Tag Archives: American Civil War

Appomattox Courthouse Village Part 1

I dislike my photo taken, and I rarely show one, but I just wanted to show the other Laura (she knows who she is) that, yes, it did rain on this road trip. The rain, however, was never a big deal.

Appomattox Courthouse Village

Appomattox Court House and the surrounding countryside is beautiful and peaceful; a bucolic place that anyone would want to live in.

Appomattox Courthouse Village

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

The antebellum village began as Clover Hill. The village was a stop along the Richmond-Lynchburg stagecoach road. It was also the site of organizational meetings, so when Appomattox County was established by an Act on February 8, 1845, Clover Hill village became the county seat. 

Appomattox Courthouse Village

In early April 1865, Confederate States Army forces commanded by General Robert E. Lee were being pursued by Union Army troops commanded by Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant. 

Appomattox Courthouse Village

The Richmond-Lynchburg Road was important to Lee’s retreat from Grant. However, the Federals blocked this route, and in spite of Lee’s attacks, his army was surrounded, forcing him to surrender.

“Then there is nothing left for me to do but to go and see General Grant, and I would rather die a thousand deaths.”

Lee formally surrendered to Grant on April 9, 1865 at the Wilmer McLean house in Appomattox. (After the Battle of Bull Run, McLean had moved here to escape the war.)

On April 12, a formal ceremony of parade and the stacking of arms led by Confederate Maj. Gen. John B. Gordon to Federal Brig. Gen. Joshua Chamberlain marked the disbandment of the Army of Northern Virginia.

Nearly 28,000 remaining officers and men were paroled, free to return home without their major weapons, but enabling men to take their horses and officers to retain their sidearms (swords and pistols), and effectively ending the war in Virginia.

Appomattox Courthouse Village

There were perhaps 100 soldiers killed here between April 8 and 9. 19 of those are buried here in Appomattox Court House Confederate Cemetery.

Appomattox Courthouse Village

Only 8 of these soldiers are known. Alabamian Private Jesse H. Hutchins enlisted only 5 days after Confederate troops fired upon Fort Sumter. He had survived 1,454 days of service, only to be killed a few yards from the Appomattox Courthouse in the evening of April 8, 1865, just hours before General Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to General Ulysses S. Grant.

Appomattox Courthouse Village

The unidentified Union soldier was found in a wooded lot after the Federal dead had been removed in 1866 and 1867.

Appomattox Courthouse Village

I discovered Thomas Tibbs in the Appomattox Courthouse museum. He stood out to me because he was an Appomattox County native and served in Custer’s U.S. 7th Cavalry. He did not die at the Battle of Little Bighorn, which I have visited twice, but at the Battle of Washita.

Appomattox Courthouse Village

Since 1903, when General Joshua Chamberlain revisited Appomattox Court House, and described the McLean house as a heap of ruins, the house has been reconstructed. I will share that in the next post.

See the world around you!

Bennett Place North Carolina

I am going to show my ignorance here, by stating that I did not realize that the surrender of the Northern Army of Virginia by General Robert E. Lee to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse did not end the American Civil War.

On our road trip, the Hubster and I discovered Bennett Place, where I learned the rest of the story.

Bennett Place North Carolina

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Bennett Place North Carolina

General Joseph E. Johnston was the highest-ranking United States officer to resign his commission and fight for the Confederacy. William T. Sherman left his position as superintendent at Louisiana Seminary and Military Institute to fight for the Union.


The two met in battle in 1861 at First Manassas (Bull Run) where Johnston’s Confederate army forced Union troops, including a brigade led by Colonel Sherman, into a full retreat.


After recovering from wounds sustained in 1862, Johnston was sent to the Western Theater of Operations.


Within two years, the men confronted each other at Vicksburg and again in the Atlanta Campaign.
They faced off for the fourth time, in 1865, in the Carolinas Campaign, and ultimately jointly orchestrated the war’s final chapter at Bennett Place.

Bennett Place North Carolina

In 1846, James and Nancy (Leigh Pierson) Bennett purchased the property here. They supplemented their farm income by tailoring clothes, selling liquor, providing transportation with their wagon, and renting space in their home to travelers.

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

On April 17, 1865, Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston and Union General William T. Sherman, met under a flag of truce midway between their lines on Hillsborough Road, seven miles west of Durham Station, to discuss surrender terms.

Johnston suggested that they use this nearby farmhouse, the home of James and Nancy Bennett, for privacy.

Bennett Place North Carolina

Sherman offered terms similar to those that General Ulysses S. Grant had given to General Robert E. Lee at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia on April 9, 1865.

After negotiations, on April 26, Sherman and Johnston met at Bennett Place, where Johnston accepted the terms and surrendered the armies under his command including those in the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida, about 89,270 Confederates. It was the largest surrender of troops in the war.

Bennett Place North Carolina

There is a very nice visitor’s center and informative displays at Bennett Place. The employees are knowledgeable and helpful.

Bennett Place North Carolina

Bennett Place North Carolina

See the world around you!

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site

Kansas was one of my favorite states to travel through.

Sunrise Paxico Rest Area Kansas

For one thing, Kansas has fantastic sunrises and sunsets.

For another, Kansas takes good care of her travelers. Her rest areas are clean and cater to those who need a place to spend the night. I went to sleep listening to cicadas. (I love the sound of crickets at night, so it was easy for me to love the cicadas.)

Kansas has easy to read and informative historical markers. This one was at a rest area; the same place where I photographed the rising sun.

Sunrise Paxico Rest Area Kansas

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

Another unplanned stop was to a place that the Hubster, nor I, had ever heard of.

We came upon the Confederate Memorial State Historic Site in Missouri. We are so glad that we stopped to check it out!

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

The grounds are beautiful and offer picnic sites, walking trails, and ponds for recreational fishing.

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

From 1891 to 1950, the site was used as an old soldiers’ home for veterans of the Confederate States Army after the American Civil War. 

Confederate veterans, some of whom had difficulty accessing medical treatment and who had been disenfranchised from voting, periodically met throughout the state of Missouri after the war. At a meeting in Higginsville in 1889, the idea of creating an old soldiers’ home to care for aging veterans was discussed. In 1891, 365 acres in the Higginsville vicinity were purchased to establish the old soldier’s home. The families of Confederate veterans were also allowed to live at the site.

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

The chapel is one of about 30 buildings located on the grounds at its peak.

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

Within the cemetery are 723 graves and a monument erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy.  

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

The monument is modeled on the Lion of Lucerne, one of the most famous sculptures in Switzerland.

USA author Mark Twain praised the sculpture of a mortally wounded lion as “the most mournful and moving piece of stone in the world.”

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

I know it moved my soul.

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

 The home remained in operation until 1950, when John T. Graves, the last Confederate veteran in the state died.

The state government purchased the site to operate as a state park.

Confederate Memorial State Historic Site Missouri

For further reading, you might be interested in an article about the controversy in removing Confederate monuments.

See the world around you!