<h2><SPAN name="XXXVI" id="XXXVI"></SPAN>XXXVI</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Lincoln's Interviews with Campbell—Withdraws Authority
for Meeting of Virginia Legislature—Conference of Davis and
Johnston at Greensboro—Johnston Asks for an
Armistice—Meeting of Sherman and Johnston—Their
Agreement—Rejected at Washington—Surrender of
Johnston—Surrender of other Confederate Forces—End of
the Rebel Navy—Capture of Jefferson Davis—Surrender of
E. Kirby Smith—Number of Confederates Surrendered and
Exchanged—Reduction of Federal Army to a Peace
Footing—Grand Review of the Army</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>While in Richmond, Mr. Lincoln had two interviews with John A.
Campbell, rebel Secretary of War, who had not accompanied the other
fleeing officials, preferring instead to submit to Federal
authority. Mr. Campbell had been one of the commissioners at the
Hampton Roads conference, and Mr. Lincoln now gave him a written
memorandum repeating in substance the terms he had then offered the
Confederates. On Campbell's suggestion that the Virginia
legislature, if allowed to come together, would at once repeal its
ordinance of secession and withdraw all Virginia troops from the
field, he also gave permission for its members to assemble for that
purpose. But this, being distorted into authority to sit in
judgment on the political consequences of the war, was soon
withdrawn.</p>
<p>Jefferson Davis and his cabinet proceeded to Danville, where,
two days after his arrival, the rebel President made still another
effort to fire the Southern heart, <SPAN name="page520" id="page520"></SPAN> announcing, "We have now
entered upon a new phase of the struggle. Relieved from the
necessity of guarding particular points, our army will be free to
move from point to point to strike the enemy in detail far from his
base. Let us but will it and we are free"; and declaring in
sonorous periods his purpose never to abandon one foot of ground to
the invader.</p>
<p>The ink was hardly dry on the document when news came of the
surrender of Lee's army, and that the Federal cavalry was pushing
southward west of Danville. So the Confederate government again
hastily packed its archives and moved to Greensboro, North
Carolina, where its headquarters were prudently kept on the train
at the depot. Here Mr. Davis sent for Generals Johnston and
Beauregard, and a conference took place between them and the
members of the fleeing government—a conference not unmixed
with embarrassment, since Mr. Davis still "willed" the success of
the Confederacy too strongly to see the true hopelessness of the
situation, while the generals and most of his cabinet were agreed
that their cause was lost. The council of war over, General
Johnston returned to his army to begin negotiations with Sherman;
and on the following day, April 14, Davis and his party left
Greensboro to continue their journey southward.</p>
<p>Sherman had returned to Goldsboro from his visit to City Point,
and set himself at once to the reorganization of his army and the
replenishment of his stores. He still thought there was a hard
campaign with desperate fighting ahead of him. Even on April 6,
when he received news of the fall of Richmond and the flight of Lee
and the Confederate government, he was unable to understand the
full extent of the national triumph. He admired Grant so far as a
man might, short of idolatry, yet the long habit of respect for Lee
led him to think he would somehow get away and join<SPAN name="page521" id="page521"></SPAN> Johnston
in his front with at least a portion of the Army of Northern
Virginia. He had already begun his march upon Johnston when he
learned of Lee's surrender at Appomattox.</p>
<p>Definitely relieved from apprehension of a junction of the two
Confederate armies, he now had no fear except of a flight and
dispersal of Johnston's forces into guerrilla bands. If they ran
away, he felt he could not catch them; the country was too open.
