. Trials and triumphs : the record of the Fifty-Fifth Ohio Volunteer Infantry . George Collingwood Sergeant, Company D ) JiiNF. 22. 1864, IN Battle of Kenesaw Mountain. George W. HollowayCompany D 1864] CAMPAIGNING WITH SHERMAN IN GEORGIA 167 with respect for each others soldierly qualities, and as loyal to eachother as to the cause for which they fought. It is true, mistakeswere made during the campaign, as they always will be made, but,in the language of General J. D. Cox, He would be a rash criticwho would confidently assert that he could find better means toattain desired ends than
. Trials and triumphs : the record of the Fifty-Fifth Ohio Volunteer Infantry . George Collingwood Sergeant, Company D ) JiiNF. 22. 1864, IN Battle of Kenesaw Mountain. George W. HollowayCompany D 1864] CAMPAIGNING WITH SHERMAN IN GEORGIA 167 with respect for each others soldierly qualities, and as loyal to eachother as to the cause for which they fought. It is true, mistakeswere made during the campaign, as they always will be made, but,in the language of General J. D. Cox, He would be a rash criticwho would confidently assert that he could find better means toattain desired ends than those which were employed in attack, ordefence, over a hundred miles of mountains and forests in northernGeorgia in 1864. CHAPTER X THE MARCH TO THE SEA THE occupation of Atlanta by the Twentieth Corps marked thecessation of active operations by General Shermans armies,which since May 2 had endured a terrific strain. The ConfederateArmy concentrated near Lovejoys Station was not molested, andthe Union armies retired, the Army of the Ohio to Decatur and theArmy of the Tennessee to East Point. The Army of the Cumber-land had been grouped around Atlanta. The Twentieth Cor
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