What did the surrender terms of Confederate commander Robert E Lee's include?
That soldiers be allowed to keep horses for farming
What did the surrender terms of Confederate commander Robert E Lees include?
That soldiers would be allowed to keep horses for farming
Who is family moved to Georgetown when he was a year old Ulysses S. Grant or Robert E Lee?
Lee moved when he was a year old
What is General Robert E. Lee's daughters' names?
General Lee had three sons and four daughters. His daughters' names are as follows:
For your information, his sons' names are as follows:
Who was leader of the Confederate military forces?
General Robert E. Lee was the leader of the Confederate army. He was considered the best trained military man at the time.
How did Robert E. Lee pick up his girls?
Lee courted one woman, Marie Custis, for years before her father allowed him to marry her.
Why did Robert E. Lee never return to his plantation?
Because the Union Army started burying their war dead on the grounds surrounding Arlington House and it became a national cemetery.
What happened to all of General Robert E. Lee's slaves?
The last of the slaves inherited by Lee's wife were freed in 1862 at the start of the war.
Most stayed on at the plantation or at the federally established Freedman's Village on the property.
Their descendants still live in Arlington County
Robert E Lee granted his personal slave freedom in 1858
How many general lee cars are left?
If you are asking about General Robert E. Lee he didn't have a car. Cars weren't invented when be was alive. He rode a horse named Traveller.
Is Robert E. Lee grave in little rock?
General Robert E. Lee is not buried in Little Rock. He was entombed at the Washington-Lee University.
What did Robert E. Lee do for a living?
For his entire adult life Lee was an officer of the US Army. He entered the US Military Academy at West Point, New York, when he was 18, in 1825, and graduated second in his class in 1829. Graduates who ranked high in their class were usually offered positions in the Army Corps of Engineers, and this was the work Lee was given throughout the early years of his career - building forts, improving navigation on the Mississippi River, and so on. Lee particularly distinguished himself during the Mexican War. General In Chief of the US Army Winfield Scott had taken the field himself, and led a small army from Vera Cruz, on the east coast of Mexico, into central Mexico and captured Mexico City, the largest city in the Americas, and there dictated peace terms to the defeated Mexicans. Lee served as an officer on Scott's staff, and twice scouted and found a way for the tiny American force to outflank the vaslty larger Mexican forces entrenched on the only road to Mexico City, enabling the Americans to "turn" the Mexican position and force the Mexicans to retreat. Lee so impressed Scott that when the Civil War began Scott, who was 75 but still the Commanding General of the US Army (there was no system of retirement then) offered Lee the command of the field army of the US, which Lee declined to go with his native state of Virginia. After the Mexican War Lee was Superintendent of the US Military Academy for several years, and then was given a plum assignment. The US Army was small, there was no retirement, and to get promoted officers waited years, decades, for somebody above them to die or get disgusted and resign. The vast new territory won from Mexico called for new army units to patrol the immense area and deal with the Apaches and Comanches. The creation of these new units also created new positions for officers. Lee had been a captain in the army for more than twenty years, when he was selected for promotion to Lieutenant Colonel (second in command) of one of these new units, the 2nd Cavalry, by Secretary of War Jefferson Davis (soon to be the president of the Confederacy). Davis was himself a graduate of West Point, two years before Lee, and had also distinguished himself in the Mexican War.
Lee had married a granddaughter of Martha Washington, who inherited some plantations and hundreds of slaves from her family. Lee was on a long leave of many months administering the estate of his deceased mother-in-law when John Brown made his raid on Harper's Ferry. Lee was at his wife's estate of Arlington when he was sent for to deal with that situation, and with some Marines from the Washington Navy Yard, and young Lieutenant Jeb Stuart, who had been at the War Department awaiting an assignment to duty when word of Brown's attack came in, Lee was able to capture Brown and his colleagues.
The income from his wife's properties allowed Lee to live well, despite the low pay of army officers. The Lees also invested prudently, but put all their money into Confederate bonds at the start of the Civil War, and thus lost it all. So when the Civil War ended Lee was 58, broke, without a job, unable to practice the profession he had followed all his life, his home - his wife's estate of Arlington - had been confiscated by the US government and Arlington Cemetery established on the grounds, his wife was an invalid, and he was living in a house his son (who was a prisoner of war) had rented in Richmond, Virginia, with his extended family. He expected he might be arrested at any moment, and had no means or income with which to pay the rent. The landlord insisted that he had agreed to accept Confederate money for the rent, and so Confederate money was all he would accept, to avoid the necessity of evicting General Lee and his invalid wife and family. Lee was getting offers in the mail, offers such as other Confederate officers found it necessary to accept - to lend his name and prestige to life insurance companies (then an infant industry) or to oversee state lotteries (as Beauregard was reduced to doing in Louisiana), all in the nature of commercial endorsements, trading on his immense prestige among not only southerners, but all Americans. Lee refused to consider such propositions, no matter his dire need.
At this juncture the Trustees of tiny Washington College in Lexington, Virginia had their first post war meeting. The College was in dire straits. It had closed when all the students went off to the war. Yankee troops had wrecked the buildings, destroyed the library, stabled their horses in the chapel, broke all the apparatus in the laboratories. There was no money. Drastic steps were needed. Someone suggested that they elect Robert E. Lee President of the College, and they did. One of the trustees had to borrow a suit of clothes to travel to Richmond to inform Lee of this bold step, and to find out his reaction to this proposal, of which Lee knew nothing beforehand. Lee gladly accepted this offer, moved his family to Lexington, where the college obtained donations once it was known Lee had affiliated himself with the school, and built a new house for the President. Lee got the school not just going, but flourishing. Students came from all over the south, once they heard he was there. The school also built a new chapel, and Lee had his office in the basement. He insisted on a weekly report on the progress of each student, and was very active. He soon had the school growing and expanding its offerings, and was engaged in this useful work when he died in 1870. Today the school is Washington and Lee University.
What actors and actresses appeared in Heart of General Robert E. Lee - 1928?
The cast of Heart of General Robert E. Lee - 1928 includes: George Berliner as Sergeant Marjorie Daw as Virginia Hale Richard Walling as Jack Clay Will Walling as Maj. Colfax Clay
Why is a civil war so sad and difficult?
Because, being within one country, it inevitably divides communities and even families. There was an incident in the Civil War in which, during a battle, a Union soldier was captured. As he was being led past the Confederate lines he recognised his own brother in the other army. He called out, "Bill! Don't shoot into those bushes, that's Father!" (I may have the name wrong). Michael Montagne Not just in family, but many soldiers that had fought with each other now found themselves looking down the barrel at each other. Jared
What three elements forced General Robert E. Lee to withdraw from the siege of Pittsburgh?
There was no Siege of Pittsburgh in the Civil War, and Lee was not present at Pittsburgh Landing, Tennessee, also known as Shiloh.
Strictly speaking, Arlington and the slaves were the property of Lee's wife. She was the granddaughter of Martha Washington and had inherited the slaves and the land. Lee could manage the operation, but would have been personally liable for allowing the value of the estate to diminish through his actions, such as freeing all the valuable slaves, if he had had the power to do so. But, since most of them were not his, he did not have the actual legal authority to free them.
Lee's children stood to inherit Arlington. A slave man in his prime was worth perhaps $1000 on the market. In many places this was enough money to buy 500 acres of farmland. On many plantations the market value of the slaves was greater than that of the soil they tilled. Freeing the slaves would have reduced the value of the bequest to his children by more than half. And without them, it would have been difficult to farm the land. But anyway, Lee lacked the legal authority to free the slaves, if he had been able to face the idea of such a vast diminishment of what he would see left to his children.
Which battlefield did general Robert E. Lee fight in?
In The American Civil War he fought in Antietam, Ghettesburg, And Richmond. He was Wounded at ticoncaugua in The Mexican_American war.
the wars that he fought in that made him famous where the anietam,gettyburg and so on.
