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  1. When Rev Thomas Ewing Sherman was born on 12 October 1856, in San Francisco, California, United States, his father, Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman, was 36 and his mother, Eleanor Boyle Ewing, was 32. He lived in Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States in 1930 and Svalbard, Norway in 1933. He registered for military service in ...

  2. Aug 11, 2017 · Thomas Ewing Sherman was born into a House divided by religion on October 12, 1856. He was the son of William Tecumseh Sherman, at the time an obscure former Army officer, and Ellen Ewing Sherman.

  3. Thomas Sherman was the son of Major General William and Ellen Ewing Sherman. His father is most noted for his march to the sea that led to a scorched-earth policy in Georgia during the Civil War. He was highly intelligent, graduating from Georgetown at age 18 then pursued a career in law by earning a degree from Yale two years later.

  4. Nov 3, 2023 · Sherman was an American lawyer, educator, and Catholic Jesuit priest. He was the fourth child and second son of Union Army General William Tecumseh Sherman and his wife Ellen Ewing Sherman. Life. Sherman was named after his maternal grandfather Thomas Ewing, a U.S. Senator and cabinet secretary. Tom was born in San Francisco, California, while ...

  5. Thomas Ewing Sr. was an Ohio Senator and U. S. Secretary of the Treasury. He raised Sherman as his own son after Sherman's father died in 1829. Ewing Jr. was an ardent anti-slavery man. His observations on the election fraud in Kansas were later instrumental in blocking the admission of Kansas into the Union as a slave state.

  6. Thomas Ewing, a family friend and a Whig political force in Ohio, adopted the boy, and his foster mother added William to his name. When Sherman was 16, Ewing obtained an appointment to West Point for him. Sherman graduated near the head of his class…. Politics, Law & Government Politics & Political Systems.

  7. Jan 12, 2024 · Thomas and Maria Ewing became wards of William Tecumseh Sherman after his father, Ohio Supreme Court Justice Charles R. Sherman, died unexpectedly in 1829. In 1823, Thomas Ewing ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the Ohio General Assembly.