"Appomattox County Jail (1870) Background Bocock-Isbell House (1850)" by U.S. National Park Service , public domain
Appomattox Court HouseBrochure |
Official Brochure of Appomattox Court House National Historical Park (NHP) in Virginia. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Appomattox Court House
National Historical Park
Virginia
Appomattox Court House
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
ALL PHOTOS NPS UNLESS OTHERWISE CREDITED
The Surrender Site . . . Then and Now
Here on April 9, 1865, Robert E. Lee, commanding general of the Army of Northern
Virginia, surrendered his men to Ulysses
S. Grant, general-in-chief of all United
States forces. Though several Confederate armies under different commanders
remained in the field, Lee's surrender
signaled the end of the Southern states'
attempt to create a separate nation.
Three days later the men of the Army of
Northern Virginia marched before the
Union Army, laid down their flags,
stacked their weapons, and then began
Academy Dwelling
Yesterday and
House, which no
Today
longer exists.
Compare the picture
of the village today
(above) with the pic- ©Tavern Guest House
ture at left taken in ©Clover Hill Tavern
1889. Both show the
village from the west, © W o o d s o n Law Office
though the older one © Meeks Store
is farther away. The
©Courthouse
numbers are on the
© McLean House
same buildings in
both pictures. The
© Kitchen
building at the far
left in the older pho- ©Slaves' Quarters
Grant and Lee
Ulysses S. Grant (far
left) and Robert E. Lee
were well-matched adversaries who skillfully
led their troops against
each other in the last
year of the Civil War.
Grant knew how to exploit an opponent's
weaknesses to best
advantage. Lee's
strengths were his aggressiveness and his
ability to assess an opponent's capabilities.
the journey back to their homes. For
them it was an ending, but for the nation
it was a new beginning. Today, the
National Park Service, which manages
this historical park, invites you to walk
the old country lanes where these events
took place and in the quietness and stillness imagine the activity of those April
days of 1865. Use the map and guide on
the reverse side as you travel about the
park. Vignettes about the Appomattox
story are presented on this side of the
brochure.
tograph is the Union
The McLeans
During the war Wilmer McLean and his
family left their home
in Manassas, Va., for
business purposes. He
was a sugar speculator
and bought the property at Appomattox
Court House in the fall
of 1862 to be near the
railroad. Lee used the
parlor of their home
(left) when he surrendered to Grant.
The Park
Appomattox Court
House National Historical Park is located in
south central Virginia,
92 miles west of Richmond and 18 miles
east of Lynchburg. It is
on Va. 24, three miles
northeast of the town
of Appomattox, where
motel accommodations, restaurants,
and stores are located.
The nearest public
campground is at Holiday Lake State Park.
Park programs show
how the war affected
the people of the village and how they
lived from day to day.
Begin your visit at the
visitor center in the reconstructed courthouse, which contains
an information desk, a
museum, and an auditorium where videos
are presented. Service
animals are welcome.
The Paroles
Black Contributions
Blacks served in both
armies. In Lee's army,
blacks served in support roles (musicians,
cooks, teamsters, and
personal servants), and
39 of them received
paroles. For Grant,
seven regiments of
black soldiers known
as United States Colored Troops, about
2,500 men, participated in the Battle of
Appomattox Court
House just hours before the surrender.
The Village
house was built. Slowly the settlement grew
into a village of homes,
stores, and lawyers'
offices. Among the
original structures still
standing from 1865
are the Clover Hill
Tavern (left, in 1865),
Meeks Store, Woodson
Law Office, Peers
House, Mariah Wright
House, and Jones Law
Office.
Originally the village
of Appomattox Court
House was known as
Clover Hill. It was a
small settlement with
a few houses around
the tavern, a stoppingoff point on the main
Richmond-Lynchburg
Stage Road. When the
county of Appomattox
was formed in 1845,
Clover Hill was chosen
as the county seat and
renamed Appomattox
Court House. The next
year the county court-
Surrender Terms
When Grant and Lee
sat down in the parlor
of Wilmer McLean's
home, Grant asked
only that the Confederates pledge not to
take up arms against
the United States.
Officers were allowed
to keep their side arms
and any Confederate
soldier who owned a
horse was allowed to
take it home with him.
The generous terms
began the process of
reunification.
The official surrender
documents were prepared by Lt. Col.
