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Captain (5000+ posts)
April 24, 1865
General Grant reached Sherman's headquarters in Raleigh and brought with him the news that President Johnson had disapproved Shermans agreement with Johnston. Sherman was ordered to give forty--eight hours notice and then resume hostilities if there was no surrender. Sherman was incensed both by the disapproval and the large amount of material on the subject in the New York papers including the dispatch of March 3, 1865 from Lincoln to Grant stating the generals should accept nothing but surrender and should not negotiate peace. Sherman said he never received the message. The fiery general soon raged against Stanton and Halleck, claiming he had not gone beyond Lincoln's wishes. While historians differ, it does seem that Sherman had gone beyond military obligations, and that he did try to make a peace agreement. Grant was now under orders to direct military movements and left Sherman to carry them out. General Johnston was ordered to suspend the truce at once. President Davis approved Johnston's agreement with Sherman, not knowing it had been rejected by the Union.
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Captain (5000+ posts)
April 26, 1865 ...
At the Bennett House near Durham, General William T Sherman met again with General Joseph E Johnston in midafternoon. Final terms of capitulation for troops of Johnston's command were signed following the formula set by Grant at Appomattox. The same day the terms were approved by Grant. All arms and public property were to be deposited by Confederates at Greensborough. Troops were to give their parole and pledge not to take up arms until released from this obligation. Side arms of officers and their private horses and baggage could be retained. All officers and men were permitted to return to their homes. Field transportation was to be loaned to the troops for getting home and later use. A small quantity of arms would be retained and then deposited in state capitals. Horses and other private property were to be retained. troops from Te[x]as and Arkansas were to be furnished water transportation. Surrender of naval forces with the limits of Johnston command. Thus the second major army of the Confederate States of of America totaling in all about thirty thousand men surrendered. The Confederate Cabinet met with President Davis at Charlotte and agreed to leave that day with the aim of getting west of the Mississippi. ...".
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Captain (5000+ posts)
April 26, 1865 Gen. Joseph Johnston surrendered the Army of
Tennessee to Gen. William T. Sherman at Bennett Place in west
Durham, North Carolina.
That same day Col. Josiah Patterson was writing from Alabama:
Somerville, April 26, 1865.
Brig. Gen. R.S. Granger,
Commanding U.S. Forces, North Alabama:
SIR: I have seen your letter and also that of General Thomas, addressed to the citizens of this county. Thanking you for your kind intentions, I beg leave to make the following statement: There is at this time a considerable force of Confederate cavalry in this section of country. I have received no notification of General Lee's surrender except through Northern channels. Although I do not doubt that it is so, yet you are aware that I can take no action in the premises unless I had official information of the fact, and it would be impossible for citizens of the county, with any degree of propriety, to make any engagements which would compromise them with a command which is composed of their relatives and friends. I make free to state, general, that if General Lee has surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia, it leaves, in my judgement, our cause in a hopeless condition. A further shedding of blood would be suicidal. Guerrilla or partisan warfare would be the only warfare we could resort to, and that would prove disastrous alike to friend and foe. However much may have been said heretofore of guerilla warfare as a last resort, yet no good man, however patriotic he might be, would encourage, much less participate in, such a struggle. It is impossible for any action to be taken at this time. I will, however, communicate with General Roddey, and use my excretions to bring about such joint action on the part of the people and this command as will best secure life and property. In the meantime I respectfully ask that you refrain from any offensive operations for twenty days and I will do the same. You will please communicate with me immediately at this place as to what action you will take in this premises. You will perhaps not deem it improper for me to state no good man or brave spirit in our army takes pleasure in the assassination of President Lincoln. The deed has met with the universal condemnation of our troops, so far as I have heard an expression.
I am, general, very respectfully, your obedient servant,
JOSIAH PATTERSON,
Colonel, Commanding Fifth Regiment Cavalry.
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Captain (5000+ posts)
Edward C. Walthall
The war ended for Major-General Edward C. Walthall in North Carolina, as his division joined Joe Johnston at the battle of Bentonville. Walthall was paroled on May 2, 1865, and returned to his beloved Mississippi. After serving as an U. S. Senator for twelve years, Walthall died in Washington. The following day, Members of the House, the Diplomatic Corps, the Justices of the Supreme Court and the President of the United States assembled in the Senate Chambers, where Walthall's body had been placed. After the funeral rites had been administered, a detail was selected to accompany his remains back to Holly Springs, Mississippi, where he is buried today. (Garner)
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Captain (5000+ posts)
Forrest calls it quits
May 4, 1865 The 21st Tennessee Cavalry CSA surrendered at Citronelle, Alabama under the command of Lt. Gen. Taylor, son of the former president. This included the remnants of the cavalry of Nathan Bedford Forrest who declared “You boys can do what you **** please, I’m agoing home.”
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Captain (5000+ posts)
Hatch and Forrest call it quits
May 5, 1865 Two armies on the same road, or at least two soldiers covering much of the same ground was certainly true of Edward Hatch of Maine and Nathan Bedford Forrest of Tennessee. These two men confronted each other across Tennessee and Alabama from 1863 until the war’s end. It was Hatch who had the last say at least on paper as he wrote the following document demanding the surrender of the remainder of Forrest’s command:
[HEADQUARTERS FIFTH DIVISION, CAVALRY CORPS,
MILITARY DIVISION OF THE MISSISSIPPI,
Eastport, Miss., May 5, 1865.
Lieut. Gen. N. B. FORREST:
I am directed by the major-general commanding Department of the Cumberland to demand the surrender of all Confederate forces under your command on the same terms given to Generals Lee and Johnston by General Grant, viz:
Rolls of all the officers and men to be made in duplicate, one copy to be given to an officer designated by me, the other to be retained by such officer as you may designate, the officers to give their individual paroles not to take arms against the Government of the United States until properly exchanged, and each company or regimental commander sign a like parole for the men of their command; the arms, artillery, and public property to be parked and stacked, and turned over to the officer appointed by me to receive them. This will not embrace the side-arms of the officers or the private horses or baggage. This done, each officer and man will be allowed to return to their homes, and not to be disturbed by the U.S. authorities so long as they observe their parole and the laws in force where they may reside.
If these terms are accepted, send an officer to Baldwyn or Eastport to arrange final preliminaries. Answer by bearer of these dispatches.
Very respectfully, your obedient servant,
EDWARD HATCH,
Brigadier-General, Commanding.]
SOURCE: Official Records
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Captain (5000+ posts)
Wrapping it up
May 10, 1865 President Jefferson Davis captured at Irwinville, Georgia and sent to prison at Fortress Monroe in Virginia.
May 25, 1865 The 10th TN Cavalry relieved of duty at Natchez,
Mississippi and ordered to Nashville.
May 26, 1865 The Department of Mississippi forces who had been under the command of Gen. Smith were surrendered in New Orleans, Louisiana
June 13, 1865 The 10th TN Cavalry were ordered to Johnsonville, TN along with Private James Patterson Cockerham.
June 23, 1865 Gen. Stand Watie CSA, a Cherokee Chief, surrendered the last of the Native American forces.
August 1, 1865 The 10th TN Cavalry mustered out of service. The war for James Patterson Cockerham was finally over.
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