Ellen Ewing Sherman

Eleanor Boyle Ewing Sherman, portrait by G.P.A. Healy (1868)

Ellen Ewing Sherman (October 4, 1824 November 28, 1888), was the wife of General William Tecumseh Sherman, a leading Union general in the American Civil War. She was also a prominent figure of the times in her own right.

She was born Eleanor Boyle Ewing in Lancaster, Ohio, the daughter of prominent Whig politician Thomas Ewing and Maria Boyle Ewing. Ellen's parents also raised her future husband, "Cump" Sherman, after the 1829 death of his own father.

Ellen Sherman died in New York City on November 28, 1888, survived by her husband and six of their children. She is buried in Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri; her tombstone there identifies her as Eleanor Boyle Ewing Sherman.[1]

Accomplishments

Ellen was educated in Lancaster and Washington, D.C. She married "Cump" Sherman in Washington, D.C., on May 1, 1850, in a ceremony attended by President Zachary Taylor and other political luminaries.[2] The Shermans, who often lived apart even before the Civil War due to Sherman's military career, had eight children together, two of whom (Willie and Charles) died during the war.[3]

Although women did not have the right to vote in her day, Ellen declared herself to favor Abraham Lincoln in advance of the 1860 elections and was fierce in her pro-Union sentiment.[4] During the Civil War, in addition to her husband, three of her four then-living brothers became Union generalsHugh Boyle Ewing, Thomas Ewing, Jr., and Charles Ewing. In addition, Ellen worked to protect her husband's military standing during the war, especially in a January 1862 Washington meeting with Lincoln at a time when General Sherman's reputation was under a cloud due to newspaper charges of insanity.[5]

Ellen was a devout Catholic and often at odds with her husband over religious topics. One of their sons, Thomas Ewing Sherman, became a Catholic priest. She also took an ongoing interest in Indian missions and was credited as the principal organizer of the Catholic Indian Missionary Association.[6] In "the most absorbing and monumental work of her life," Ellen played an active role in U.S. observances of the Golden Jubilee of Pope Pius IX (May 21, 1877) for which she later received the personal thanks of the Pope.[7]

Writings

Notes

  1. Illinois in the Civil War
  2. Burton, 75-78; Kerr, 37.
  3. Kerr, 103-105.
  4. EES letters to WTS, July 3, 10, 17 & December 31, 1860, January 25, 29, February 6 & October 4, 1861, April 23 & August 9, 30, 1862, September 17, 1864, Sherman Family Papers, Notre Dame Archives.
  5. Burton, 138-40; EES letter to WTS, January 29, 1862, Sherman Family Papers, Notre Dame Archives.
  6. Rahill, 121-31, 154-59, 176.
  7. Carey, 51; McAllister,346-48.

References

External links

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