Quincy soldier wrote of Sherman's march

It has been 150 years since Union Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman cut his lifeline with the North, burned Atlanta and launched his March to the Sea.
Beforehand, he wrote to Gen. Ulysses Grant, telling of his plan.
He reasoned that by marching an “army right though” the enemy’s territory, the federal government would demonstrate to all “that we have a power” that cannot be resisted or stopped.
On Nov. 15, 1864, Sherman set out to destroy a swath of Georgia, an area considered to be a major food and military source for the Confederacy. His words to Grant were, “I can make Georgia howl!”
On Christmas Day 1864, William H. Minter, a former Quincy steamboat captain and now a lieutenant- colonel in the 18th Missouri Infantry, wrote a letter to his “dear friend, Mattie.”
He began: “Since I last wrote you, many and varied have been the scenes through [which] I have passed.”
Minter explained: “After destroying all communication behind us at Atlanta and above that point, we turned our backs upon the north and struck boldly out across the Confederacy to look for oysters in the waters of the Atlantic.
In wind and rain ... in daylight and in darkness we ... pressed on our way, for Crazy Bill (as the boys call Sherman) was leading ... and they were bound to follow. Our point of destination as you are now aware was Savannah Ga but I presume our movements were a mystery to our friends at home and many an anxious eye was turned to look for news of Sherman....”
Minter further wrote that the Union troops drove “the rebels before us burning RR [railroads], building Bridges, crossing streams, making roads, wading swamps.”
Sherman’s army had brought along limited provisions,forcing his men to live off the land.
“Upon our march down the boys lived high. We foraged on the country for rations finding plenty of Hogs, Turkeys, Chickens, Honey, and Sweet potatoes all the way through,” Minter informed his friend.
“It was amusing to see them as they marched in column loaded down with Pork and fowls of every description.”
In fact, the men lived “so high you could not get them to eat Beef at all. It was almost an insult to offer a man a piece of Beef,” he wrote.
Minter observed that “the Horses fared as finely as the men,” having “plenty of corn, oats, and Fodder.”
As the Union forces closed on Savannah, Ga., Minter noted: “The Rebels met us several miles out of town and the fight opened....” He wrote that the road the Federals approached on “was strait as an arrow and very fine but on each side the water of the swamps came close up to it. We formed in two lines of battle and pressed forward. The men wading knee deep in water and tearing their way through the tangled thickets.”
The bluecoats drove “the rebels for miles ... but at length we came to a swamp into which the rebs turned a canal from the river overflowing the whole bottom and planting their batteries on the other side....”
Minter stated the Northern troops were undaunted and pressed on.
Under heavy enemy fire and with the water in the canal waist deep, the men waded across, securing the far bank and establishing defensive position — “now the fight commenced in real earnest.” It “lasted for several days but” in the end “the Johnnies could stand it no longer,” and they retreated, “leaving their beautiful city to fall into our hands....”
With the Rebels gone, a Union division entered Savannah on Dec. 21.
Sherman wrote President Abraham Lincoln: “I beg to present you as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah, with one hundred and fifty heavy guns and plenty of ammunition, also about twenty five thousand bales of cotton.”
Lincoln received the message on Christmas Eve, and he in turn gave the news to the North on Christmas morning.
For Minter, “Christmas ... passed off pleasantly.”
He and fellow Quincyan, Col. John Tillson Jr., a brigade commander on Sherman’s March, got together and dined “on Roast Turkey” followed by a cup of “Eggnog after dinner.”
Still suffering from a head wound received during the Atlanta Campaign, Minter left the army on April 3, 1865, and returned to Quincy.
His service had begun April 29, 1861, in Quincy when he was mustered in as a lieutenant in Captain Benjamin Prentiss’ company.
When the 10th Illinois’s three-month service expired July 29, Minter mustered out, but he re-entered the army on March 10, 1862, as an officer in the 18th Missouri Infantry.
Minter and two other Quincyans obtained commissions in the Missouri regiment through the “impressive political contacts” of Sen. Orville Browning.
The 18th was sent to Pittsburg Landing and was engaged at the Battle of Shiloh. Here, part of the 18th fought at the Hornet’s Nest and were under the command of Gen. Prentiss. They were eventually surrounded and forced to surrender. Minter was one of the prisoners. By June 1862, he had been exchanged and was back with the regiment.
In February 1863, he was promoted to captain. Two months later he was again promoted, this time to major. On Aug. 15, 1864, he was elevated to the regiment’s lieutenant colonel.
With the war’s end, Minter returned to Quincy and his wife, and for a while worked as an assistant assessor. However, much of his postwar worklife was spent as a clerk in the U.S. revenue office run by his friend Tillson.
With his head wound still bothering him, Minter filed for and was granted a veteran’s disability pension. He moved to Florida, and in 1888, the old soldier put a revolver to his head and pulled the trigger.
Phil Reyburn is a retired field representative for the Social Security Administration. He wrote “Clear the Track: A History of the Eighty-ninth Illinois Volunteer Infantry, The Railroad Regiment” and co-edited “ ‘Jottings from Dixie:’ The Civil War Dispatches of Sergeant Major Stephen F. Fleharty, U.S.A.”





