Philip Sheridan wasn’t a physically imposing man. He stood barely five feet five inches tall. Yet by the end of the Civil War, he had become one of the most feared commanders in the Union Army.
His troops admired him. His enemies respected him. Newspapers celebrated him. And for decades after the war, Sheridan remained one of the most famous military figures in America.
Today, however, his name is often overshadowed by Grant, Sherman, and Lee.
That’s unfortunate. Because few generals had a bigger impact on how the Civil War ended.






