9
North Versus South
he was an abolitionist, one who was opposed to slavery and
supported its immediate destruction. Lincoln was no abolition-
ist in 1860, but that truth almost did not matter. The Illinois
Republican had been elected without a single Southern vote.
From Texas to Florida to Virginia, Southerners were certain
that the future would consist of their voices being silenced and
their “peculiar institution”—slavery—being doomed.
One by one, 11 Southern states had seceded from the Union
and formed their own country. When Lincoln was unwilling
to turn federal property on Southern soil over to the Confed-
erates, they chose to attack, starting at Fort Sumter. Between
April 1861 and November 1864 Americans on both sides had
killed one another in a random collection of conflicts. In battle
after battle—First Bull Run, Shiloh, the Seven Days, Second
Bull Run, Antietam, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg—the clash of
arms had delivered thousands, even tens of thousands of casu-
alties. Yet Americans had continued to fight, each committed to
their own cause and certain that God was on their side.
Atlanta Falls
When the war opened, William Tecumseh Sherman had reen-
listed, as a colonel. He rose rapidly through the ranks, serving
in the western theater of war, in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Mis-
sissippi. By the summer of 1864, already a brigadier general,
Sherman had received orders to launch a campaign of conquest
from Chattanooga, Tennessee, marching southeast toward Geor-
gia’s most important city—Atlanta. It was a hub city, an urban
center for converging rail lines and communications. Atlanta
represented a bastion of defiance, of Southern strength, even
as the Confederate armies were losing battles, their manpower
nearly exhausted, and their supplies nearly nonexistent.
In early May, Sherman and his men had begun the march
toward Atlanta, repeatedly engaging an outnumbered Confed-
erate force under the command of General Joseph Johnston.
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