Charles Marshall of
Lee's staff and Lt. Col.
Ely S. Parker of Grant's.
They appear at the far
left in Keith Rocco's
painting of the surren-
der. Also shown,
standing directly behind Grant, is Capt.
Robert Todd Lincoln,
son of President Abraham Lincoln and a junior member of Grant's
military family.
The County
At the time of the
Civil War, Appomattox
County was rural and
agricultural. Of its 8,900
residents, 54 percent
were black, most of
them enslaved. The
county seat was the
only town, boasting a
population of less than
150. The few trades—
blacksmith, cooper,
wheelwright, miller,
and sawyer—served
mostly the needs of
farmers and plantation
owners.
Despite the county's
overwhelmingly agricultural character, the
people needed a place
to conduct legal affairs,
buy the few items they
did not grow or make,
and meet neighbors.
Appomattox Court
House filled these
needs.
Some lawyers opened
offices around the
courthouse. Two of the
county's dozen stores
were in the small village. Meeks Store, the
To print the passes
that Confederates
needed to return
to their homes,
printing presses
(right) were set
up in the Clover
Hill Tavern. Printers
worked in relays to
print 30,000 blank
forms. By April 11, the
paroles were ready
for distribution to the
Southern camps. The
parole seen here was
issued to Maj. Gen.
largest, doubled as
post office. Francis
Meeks' son Lafayette
served in the Confederate army, died of typhoid, and was buried
here (left). The village
and county prospered
in the 1850s. The war
would change all this.
End of the War
Lee's surrender did not
immediately end the
Confederate States of
America; other armies
were still in the field.
Not until the surrender of Joseph E. Johnston's army in North
Carolina on April 26,
Richard Taylor's army
in Alabama on May 4,
and Edmund Kirby
Smith's army in Texas
on June 2 did the Confederacy cease to exist.
All were surrendered
on the terms set at Appomattox Court House
by Lee and Grant.
Fitzhugh Lee, Army
Northern Virginia
cavalry commander
and the nephew of
Robert E. Lee.
More Information
Appomattox Court
House National
Historical Park
P.O. Box 218
Appomattox, VA 24522
434-352-8987
www.nps.gov/apco
For firearms laws and
policies, see the park
website.
To learn more about
parks and National Park
Service programs in
America's communities
visit www.nps.gov.
Appomattox Court House
Creating A Park
After the surrender
ceremony the troops
went away and the
war ended, but Appomattox Court House
had been changed. In
many ways the village
was worse off. No
large battle had taken
place here; neither
side rushed in to erect
monuments as they
did on many other
battlefields of the war.
Locally the village became a backwater as
Appomattox Station,
just to the west, prospered because of its
position on the railroad. In the late 1880s
Union veterans formed
the Appomattox Land
Company. They hoped
to develop the area by
selling lots and building houses, but their
plans never really left
the drawing board. In
1892 the courthouse
burned (right) and the
county seat was moved
to Appomattox, formerly Appomattox
Station. And in early
1893 a Niagara Falls,
N.Y., company had the
McLean House disman-
never built, but the
idea of memorializing
the event stayed alive.
In 1934-35 the National Park Service suggested that the entire
village be restored.
The idea was received
enthusiastically.
tled with the hope of
taking it to Washington, D.C., as a war
museum. But the piles
of bricks and lumber
were never moved. Exposed to the elements,
they eventually disappeared. The little village was either going
up in smoke or crumbling into dust.
Legislation creating
the park as a national
historical monument
was signed in 1935,
and work began on acquiring land and researching the records.
The project resumed at
the end of World War II;
In 1930, Congress
passed a bill that provided for building a
monument at the site
of the old courthouse.
The monument was
in 1954, the area was
redesignated Appomattox Court House
National Historical
Park. Today the village
looks much as it did in
April 1865.
direction from the village. Nearby, a monument erected by the
state of North Carolina marks the farthest advance of its
troops that April day.
Outside the village
are a few spots associated with the events
of the surrender. Lee's
headquarters site is
northeast of the village. It is a two-minute walk from a small
parking lot on Va. 24.
Grant's headquarters
site is in the opposite
West of the village a
small Confederate
cemetery holds the
graves of one Northern soldier and 18
Southern soldiers
killed on April 8 and
9. A hiking trail and
the highway connect
all of these locations.
