Confederate Lt. General Edmund Kirby Smith commanded the Trans-Mississippi Department, which included Arkansas, Indian Territory, Texas, and most of Louisiana.
After the Union army took control of the Mississippi River, Smith’s army was cut off from the Confederacy. He stayed west of the Mississippi until the war ended.
By May 5, 1865, Smith’s force of 43,000 men was the last major army remaining in the Confederacy.
General Grant had turned his attention toward the Trans-Mississippi Department by May 8th.
Smith sent Lieutenant General Buckner to New Orleans for a meeting with Union Major General Peter Osterhaus on May 26th. They discussed terms of surrender similar to those agreed-upon at Appomattox.
Aboard the U.S.S. Fort Jackson just outside Galveston Harbor, Smith signed the surrender on June 2nd.
Some troops, refusing the surrender, fled to Mexico or to the Far West.
-Sandra Merville Hart
“Conclusion of the American Civil War,” Wikipedia.com, 2018/03/21 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conclusion_of_the_American_Civil_War.
“Conclusion of the American Civil War,” Wikiwand.com, 2018/03/22 http://www.wikiwand.com/en/Conclusion_of_the_American_Civil_War.
Long, E.B. and Long, Barbara. The Civil War Day by Day: An Almanac 1861-1865, A Da Capo Paperback, 1971.
Plante, Trevor K. “Ending the Bloodshed,” National Archives, 2018/03/21
https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2015/spring/cw-surrenders.html.