They could scatter and meet again, and so continue a partizan
warfare indefinitely. He could not be expected to know that this
resolute enemy was sick to the heart of war, and that the desire
for more fighting survived only in a group of fugitive politicians
flying through the pine forests of the Carolinas from a danger
which did not exist.</p>
<p>Entering Raleigh on the morning of the thirteenth, he turned his
heads of column southwest, hoping to cut off Johnston's southward
march, but made no great haste, thinking Johnston's cavalry
superior to his own, and desiring Sheridan to join him before he
pushed the Confederates to extremities. While here, however, he
received a communication from General Johnston, dated the
thirteenth, proposing an armistice to enable the National and
Confederate governments to negotiate on equal terms. It had been
dictated by Jefferson Davis during the conference at Greensboro,
written down by S.R. Mallory, and merely signed by Johnston, and
was inadmissible and even offensive in its terms; but Sherman,
anxious for peace, and himself incapable of discourtesy to a brave
enemy, took no notice of its language, and answered so cordially
that the Confederates were probably encouraged to ask for better
conditions of surrender than they had expected to receive.</p>
<p>The two great antagonists met on April 17, when<SPAN name="page522" id="page522"></SPAN> Sherman
offered Johnston the same terms that had been accorded Lee, and
also communicated the news he had that morning received of the
murder of Mr. Lincoln. The Confederate general expressed his
unfeigned sorrow at this calamity, which smote the South, he said,
as deeply as the North; and in this mood of sympathy the discussion
began. Johnston asserted that he would not be justified in such a
capitulation as Sherman proposed, but suggested that together they
might arrange the terms of a permanent peace. This idea pleased
Sherman, to whom the prospect of ending the war without shedding
another drop of blood was so tempting that he did not sufficiently
consider the limits of his authority in the matter. It can be said,
moreover, in extenuation of his course, that President Lincoln's
despatch to Grant of March 3, which expressly forbade Grant to
"decide, discuss, or to confer upon any political question," had
never been communicated to Sherman; while the very liberality of
Grant's terms led him to believe that he was acting in accordance
with the views of the administration.</p>
<p>But the wisdom of Lincoln's peremptory order was completely
vindicated. With the best intentions in the world, Sherman,
beginning very properly by offering his antagonist the same terms
accorded Lee, ended, after two days' negotiation, by making a
treaty of peace with the Confederate States, including a
preliminary armistice, the disbandment of the Confederate armies,
recognition by the United States Executive of the several State
governments, reëstablishment of the Federal courts, and a
general amnesty. "Not being fully empowered by our respective
principals to fulfil these terms," the agreement truthfully
concluded, "we individually and officially pledge ourselves to
promptly obtain the necessary authority."</p>
<p><SPAN name="page523" id="page523"></SPAN> The rebel President, with unnecessary
formality, required a report from General Breckinridge, his
Secretary of War, on the desirability of ratifying this most
favorable convention. Scarcely had he given it his indorsement when
news came that it had been disapproved at Washington, and that
Sherman had been directed to continue his military operations; and
the peripatetic government once more took up its southward
flight.</p>
<p>The moment General Grant read the agreement he saw it was
entirely inadmissible. The new President called his cabinet
together, and Mr. Lincoln's instructions of March 3 to Grant were
repeated to Sherman—somewhat tardily, it must be
confessed—as his rule of action. All this was a matter of
course, and General Sherman could not properly, and perhaps would
not, have objected to it. But the calm spirit of Lincoln was now
absent from the councils of the government; and it was not in
Andrew Johnson and Mr. Stanton to pass over a mistake like this,
even in the case of one of the most illustrious captains of the
age. They ordered Grant to proceed at once to Sherman's
headquarters, and to direct operations against the enemy; and, what
was worse, Mr. Stanton printed in the newspapers the reasons of the
government for disapproving the agreement in terms of sharpest
censure of General Sherman. This, when it came to his notice some
weeks later, filled him with hot indignation, and, coupled with
some orders Halleck, who had been made commander of the armies of
the Potomac and the James, issued to Meade, to disregard Sherman's
truce and push forward against Johnston, roused him to open
defiance of the authorities he thought were persecuting him, and
