The Confederacy Collapses

As 1865 dawned, military disaster littered the Confederate landscape. With the destruction of John B. Hood’s army at Nashville in December 1864, the interior of the Confederacy lay in Yankee hands (Map 15.3). Sherman’s troops, resting momentarily in Savannah, eyed South Carolina hungrily. Farther north, Grant had Lee’s army pinned down in Petersburg, a few miles from Richmond.

Some Confederates turned their backs on the rebellion. News from the battlefield made it difficult not to conclude that the Yankees had beaten them. When soldiers’ wives begged their husbands to return home to keep their families from starving, the stream of deserters grew dramatically. Still, white Southerners had demonstrated a remarkable endurance for their cause. Half of the Confederate soldiers had been killed or wounded or had died of disease, and ragged, hungry women and children had sacrificed throughout one of the bloodiest wars then known to history.

The end came with a rush. On February 1, 1865, Sherman’s troops stormed out of Savannah into South Carolina, the “cradle of the Confederacy.” In Virginia, Lee abandoned Petersburg on April 2, and Richmond fell on April 3. Grant pursued Lee until he surrendered on April 9, 1865, at Appomattox Court House, Virginia. Grant offered generous peace terms. He allowed Lee’s men to return home and to keep their horses to help “put in a crop to carry themselves and their families through the next winter.” With Lee gone, the remaining Confederate armies lost hope and gave up within two weeks. After four years, the war was over.

No one was more relieved than Lincoln, but his celebration was restrained. He told his cabinet that his postwar burdens would weigh almost as heavily as those of wartime. Seeking a distraction, Lincoln attended Ford’s Theatre on the evening of Good Friday, April 14, 1865. John Wilkes Booth, an actor with southern sympathies, slipped into the president’s box and shot Lincoln, who died the next morning. Vice President Andrew Johnson became president. The man who had led the nation through the war would not lead it during the postwar search for a just peace.

> QUICK REVIEW

Why were the siege of Vicksburg and the battle of Gettysburg crucial to the outcome of the war?