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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: February 21, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Sherman or search for Sherman in all documents.

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n birth, did not come out with our forces, but remained to receive the Yankees. The evacuation of Charleston should rather inspire cheerfulness than gloom. Sherman can only be checked by an immediate concentration in his front of all our troops, both in North and South Carolina. If this is done, he may be defeated and his pstraight up the railroad to Charlotte, thence to Salisbury, thence to Greensboro' and Danville, and so on to Richmond. Many different estimates have been made of Sherman's army.--Some think he has sixty thousand men. We know he has four full army corps and a strong force of cavalry. His corps will not number less than twelve thouRichmond and Petersburg lines. All continues quiet on the lines before Richmond and Petersburg. Grant congratulates himself on holding General Lee here while Sherman is turned loose upon the Carolinas. Negro soldiers — Confirmations. The Senate bill to raise two hundred thousand negro soldiers will, it is understood,
ay, the 17th. The news is of little interest. Gold, 205 1-8. Sherman's March. The last of Sherman's troops (except the garrison) leSherman's troops (except the garrison) left Savannah on the 27th ultimo. He has the Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Seventeenth and Twentieth corps. The left wing (Fourteenth and Twentieth ains were loaded to the utmost limit. On the ration question, General Sherman is safe. His army can subsist forty days away from all base. State, South Carolina's governmental seat is doomed to fall before Sherman's prowess. The roads give great trouble. Only a spirit of iemy has only appeared in small forces of cavalry. Speaking of Sherman's objective point, and the forces to co-operate with him, the Time of the ablest officers in the Union army. He was associated with Sherman in his advance upon Atlanta, was subsequently with General Thomas nth, Fifteenth, Seventeenth and Twentieth corps, now marching with Sherman, the shout of victory which this invincible army has so often sent