We
stood on a country lane in Virginia, the sound of musket-fire and cannons
bringing history to life as reenactors told the tale of the events that took
place precisely 152 years previous. I enjoy putting effort into planning our family
vacations, but even my attention to detail neglected to notice that our visit
to Appomattox Courthouse National Historical Park would coincide with the anniversary of the day in 1865
that General Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to Lt.
Gen. Ulysses S. Grant in what signaled the end of the Confederacy.
Mikus and General Robert E. Lee on the steps of the McLean House |
First
of all, Appomattox. It’s pronounced ap-uh-mat-uh ks.
Fanning the flames |
A
second fact that I learned is that Appomattox Court House is the name of the village.
None of the events of the surrender took place in the actual courthouse, but are
instead named for the village. What was a stop along the Richmond-Lynchburg
Stage Road became the county seat with the formation of Appomattox county in 1845. The
county courthouse was built in 1846, burned in 1892, was reconstructed in 1964,
and today houses the visitor center and museum.
Appomattox county courthouse center, county jail on right |
The
Battle of Appomattox Court House was fought on the morning of April 9, 1865 and
was the final engagement of Confederate Army general Robert E. Lee's Army of
Northern Virginia. Lee had abandoned the Confederate capital of Richmond after
the ten-month Siege of Petersburg. Retreating west, he hoped to join his army
with the Confederate forces in North Carolina but instead were pursued and cut
off by Union forces.
Meeks stable |
The
surrender took place in the parlor of the McLean House. The terms asked that
the Confederates pledge not to take up arms against the United States; they
would not be imprisoned or prosecuted for treason, officers were allowed to
keep their sidearms, the men were allowed to take home their horses and mules
to carry out the spring planting, and food rations were provided for the
starving troops. Custer and other Union officers purchased the furnishings of
the room Lee and Grant met in as souvenirs. In 1893 the house was dismantled by
a private company in preparation to move it to Washington DC as a war museum,
but the piles of bricks and lumber were never moved. In the 1940s the National
Park Service used plans and archaeological evidence to rebuild the house on its
1848 foundation, and today the reconstruction is open to the public as it would
have looked at the time of the surrender.
Parlor of the McLean house: Lee sat at the marble table on the left, Grant at the wood table on the right |
A few
of the original village structures have survived, including the Clover Hill
Tavern (1819) and its kitchen (now a bookstore). On the morning of April 12,
1865, about 5,000 Federal troops lined the Richmond-Lynchburg State Road to
receive the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia. After the Stacking of
Arms (weapons, flags and other accoutrements), the Confederates were given
passes (paroles) that allowed the soldiers to return home; the Tavern was where
these parole passes were printed. At the surrender ceremonies 28,000
Confederate soldiers passed by and stacked their arms. 26,300 of those are
listed on the Appomattox Roster lists, while an additional 7,700 who were
captured at Sailor's Creek three days earlier were treated as prisoners of war.
view of courthouse through Clover Hill Tavern |
The surrender
didn’t immediately end the Confederate States of America, but the terms set at
Appomattox Court House governed the surrenders of all the other Confederate
armies: Johnston’s army in NC, Taylor’s army in Alabama, and Smith’s army in
Texas. The end of the war (and of the Confederacy) was final only after Edmund
Kirby Smith surrendered on June 2nd.
Nearby Longacre Bed and Breakfast |
A few
spots associated with the events of the surrender lie outside the village,
including Lee and Grant’s headquarters sites, a small Confederate cemetery and
the North Carolina monument. Three miles southeast is the town of Appomattox;
the closest restaurants, stores and accommodations are located here. We spent
the night at Longacre Bed and Breakfast, an English Tudor built in 1933. Located
on two ½ acres of secluded gardens, the B&B features 5 guestrooms in the
main house and 1 carriage house all with private bathrooms. The breakfast and
hospitality couldn’t be beat; I highly recommend booking at Longacre if you’re
looking for unique accommodations on the doorstep of Appomattox Court House
National Historical Park.
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