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Appomattox
[ ap-uh-mat-uhks ]
noun
- a town in central Virginia where Lee surrendered to Grant on April 9, 1865, ending the Civil War.
- a river flowing E from E central Virginia to the James River. 137 miles (220 km) long.
Appomattox
/ ˌæpəˈmætəks /
noun
- a village in central Virginia where the Confederate army under Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant's Union forces on April 9, 1865, effectively ending the American Civil War
Example Sentences
Another just opened in February, owned by the former head of the Appomattox County GOP.
This hulk of metal, a deepwater platform called Appomattox and owned by Shell, collects the oil and gas that rigs tap from reservoirs thousands of feet below the seafloor.
Even after the Appomattox surrender, the secessionist undersheriff, King, went on insisting, “We have been and are yet secessionist.”
Within five years of Appomattox, Robert E. Lee’s former lieutenant was leading Black militiamen into battle against white insurrectionists—his own onetime comrades in arms.
Varon, a distinguished historian at the University of Virginia and the author of previous works focused on white Southern dissenters, is careful to emphasize how all of this would have been anathema to Longstreet before the war—indeed, right up until Appomattox.
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