美国南北战争的结束 亚伯拉罕.林肯并没有看到南方邦联所有xx的最终投降,一个南方邦联的同情者于1865年4月14日在华盛顿的福特剧场暗杀了林肯总统。然而此时,美国内战实际上已经结束了,罗伯特.李将军已经于4月初投降了,这就直接导致了为期四年的美国内战的结束。尽管其他几支南方邦联的xx还在战斗,但这些xx规模太小,作战能力太弱,已经很难继续作战了。本周,我们就向你讲述南方邦联其他xx投降的故事。 其中一支南方xx驻扎在北卡罗莱纳州,由乔.约翰斯顿将军率领。在李将军投降五天后,约翰斯顿请求与同样驻扎在北卡罗莱纳州的北方军将领威廉.谢尔曼(William Sherman)将军会面。几天之后,谢尔曼与约翰斯顿会面,他向约翰斯顿提出了李将军所接受的同样的投降条件,他说,南方必须放弃他们手中的武器,并承诺不再打战,然后他们就可以自由地回到他们的家乡。约翰斯顿说,他不能接受这些条件。约翰斯顿说,如果谢尔曼同意与他达成一项政治协议的话,他有能力让所有的南方邦联的xx都按他所说的去做。 这两位将军在第二天再次会面,谢尔曼认真听取了约翰斯顿所阐述的要求,对这些要求中的绝大部分,谢尔曼都表示接受。他认为,林肯总统希望尽一切可能帮助南方各州,他曾经听到林肯说要让南方各州很方便地回到合众国中来。当这份政治协议草案完成之后,谢尔曼立即将其送到华盛顿,期待新总统――安德鲁.约翰逊(Andrew 根据此项政治协议,南方邦联的所有xx不再是向谢尔曼投降,而是解散,这些士兵可以拿着他们的武器回家。这些士兵将需要签一份承诺书,表示不再打战,并遵守本州和xx的法律。作为交换,谢尔曼说,总统将承认那些遵守美国宪法的各州的州政府。谢尔曼说,xx法院将再次在南方各州设立,而且他说,正和他一样,总统将保护所有公民和各州的宪法权利,而且,谢尔曼还说,如果南方人民遵守和平以及xx的法律,那么美国xx政府将不会干涉南方人民的行为。 安德鲁.约翰逊总统召集内阁会议,讨论这份由谢尔曼签署的政治协议。战争部长斯坦顿和其他内阁成员都强烈反对这份政治协议,他们说,谢尔曼没有权力签署这样的政治协议。约翰逊总统拒绝了这份政治协议,他说,约翰斯顿的xx必须在48小时之内投降,否则就将被消灭。总统说,约翰斯顿的投降条件不能比李将军的投降条件更优惠。 约翰斯顿还是决定投降了。在1865年4月26日,他的xx放下武器。随后,一支又一支的南方xx纷纷投降,这些士兵们开始返回家乡。 许多士兵对此感到痛苦,他们想继续战斗,他们说,可以用游击战与北方佬对抗。但绝大多数将领们都反对,正和骑兵军官内森.贝德福德.福斯特(Nathan Bedford Forrest)将军一样,许多将领劝他们的士兵接受失败的事实。福斯特在一次告别会上说:“事实已经再清楚不过,我们已经被打败了,我们不能再愚蠢地想继续打下去,我们曾经为之奋斗的政府已经完了,内战,正如你们所经历的那样,你们经历了痛苦和仇恨,我们必须把这些痛苦和仇恨放到一边,无论你应该承担什么责任,都要像一个男人一样去勇敢地承担。你们已经是一位优秀的士兵,同样你们也能成为优秀的公民。” 南方邦联的总统杰斐逊.戴维斯在其政府倒台之后逃到了南方,他想渡过密西西比河,他认为他还能再重建一支南方xx,如果不行的话,那么他就准备逃往墨西哥。林肯总统倒真的希望戴维斯逃走,他觉得惩罚戴维斯,只会增加仇恨和痛苦,而且对南方的重建也不利。但约翰逊总统与林肯的感觉不一样,他认为戴维斯参与了谋杀林肯总统的阴谋,他说,戴维斯必须被捕。