He didn't want to motivate the Confederates to take to the hills and conduct guerrilla warfare.
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One reason was pragmatism. Grant did not want to take prisoners, and did not think the Union was in any danger from Confederates who had surrendered. Also, both Grant and Lee felt that this was a historic moment, and it brought out the noble side in both of them. It was a moment for gracious and magnanimous gestures.
Robert E. Lee faced up to it that his army couldn't have gone on any longer, and he surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House. His President, Jefferson Davis, was still talking wildly about fighting on, as he fled into Georgia. This was just big talk. He was in fact running away from his responsibilities.
grant plan was very smart and they toke time to think what was going to happen so that's why they win
Actually, I don't think Hitler surrendered at all... He took the 'cowards way' out of a, seemingly hopless situation. That meant that, when all hope was lost he took a cyanid ampull, crushed it with his teeth and immediately after that shot himself. -- Hitler didn't surrender. He shot himself.
The Battle of the Plains of Abraham was the decisive battle between the French and the English. It demonstrated that the French would be defeated and that the British would be victorious. It did not, however, end the French and Indian War. It was not until Montreal was surrendered to the British that the Canadian aspects of the Seven Years War was complete.
One reason was pragmatism. Grant did not want to take prisoners, and did not think the Union was in any danger from Confederates who had surrendered. Also, both Grant and Lee felt that this was a historic moment, and it brought out the noble side in both of them. It was a moment for gracious and magnanimous gestures.
I should think that you meant R.E.Lee who surrendered to U.S.Grant at the Appomattox Courthouse April 9, 1865 unless you are referring to some alternate history .
If you mean after the surrender at Appomattox, then I think Grant was fairly generous about it. If it was before the surrender, he would just have said "Run up the white flag, buddy boy." He had of course ended prisoner exchange as soon as he became General-in-Chief.
You're lucky that she was generous enough to buy it for you. It think you're being a little too generous. If you keep taking advantage of it, he won't be generous anymore.
Content and generous, I think.
Jackson thinks his policy is kind and generous because he is keepng the Cherokee from utter annihilation
Because he was a pragmatist and a good simplifier of problems, who realised that his scorched-earth policy was the quickest way to end the war. He was not acting out of deliberate cruelty. His terms of surrender to Lee at Appomattox were so generous that Lee would not hear a word against his old enemy for the rest of his life.
Grant was not acting out of personal cruelty when he applied such harsh measures in the field. He knew that attrition was the only way. After the surrender, he could afford to be generous, and he certainly was. No hangings or jailings, and a good meal for every Confederate soldier, probably their first in months.
Because the Alexander's empire was growing.
well i think probally the football the tea and there generous hospitality
No he owned a plantation
I don't know that much but I think they did because the people of Haiti are generous.:-)