made him declare in a report to Grant, that he would have
maintained his truce at any cost of life. Halleck's order,
<SPAN name="page524" id="page524"></SPAN> however, had been nullified by
Johnston's surrender, and Grant, suggesting that this outburst was
uncalled for, offered Sherman the opportunity to correct the
statement. This he refused, insisting that his record stand as
written, although avowing his readiness to obey all future orders
of Grant and the President.</p>
<p>So far as Johnston was concerned, the war was indeed over. He
was unable longer to hold his men together. Eight thousand of them
left their camps and went home in the week of the truce, many
riding away on the artillery horses and train mules. On notice of
Federal disapproval of his negotiations with Sherman, he
disregarded Jefferson Davis's instructions to disband the infantry
and try to escape with the cavalry and light guns, and answered
Sherman's summons by inviting another conference, at which, on
April 26, he surrendered all the forces in his command on the same
terms granted Lee at Appomattox; Sherman supplying, as did Grant,
rations for the beaten army. Thirty-seven thousand men and officers
were paroled in North Carolina—exclusive, of course, of the
thousands who had slipped away to their homes during the suspension
of hostilities.</p>
<p>After Appomattox the rebellion fell to pieces all at once. Lee
surrendered less than one sixth of the Confederates in arms on
April 9. The armies that still remained, though inconsiderable when
compared with the mighty host under the national colors, were yet
infinitely larger than any Washington ever commanded, and capable
of strenuous resistance and of incalculable mischief. But the march
of Sherman from Atlanta to the sea, and his northward progress
through the Carolinas, had predisposed the great interior region to
make an end of strife: a tendency which was greatly promoted by the
masterly raid of General J.H. Wilson's <SPAN name="page525" id="page525"></SPAN> cavalry
through Alabama, and his defeat of Forrest at Selma. An officer of
Taylor's staff came to Canby's headquarters on April 19 to make
arrangements for the surrender of all the Confederate forces east
of the Mississippi not already paroled by Sherman and Wilson,
embracing some forty-two thousand men. The terms were agreed upon
and signed on May 4, at the village of Citronelle in Alabama. At
the same time and place the Confederate Commodore Farrand
surrendered to Rear-Admiral Thatcher all the naval forces Of the
Confederacy in the neighborhood of Mobile—a dozen vessels and
some hundreds of officers.</p>
<p>The rebel navy had practically ceased to exist some months
before. The splendid fight in Mobile Bay on August 5, 1864, between
Farragut's fleet and the rebel ram <i>Tennessee</i>, with her three
attendant gunboats, and Cushing's daring destruction of the
powerful <i>Albemarle</i> in Albemarle Sound on October 27, marked
its end in Confederate waters. The duel between the
<i>Kearsarge</i> and the <i>Alabama</i> off Cherbourg had already
taken place; a few more encounters, at or near foreign ports,
furnished occasion for personal bravery and subsequent lively
diplomatic correspondence; and rebel vessels, fitted out under the
unduly lenient "neutrality" of France and England, continued for a
time to work havoc with American shipping in various parts of the
world. But these two Union successes, and the final capture of Fort
Fisher and of Wilmington early in 1865, which closed the last haven
for daring blockade-runners, practically silenced the Confederate
navy.</p>
<p>General E. Kirby Smith commanded all the insurgent forces west
of the Mississippi. On him the desperate hopes of Mr. Davis and his
flying cabinet were fixed, after the successive surrenders of Lee
and Johnston had left them no prospect in the east. They
<SPAN name="page526" id="page526"></SPAN> imagined they could move westward,
gathering up stragglers as they fled, and, crossing the river, join
Smith's forces, and there continue the war. But after a time even
this hope failed them. Their escort melted away; members of the
cabinet dropped off on various pretexts, and Mr. Davis, abandoning
the attempt to reach the Mississippi River, turned again toward the
east in an effort to gain the Florida coast and escape by means of
a sailing vessel to Texas.</p>
<p>The two expeditions sent in pursuit of him by General Wilson did
not allow this consummation, which the government at Washington
might possibly have viewed with equanimity. His camp near
Irwinville, Georgia, was surrounded by Lieutenant-Colonel
Pritchard's command at dawn on May 10, and he was captured as he
was about to mount horse with a few companions and ride for the
coast, leaving his family to follow more slowly. The tradition that
he was captured in disguise, having donned female dress in a last
desperate attempt to escape, has only this foundation, that Mrs.
