreme commander of the Union Army in the West, he set out from Chattanooga on the road to Atlanta. Success once again brought promotion -- this time to the rank of major-general in the regular army. With the capitulation of Atlanta on Sept. 1, he prepared for his next great maneuver -- the devastating "March through Georgia" which brought him the plaudits of the North and the vituperation of the South and which will ever be connected with his name. After the fall of Savannah on Dec. 21, he proceeded northward through the Carolinas. By April, 1865, he had compelled his Confederate opponent and West Point classmate, General Joseph E. Johnston, to make overtures for surrender. The liberal terms which Sherman proposed were accepted by Johnston but rejected in a Washington embittered by the recent assassination of Lincoln and they earned for Sherman the hostile criticism of Secretary of War Stanton and radical Northern newspapers. Nevertheless, he emerged from the War, along with Ulysses S. Grant and the Philip H. Sheridan, as one of the North's three most famous heroes.