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  1. Charles Robert Sherman (c. September 26, 1788 – June 24, 1829) was an American lawyer and public servant. Of his 11 children, four became prominent public figures during and after the Civil War . Life and career. Sherman was born in Norwalk, Connecticut, the son of Taylor Sherman, a judge and state representative.

  2. Supreme Court. Justices 1803 to Present. Charles Robert Sherman. Charles Robert Sherman served on the Supreme Court of Ohio in the 1820s, but perhaps his biggest link to history is the fact that he was the father of Civil War General William Tecumseh Sherman. Born on Sept. 26, 1788, in Norwalk, Conn., Charles was the oldest son of Taylor and ...

  3. The Sherman Family Tree. Charles Robert Sherman (Sept. 26, 1788-June 24, 1829) and Mary Hoyt Sherman (Dec. 28, 1787-Sept. 23, 1852) Children: Charles Taylor Sherman (Feb. 3, 1811- Jun. 1, 1879) Married Eliza Jane Williams (1822-1893), Feb. 2, 1841; Children: Mary Hoyt Sherman (1842-1904)

  4. William Tecumseh Sherman was born in 1820 in Lancaster, Ohio, to Charles Robert Sherman, a successful lawyer. His father died while William was still a boy and after his father’s death, he was raised by a family friend, attorney Thomas Ewing. His siblings all enjoyed professional success. His older brother Charles became a federal judge.

  5. Father of legendary Civil WCharles Robert Sherman (c. September 26, 1788 – June 24, 1829) was an American lawyer and public servant. Of his 11 children, four became prominent public figures during and after the civil war.

    • Male
    • Mary Elizabeth Hoyt
  6. Sherman nació el 8 de febrero de 1820 en Lancaster, Ohio, cerca de las riberas del río Hocking. Su padre, Charles Robert Sherman, un exitoso abogado que trabajaba en la Suprema Corte de Ohio, murió repentinamente en 1829.

  7. Justice of Ohio State Supreme Court. Father of legendary Civil War General William Tecumseh Sherman. Sherman was born in Norwalk, Connecticut, the son of Taylor Sherman, a judge and state representative. He studied law in the office of a Mr. Chapman in Newtown and was admitted to the bar in 1809.