Davis threw a cloak over her husband's shoulders, and a shawl over
his head, on the approach of the Federal soldiers. He was taken to
Fortress Monroe, and there kept in confinement for about two years;
was arraigned before the United States Circuit Court for the
District of Virginia for the crime of treason, and released on
bail; and was finally restored to all the duties and privileges of
citizenship, except the right to hold office, by President
Johnson's proclamation of amnesty of December 25, 1868.</p>
<p>General E. Kirby Smith, on whom Davis's last hopes of success
had centered, kept up so threatening an attitude that Sherman was
sent from Washington to bring him to reason. But he did not long
hold his position of solitary defiance. One more needless
<SPAN name="page527" id="page527"></SPAN> skirmish took place near Brazos, Texas,
and then Smith followed the example of Taylor and surrendered his
entire force, some eighteen thousand, to General Canby, on May 26.
One hundred and seventy-five thousand men in all were surrendered
by the different Confederate commanders, and there were, in
addition to these, about ninety-nine thousand prisoners in national
custody during the year. One third of these were exchanged, and two
thirds released. This was done as rapidly as possible by successive
orders of the War Department, beginning on May 9 and continuing
through the summer.</p>
<p>The first object of the government was to stop the waste of war.
Recruiting ceased immediately after Lee's surrender, and measures
were taken to reduce as promptly as possible the vast military
establishment. Every chief of bureau was ordered, on April 28, to
proceed at once to the reduction of expenses in his department to a
peace footing; and this before Taylor or Smith had surrendered, and
while Jefferson Davis was still at large. The army of a million men
was brought down, with incredible ease and celerity, to one of
twenty-five thousand.</p>
<p>Before the great army melted away into the greater body of
citizens, the soldiers enjoyed one final triumph, a march through
the capital, undisturbed by death or danger, under the eyes of
their highest commanders, military and civilian, and the
representatives of the people whose nationality they had saved.
Those who witnessed this solemn yet joyous pageant will never
forget it, and will pray that their children may never witness
anything like it. For two days this formidable host marched the
long stretch of Pennsylvania Avenue, starting from the shadow of
the dome of the Capitol, and filling that wide thoroughfare to
Georgetown with <SPAN name="page528" id="page528"></SPAN> a serried mass, moving with the easy yet
rapid pace of veterans in cadence step. As a mere spectacle this
march of the mightiest host the continent has ever seen gathered
together was grand and imposing; but it was not as a spectacle
alone that it affected the beholder most deeply. It was not a mere
holiday parade; it was an army of citizens on their way home after
a long and terrible war. Their clothes were worn and pierced with
bullets; their banners had been torn with shot and shell, and
lashed in the winds of a thousand battles; the very drums and fifes
had called out the troops to numberless night alarms, and sounded
the onset on historic fields. The whole country claimed these
heroes as a part of themselves. And now, done with fighting, they
were going joyously and peaceably to their homes, to take up again
the tasks they had willingly laid down in the hour of their
country's peril.</p>
<p>The world had many lessons to learn from this great conflict,
which liberated a subject people and changed the tactics of modern
warfare; but the greatest lesson it taught the nations of waiting
Europe was the conservative power of democracy—that a million
men, flushed with victory, and with arms in their hands, could be
trusted to disband the moment the need for their services was over,
and take up again the soberer labors of peace.</p>
<p>Friends loaded these veterans with flowers as they swung down
the Avenue, both men and officers, until some were fairly hidden
under their fragrant burden. There was laughter and applause;
grotesque figures were not absent as Sherman's legions passed, with
their "bummers" and their regimental pets; but with all the
shouting and the laughter and the joy of this unprecedented
ceremony, there was one sad and dominant thought which could not be
driven from the minds of <SPAN name="page529" id="page529"></SPAN> those who saw it—that of the
men who were absent, and who had, nevertheless, richly earned the
right to be there. The soldiers in their shrunken companies were
conscious of the ever-present memories of the brave comrades who
had fallen by the way; and in the whole army there was the
passionate and unavailing regret for their wise, gentle, and
powerful friend, Abraham Lincoln, gone forever from the house by
the Avenue, who had called the great host into being, directed the
course of the nation during the four years they had been fighting
for its preservation, and for whom, more than for any other, this
crowning peaceful pageant would have been fraught with deep and
happy meaning.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<SPAN name="page530" id="page530"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />