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By March 1865 Lee’s army was thinned by casualties and desertions and was desperately short of supplies. Grant began his final advance on April 1 at Five Forks, captured Richmond on April 3, and accepted Lee’s surrender at nearby Appomattox Court House on April 9. Sherman had moved north into North Carolina, and on April 26 he received the surrender of J.E. Johnston. The war was over.

American Civil War: Lee's surrender to GrantConfederate Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendering to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, April 9, 1865; wood engraving based on an illustration by Alfred R. Waud, 1887.© North Wind Picture Archives

Naval operations in the Civil War were secondary to the war on land, but there were nonetheless some celebrated exploits. Farragut was justly hailed for his actions at New Orleans and at Mobile Bay (August 5, 1864), and the battle of the ironclads Monitor and Merrimack (March 9, 1862) is often held to have opened the modern era of naval warfare. For the most part, however, the naval war was one of blockade as the Union attempted, largely successfully, to stop the Confederacy’s commerce with Europe.

Battle of the Merrimack (rechristened the Virginia) and Monitor, March 9, 1862.Photos.com/Thinkstock


Foreign affairs

Davis and many Confederates expected recognition of their independence and direct intervention in the war on their behalf by Great Britain and possibly France. But they were cruelly disappointed, in part through the skillful diplomacy of Lincoln, Secretary of State Seward, and the Union ambassador to England, Charles Francis Adams, and in part through Confederate military failure at a crucial stage of the war.

Adams, Charles FrancisCharles Francis AdamsLibrary of Congress, Washington, D.C.

The Union’s first trouble with Britain came when Capt. Charles Wilkes halted the British steamer Trent" class="md-crosslink">Trent on November 8, 1861, and forcibly removed two Confederate envoys, James M. Mason and John Slidell, bound for Europe. Only the eventual release of the two men prevented a diplomatic rupture with Lord Palmerston’s government in London. Another crisis erupted between the Union and England when the Alabama, built in the British Isles, was permitted upon completion to sail and join the Confederate navy, despite Adams’s protestations. And when word reached the Lincoln government that two powerful rams were being constructed in Britain for the Confederacy, Adams reputedly sent his famous “this is war” note to Palmerston, and the rams were seized by the British government at the last moment.

The diplomatic crisis of the Civil War came after Lee’s striking victory at the Second Battle of Bull Run in late August 1862 and subsequent invasion of Maryland. The British government was set to offer mediation of the war and, if this was refused by the Lincoln administration (as it would have been), forceful intervention on behalf of the Confederacy. Only a victory by Lee on Northern soil was needed, but he was stopped by McClellan in September at Antietam, the Union’s most needed success. The Confederate defeats at Gettysburg and Vicksburg the following summer ensured the continuing neutrality of Britain and France, especially when Russia seemed inclined to favour the Northern cause. Even the growing British shortage of cotton from the Southern states did not force Palmerston’s government into Davis’s camp, particularly when British consuls in the Confederacy were more closely restricted toward the close of the war. In the final act, even the Confederate offer to abolish slavery in early 1865 in return for British recognition fell on deaf ears.


Aftermath

The war was horribly costly for both sides. The Federal forces sustained more than a half million casualties (including nearly 360,000 deaths); the Confederate armies suffered about 483,000 casualties (approximately 258,000 deaths). Both governments, after strenuous attempts to finance loans, were obliged to resort to the printing press to make fiat money. While separate Confederate figures are lacking, the war finally cost the United States more than $15 billion. The South, especially, where most of the war was fought and which lost its labour system, was physically and economically devastated. In sum, although the Union was preserved and restored, the cost in physical and moral suffering was incalculable, and some spiritual wounds caused by the war still have not been healed. Warren W. Hassler The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica


Reconstruction and the New South, 1865–1900


Reconstruction, 1865–77


Reconstruction under Abraham Lincoln

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