Author Topic: Honor Answering Honor: “Bloody Chamberlain” and the Surrender at Appomattox  (Read 677 times)

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rangerrebew

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Honor Answering Honor: “Bloody Chamberlain” and the Surrender at Appomattox

Jimmy Price
Programs and Education Department


National Museum of the United States Army Project OfficeIt was one of the most iconic moments in all of American history – the famed “stillness” at Appomattox. After four years of bitter struggle, General Ulysses S. Grant’s armies had finally vanquished General Robert E. Lee’s vaunted Army of Northern Virginia. While the surrender terms had been agreed upon by Lee and Grant on April 9, 1865, the formal surrender ceremony did not take place until April 12th. Neither Lee nor Grant elected to attend the surrender ceremony.   Instead, Grant selected Brevet Major General Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain to receive the surrender of the Confederate infantry.Chamberlain as is Small
Chamberlain’s meteoric rise from college professor to Union general is now the stuff of legend, but in April of 1861, no one could have foreseen the role that he would play in preserving the Union. When the call to the colors was sounded following the firing on Fort Sumter, Chamberlain was residing in his native Maine, teaching rhetoric and modern languages at Bowdoin College. Stating that “I fear, this war, so costly of blood and treasure, will not cease until men of the North are willing to leave good positions,” Chamberlain wrote to the governor of Maine requesting an appointment and became a lieutenant colonel in the 20th Maine Infantry Regiment in 1862.

http://www.civilwar.com/component/content/article.html?id=277945
« Last Edit: March 07, 2017, 09:20:03 pm by rangerrebew »

rangerrebew

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What an irony!  After 4 years and 600,000 deaths, they still had enough respect for one another they were able to return honor with honor.  Something like that is not possible in our "civilized" society today.  They understood that the Army of Northern Virginia, indeed all southern soldiers, were soon to comrade in arms and for the nation to survive, all would have to work together.  It is a sad statement about America today.