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Masters of War: William Tecumseh Sherman
Masters of War, #29
MASTERS OF WAR: WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN
A groundbreaking military biography that evaluates one of history's most controversial commanders purely as a practitioner of the art of war William Tecumseh Sherman remains one of the most polarizing figures in American history. To many in the North, he was a brilliant strategist whose innovative campaigns hastened the end of the Civil War and saved countless lives. To many in the South, he was a ruthless destroyer who waged war on civilians and left a trail of devastation across Georgia and the Carolinas. But who was Sherman the military professional? What made him one of the Union's most effective commanders? And what can his campaigns teach us about warfare, strategy, and military leadership?
Masters of War: William Tecumseh Sherman strips away the mythology, both heroic and villainous, to examine Sherman purely as a military practitioner. This comprehensive study evaluates his strategic vision, operational brilliance, tactical decisions, and leadership methods without the partisan judgments that have colored most assessments of his career. The result is a fresh perspective on a commander whose innovations influenced military thought for generations and whose campaigns remain studied at staff colleges worldwide.
From Failure to Mastery
The book traces Sherman's remarkable evolution from a struggling peacetime officer to one of history's great captains. It examines his early failures, including his 1861 nervous breakdown that led to accusations of insanity and shows how he learned from setbacks to become Grant's most trusted lieutenant and eventually an independent commander of exceptional skill. Sherman's journey demonstrates that military genius can be developed through study, experience, and relentless self-improvement.
The Hard War Philosophy
The book provides the most comprehensive examination yet of Sherman's "hard war" philosophy, his belief that making war terrible for civilian populations would shorten the conflict and ultimately reduce total suffering. It distinguishes between Sherman's actual methods and the mythology surrounding them, showing that while his armies destroyed extensive property, they operated under orders protecting civilian lives and followed the laws of war as understood in the 1860s.
This analysis doesn't shy from difficult questions: Was the destruction Sherman caused proportionate to military objectives achieved? Did his campaigns violate emerging principles of civilian immunity? What precedents did his methods establish for future conflicts? The book examines these issues honestly, presenting evidence and arguments while allowing readers to reach their own conclusions.
Leadership and the Grant-Sherman Partnership
Special attention is given to Sherman's relationship with Ulysses S. Grant, perhaps the finest military partnership in American history. The book shows how their complementary skills and mutual trust enabled Union victory, with Grant providing strategic vision and overall coordination while Sherman executed brilliant campaigns in the West. Their friendship, tested by war and politics, offers timeless lessons about trust, delegation, and effective command relationships.
Beyond the Battlefield
The book doesn't end with Appomattox. It examines Sherman's fourteen years as Commanding General of the Army (1869-1883), his principled conflicts with civilian authorities over military professionalism, his famous refusal to run for president ("If nominated I will not run; if elected I will not serve"), and his efforts to modernize military education. These postwar years reveal different dimensions of his character and his commitment to keeping the military above partisan politics.