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Capture of Jefferson Davis
In
early May 1865 the Confederate States of America was greatly disorganized, largely because of the frenetic events of the
previous month. General Robert E. Lee had surrendered the Confederate armies at the Appomattox Courthouse in Virginia, and
most Americans believed the Civil War was over. The assassination of U.S. president Abraham Lincoln in Washington, D.C., by
John Wilkes Booth and other sympathizers with the Southern cause, cast suspicion over many in the Confederate government.
Though still intact, the government was largely ineffective.
President Jefferson Davis still retained hopes for the future of the Confederacy. Privately, he harbored a desire to reinforce
the armies and move the fighting to the western part of the Confederacy. Publicly, he was forced to flee the Confederate capital
in Richmond, Virginia, with a cadre of trusted advisors, which in effect became a government in exile. Upon departing Richmond,
Davis and his retinue established a temporary center of government at Danville, Virginia. They soon moved farther south, however,
because Virginia was heavily saturated with Union troops.
Among
Davis's advisors were John H. Reagan, Judah P. Benjamin, John Breckinridge, and Burton Harrison. A small but elite military
escort was also in tow, but most of them would eventually disperse after Davis authorized their belated compensation from
the remaining Confederate treasury at Washington, Georgia. By the night of May 8, 1865, the party, which now included Varina
Davis, the first lady, and the president's children, reached south Georgia. They were keenly aware that Union forces were
close behind, pursuing Davis largely because of the War Department's false assumption that he was complicit in the assassination
of Lincoln. A $100,000 reward was promised for anyone who could bring in the president and his aides.
Reaching the farming community of Irwinville, in Irwin County, on the evening of May 9, the remaining hopefuls, still assuming that they were a step ahead of their pursuers, set up camp
near a creek bed.
Early the next morning the camp was awakened by a pop of gunfire and within minutes was surrounded by members of the First
Wisconsin and Fourth Michigan cavalries. Not one shot was fired by the Confederates. Through some confusion President Davis
made a quick dash toward the creek. He had thrown his wife's raglan, or overcoat, on his shoulders. This led to the persistent
rumor that he attempted to flee in women's clothes. A popular song of the era was "Jeff in Petticoats," and the major tabloids
featured artists' renderings of the fallen leader dressed in everything from a wig to a hoop skirt. A zealous member of the
Michigan detail quickly apprehended Davis, and he was transported to Fortress Monroe, Virginia, where he remained a prisoner
for more than two years. His poor treatment and its subsequent exposure in the press helped strengthen the cause of Southern
nationalism.
Suggested Reading Michael B. Ballard, A Long Shadow: Jefferson Davis and the Final Days of the Confederacy (1986; reprint, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1997).
Alfred Jackson Hanna, Flight into Oblivion (1938; reprint, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1999).
Noah Andre Trudeau, Out of the Storm: The End of the Civil War, April-June 1865 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1994).
Jay Winik, April 1865: The Month That Saved America (New York: HarperCollins, 2001).
Brian Brown, Fitzgerald Published 9/5/2002
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