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March to the Sea Marker
"The
March to the Sea"
State Historic
Marker
March to the Sea State
Historic Marker
Located on the Putnam County
Courthouse Square, Eatonton, Ga.
(text)
THE MARCH TO
THE SEA
On Nov. 15,
1864, after destroying Atlanta and cutting his
communications
with the North, Maj. Gen. W.T. Sherman, USA,
began his destructive
campaign for Savannah -- the March to the
Sea. He divided
his army into two wings. The Right Wing
marched south
from Atlanta, to feint at Macon but to cross the
Ocmulgee River
above the city and concentrate at Gordon.
The Left Wing
(14th and 20th Corps), Maj. Gen. H. W. Slocum,
USA, marched
east. At Decatur, the 14th Corps, accompanied by
Brig. Gen. A.S.
Williams, USA, marched east to Social Circle
and Madison,
destroying the Georgia RR between those towns.
On the 19th,
at Madison, Geary's division was detached to burn
the RR bridge
over the Oconee River (13 miles E of Madison). It
rejoined the
Corps near Dennis Station (9 miles S).
On the 20th,
the Corps camped about three miles north. Next
day, it passed
through Eatonton, destroyed a few miles of the
railroad, and
camped below Dennis Station. Heavy rains having
slowed the march
and bogged down the trains, little destruction
of public utility
property was attempted. The 14th Corps, which
had marched
from Shady Dale that day, destroyed Eatonton factory
(3 miles W on
Little River) and camped in that vicinity.
On the 22nd,
both corps converged on Milledgeville, then the
Capital of Georgia.
The 20th Corps arrived that day and took
possession of
the city; the 14th Corps arrived on the 23rd.
117-7 GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION
1957
Photo: Ed Jackson
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