For a week,
Jefferson Davis and the Confederate cabinet had called Charlotte, North
Carolina, home. Numerous meetings had taken place, including discussions about
the ongoing negotiations between Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and
Union general William T. Sherman. If the negotiations did not favor the
Confederates, then Davis directed Johnston to move his army towards Charlotte. The
plan was to move toward the Trans-Mississippi department, to Texas, and continue
the war. Yet Johnston favored surrender.
Davis, with no army left to command in North Carolina, prepared to move south.
The last full
meeting of the Confederate cabinet was held in Charlotte on April 26, 1865.
About noon, Davis and some of the cabinet rode out of Charlotte. Left behind
was Attorney General George Davis. He had already resigned. Davis and his cavalry
escort crossed over the Catawba River at Nation’s Ford and moved into York
County, South Carolina. That evening, Davis stayed at the Springfield
Plantation near Fort Mill, while others stayed at the home of Col. William E.
White. That evening, Secretary of Treasury George Trenholm, already ill, grew
worse. Not able to continue with the group, Trenholm submitted his resignation,
which Davis accepted. Davis held an impromptu “cabinet” meeting, probably with
Stephen Mallory and John C. Breckinridge. At the end of the meeting, Post
Master General John H. Reagan rode up, and Davis informed him that he was now acting
Secretary of Treasury.
Davis and his party
continued to move south, spending the night of April 27 in York. He would eventually
work his way into Georgia, where he was captured on May 10.
The route of Davis
is marked with various highway trail markers through South Carolina and
Georgia. The marker pictured is located at the intersection of N. White Street
and Horse Road. I last visited this site in 2014.
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