Sherman's Historical raid. By H. V. Boynton. Cincinnati: Wilstach, Baldwin & Co.
The author has kindly sent us a copy of this able and scathing review of Sherman's Memoirs, and we have read it with very great interest.
He shows most conclusively from the official records that Sherman has done great injustice to Grant, Buell, Rosecrans, Thomas, McPherson, Schofield, and almost every other officer to whom he alludes in his book, and he carries the war into Africa by severely criticising Sherman's generalship, upon some of his most important fields, and showing that he was actually saved from terrible disaster again and again by the very men whom he now disparages.
We cannot, of course, accept all that General Boynton has written; but we rejoice to see this well merited rebuke to “the General of the Army” who not only makes himself “the hero of his own story,” but oversteps all bounds of delicacy and propriety (not to say common decency), and well illustrates in his Memoirs the Proverb, “Oh! That mine enemy would write a book!”