Did you know that Robert E Lee died of pneumonia a little over 9:00am on October 12,1870 he was 63 when he died. If you did not know that then there you go there is something you can find only on Wiki bam.!!!!!!!!!!!BABY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:]
You shouldn't rely on wiki cause people write that stuff and it's not always true.
Did Robert E Lee and General Sherman fight against each other?
Maybe, I think it was General Ulyssas S. Grant, though.
If you mean Robert E Lee here is some info about him:
Robert Edward Lee (January 19, 1807 - October 12, 1870) was a career military officer who is best known for having commanded the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia in the American Civil War. The son of U.S. Revolutionary War hero Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee III and a top graduate of West Point, Robert E. Lee distinguished himself as an exceptional officer and combat engineer in the United States Army for 32 years before resigning to join the Confederate cause. By the end of the American Civil War, he was commanding general of the Confederate army. He became a postwar icon of the South's "lost cause", and is still admired to this day.
In early 1861, President Abraham Lincoln invited Lee to take command of the entire Union Army. Lee declined because his home state of Virginia was, despite his wishes, seceding from the Union. When Virginia declared its secession from the Union in April 1861, Lee chose to follow his home state.Lee's eventual role in the newly established Confederacy was to serve as a senior military adviser to President Jefferson Davis. Lee soon emerged as the shrewdest battlefield tactician of the war, after he assumed command of the Confederate eastern army (soon christened "The Army of Northern Virginia") after the wounding of Joseph Johnston at the Battle of Seven Pines. His abilities as a tactician have been praised by many military historians. They were made evident in his many victories such as the Battle of Fredericksburg (1862), Battle of Chancellorsville (1863), Battle of the Wilderness (1864), Battle of Cold Harbor (1864), Seven Days Battles, and the Second Battle of Bull Run. His strategic vision was more doubtful-his invasions of the North in 1862 and 1863 were designed to help gain foreign recognition, seize supplies, take the pressure off his beloved Virginia, and mobilize antiwar elements in the North. After a defeat at Antietam in 1862 and disaster at Gettysburg in 1863, hopes for victory were dashed, and defeat for the South was almost certain. However, due to ineffectual pursuit by the commander of Union forces after both defeats, Lee escaped back to Virginia. His decision in 1863 to overrule his generals and invade the North, rather than help protect Vicksburg, proved a major strategic blunder and cost the Confederacy control of its western regions, according to critical historians such as Sears and Eicher. Nevertheless, there is no dispute that Lee's brilliant defensive maneuvers stopped the Union offenses one after another, as he defeated a series of Union commanders in Virginia.
In the spring of 1864, the new Union commander, Ulysses S. Grant, began a series of campaigns to wear down Lee's army. In the Overland Campaign of 1864 and the Siege of Petersburg in 1864-65, Lee inflicted heavy casualties on Grant's larger army, but was forced back into trenches; the Confederacy was unable to replace their losses or even provide adequate rations to the soldiers that did not desert. In the final months of the Civil War, as manpower drained away, Lee adopted a plan to arm slaves to fight on behalf of the Confederacy, but the decision came too late and the black soldiers were never used in combat. In early April 1865, Lee's depleted forces were overwhelmed at Petersburg; he abandoned Richmond and retreated west as Union forces encircled his army. Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865, marking the end of Confederate hopes; the remaining armies soon capitulated. Lee rejected as folly the starting of a guerrilla campaign against the Yankees and called for reconciliation between the North and South.
After the war, as a college president of what is now Washington and Lee University, Lee supported President Andrew Johnson's program of Reconstruction and intersectional friendship, while opposing the Radical Republican proposals to give freed slaves the vote and take the vote away from ex-Confederates. He urged them to rethink their position between the North and the South, and the reintegration of former Confederates into the nation's political life. Lee became the great Southern hero of the war, and his popularity grew in the North, as well, after his death in 1870. He remains an iconic figure of American military leadership.