It seems, to some degree, that I am
visiting these Civil War sites in reverse order. After traveling to Lexington
Where General Lee lived the last years of his life, I then spent some time at
Appomattox Court House. For those of you unfamiliar with this famous location,
it is the village where General Lee surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant.
Basically this ended the Civil War, even though there were still other
Confederate armies in both the Eastern and Western theaters still bearing arms
and fighting the Union armies. Each army
would eventually surrender on their own.
Lee was never the General in Charge
of the entire Confederate Army. He was only the head of the Army of Northern
Virginia, but because of his status with the entire Southern population, including
the other Southern armies, his actions and words carried great weight. The
surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia was not a popular action in the eyes
of Jefferson Davis, but none the less, was the right thing to do. Davis
supported the thought of going to the mountains with this army and fighting
guerilla-style warfare. Lee knew this was wrong and that this tactic would only
prolong the inevitable and cause more lives to be lost.
But I digress. Appomattox Court House
was a small village that was comprised of a tavern, the county court house, a
general store, the county jail, a couple law offices, and several residences.
One of the residences was that of Wilmer McLean. This gentleman lived on the
battlefield of the first Manassas battle four years earlier and moved his
family to the Virginia country to get away from the war. How ironic that the
war would end in the parlor of the house he bought to escape the war.
To visit this village and the Wilmer
McLean house was quite an experience. Several of the structures are originals,
with a few being accurate reproductions. The court house had burned and was a
reproduction of the original. The McLean house is also a reproduction for the
most part. After the war, Mr. McLean went bankrupt, lost the house to the bank,
and it was sold along with many of its furnishings. Some of the furniture that
was in the parlor where Grant and Lee signed the surrender papers was bought by
many of the officers that were in attendance at this event. A speculator eventually bought the house in 1893
and disassembled it with the intention of shipping it to Washington, DC. He ran
out of money before it was shipped and the house lay on the ground and
eventually rotted and or disappeared. In the 1940’s , using the speculator’s
plans and specifications and an archaeological dig, the house was reconstructed
on the original site. Many of the original bricks were used in the
reconstruction. Most of the furnishings for the parlor has been located and is
on display, mainly at the Smithsonian. The furnishings now in the parlor are
exact replicas. It was certainly worth the trip to see and
feel this place. Standing in the parlor, I could almost see Grant and his
officers and Lee and his aide in the room.
I also visited Sailor’s Creek. This
was the last major battle for Lee’s army before his surrender. It took place 72
hours prior to the Appomattox Court House meeting, as Lee was retreating in an
attempt to secure rations for his troops and then to unite with Joseph
Johnston’s army in North Carolina.
With constant rear guard action from
the Union army in pursuit of Lee since Lee fled Petersburg, his army is
starving and straggling. They continue to fight for Lee though. But with this
final clash at Sailor’s Creek, Lee loses 7,700 men; nearly a quarter of his
remaining army.
This battlefield site is not a
National Park Service location and it is obvious. The state of Virginia owns
the few locations in relation to the battle site, but most of the battlefield
is privately owned. This site is not worth the time and effort to visit. The
only sites available to see are the Hillsman House that saw the first major
action of this battle. A short distance from the Hillsman House is Holt’s
Corner where General Ewell sends the wagon train north on Jamestown Road to
avoid the Union cavalry as the infantry continue their march west, the Lockett
House that is the location of another bloody clash between Union and
Confederate artillery and infantry, and the “double bridges” where the supply
wagon train bogs down attempting to cross Sailor’s Creek. At this point about
300 wagons and ambulances are captured in addition to about 1,700 of General
Gordon’s men. Ewell and Gordon were generals in charge of various brigades in
Lee’s army.
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