MUSEUM OF THE CONFEDERACY
aGPO:2010—357-940/80579 Reprint 2010
Printed on recycled paper.
Touring the Village
Start at the visitor center, where museum exhibits, video programs, seasonal talks, map orientations, and restrooms are available. The
map below depicts the historic village much as
it looked in April 1865. Existing structures have
white labels; those no longer existing are shown
pale gray with numbers for the key at far right.
All the sites are within easy walking distance
but require travel on gravel and grass surfaces.
Most buildings are over 150 years old and require steps for entry. Wheelchairs are available
at the visitor center. The official National Park
Service handbook, covering many aspects of
Lee's retreat, the surrender, and the history of
the village, is available along with other publications at the park bookstore.
Note: Firearms are prohibited in the following
buildings: Visitor Center, McLean House, Clover
Hill Tavern, and Bookstore.
McLean House
On April 9, 1865, Gen.
Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of
Northern Virginia to
Lt. Gen. Ulysses S.
Grant in the parlor of
this house. Lee's aide
Lt. Col. Charles Marshall chose this site.
The house, built in
1848, survived under
several owners until
1893, when speculators
dismantled it in a
failed money-making
scheme (see above).
In the 1940s, using the
speculators' plans and
specifications, and archeological evidence,
the National Park Service rebuilt the house
on its original foundation. (Reconstructed)
Meeks Store
Constructed in 1852, at
the time of the surrender it was used as a
general store and post
office, both operated
by Francis Meeks.
(Original)
Woodson Law Office
John Woodson bought
this office in 1856 and
practiced law here until his death eight years
later. It is a typical lawyer's office of that period. (Original)
Clover Hill Tavern
Built in 1819, this oldest village structure
was where parole
passes were printed
for Confederate soldiers. Associated
structures include the
kitchen (now a bookstore), slave quarters,
and guesthouse. In
1865 there was also
an attached dining
wing and a small detached bar. (Original)
Appomattox
County Courthouse
The original courthouse was built in
1846 and destroyed by
fire in 1892. None of
the surrender events
took place here.
(Reconstructed)
Appomattox
County Jail
The new county jail
was completed by 1867;
the original jail burned
during the war years.
(Original)
Jones Law Office
Office and town home
of Crawford Jones,
Appomattox County
farmer, lawyer, and local secessionist leader.
(Original)
Mariah Wright House
This frame house, built
in the mid-1820s, is
one of the older buildings in the village. The
stone and brick chimneys, like those of the
Jones Law Office, are
typical of this region.
Not open to the public. (Original)
Isbell House
This house was built in
1850 by two brothers,
one of whom was U.S.
Sen. Thomas Bocock,
who later served as
speaker of the Confederate Congress. Not
open to the public.
(Original)
Peers House
George Peers, clerk of
the Appomattox County court for 40 years,
lived in this frame
house, which was built
in the early 1850s. Not
open to the public.
(Original)
Stacking of Arms
On the morning of
April 12, 1865, about
5,000 Federal troops
lined the RichmondLynchburg Stage Road
from just east of the
Peers House to a point
near the McLean House
to receive the surrender of the Army of
Northern Virginia. The
weapons, flags, and
accoutrements of Lee's
infantry were stacked
before the Federals in
a formal surrender ceremony that Brig. Gen.
Joshua L. Chamberlain
dubbed "Honor answering honor."
Key to numbered
buildings (no longer
standing)
1 Union Academy
Dwelling House
2 Woodson Law
Office (1865)
3 Raine Tavern
(empty ca. 1865)
4 McLean Smokehouse
5 McLean Stable
6 Pryor Wright House
7 Meeks Storehouse
(1865)
8 Office
9 Office
10 Office
11 Tavern Smokehouse
12 Tavern Dining
Room
13 Tavern Bar
14 Carriage House
15 Mule Stable
16 Clover Hill Tavern
Stable
17 Robertson & Glover
Store
18 Original Jail
19 W. Rosser Tenant
House
20 W. Rosser Wheelwright Shop
21 W. Rosser Blacksmith Shop
22 W. Rosser Corn
Crib
23 W. Rosser Barn
24 Peers Stable
25 Bocock-lsbell Law
Office
26 Inge House
27 Peers Cabin/Slave
Quarters
28 Moffitt House
29 Union Academy
Hall
30 J. Rosser Blacksmith Shop
31 Wright Stable