5月10日,北方军在南部的乔治亚州发现了戴维斯,这位南方邦联总统的营地,北方军抓住了他,并将他带到了位于维吉尼亚州的门罗要塞,戴维斯在严密的守卫下被关在此达数月之久,针对他的审判却从来就没有进行,因为{zh1},他于1867年逃跑了。 五月下旬,一支由十五万人组成的xx代表北方各军来到了华盛顿,参加盛大的庆祝游行,此次庆祝游行通过整个华盛顿市。在两天的游行中,士兵们从白宫门前通过。参加此次游行的大多数士兵都曾经参加过弗雷德里克斯堡的布尔朗、安蒂特姆(Antietam)、葛底斯堡、彼得斯堡和阿普姆托克斯(Appomattox)战役。谢尔曼所率领的西方面军也参加了此次游行,这些参加游行的士兵都曾经参加过夏伊洛(Shiloh)、维克斯堡(Vicksburg)、莫佛利斯伯勒(Murfreesboro)、奇克莫加(Chickamauga)和亚特兰大战役。这些游行的士兵自豪地在总统和其他政府领导人面前通过。 在游行的路上,从国会大厦到白宫,道路两傍拥挤着大量欢呼的人群,一个小时一个小时地过去,一个又一个游行方队通过。华盛顿市从来没有过如此盛大的庆祝场面。每一个游行方队都带着他们自己的乐队和他们自己的战旗,有些方队甚至把他们在激烈的战斗中被撕坏了的战旗也带上了。{zh1},在游行的第二天下午,{zh1}一个游行方队通过了白宫,这次盛大的游行结束了,战旗被收好了,游行的乐队安静了,美国内战结束了。现在,人们开始反思这场战争,计算着此次战争所付出的代价。 四年血腥的战争,挽救了美利坚合众国,北方的胜利,永远地解决了各州脱离合众国的问题,而且也解决了长期以来困扰美国的奴隶制问题,但所付出的代价是巨大的:南北方共有六十万人为此付出了生命,还有数十万人受伤,他们有的失去了胳膊,有的失去了腿。 内战,使北方耗费了35亿美元,南方差不多也是如此。绝大多数战场发生在南方,因此,战争所带来的破坏也大都在南方。数百座城镇遭到破坏,有些,如亚特兰大市,则xx被北方军给摧毁了。对人口聚集区以外的破坏同样也是巨大的。北方军所经过的地方,都进行了破坏,农场被毁,房屋被烧,牲畜和农作物不是被抢就是被毁。 特别是南方的交通损毁更大,北方军摧毁了南方绝大多数铁路,少数未被北方军夺去的南方火车也是破坏严重而无法使用。船只被摧毁,道路和桥梁也是一片狼迹。南方已经没有能力进行重建。商人和富裕的地主把他们的钱都存放在南方邦联的银行里,现在一分钱也不值了。南方所欠下的战争债务根本就无法偿还。另外还有个问题是,有四百万人,以前是奴隶,现在他们自由了,但他们中很少有能够自己照顾自己的,他们需要工作和培训。 南方人面对未来,困难重重,他们在战场上被打败了,他们的经济被摧毁了,在未来的许多年中,这里将缺少粮食,人民将处于饥饿状态。农民无法耕种,因为他们没有种子和牲畜。南方没有钱来重建。 在南方面临这些问题的基础上,激进的共和党人又提出问题,他们提出要对南方进行严厉的惩罚,而不是向南方提供必要的援助,他们要求没收南方人的财产,以此来偿还北方在战争中所欠下的债务。 安德鲁.约翰逊本身就是一个来自田纳西州的南方人,他反对这种激进的计划,他有他自己重建南方的计划。 简评: 战争结束之后,要不要惩办战争罪犯?在此,我想向大家提出这个问题,如果谁有兴趣,不妨说说您的看法。 我的看法是,战争结束后,如果还要惩办战争罪犯,那就不是结束战争,而是将战争进一步延续。 惩办战争罪犯,谁是罪犯,先发动战争的人就是战争罪犯吗?我看不一定。失败者就是战争罪犯吗?我看也不一定。 如何惩办?是把主要人员抓起来杀了,就是惩办战争罪犯吗?还是将主要人员抓起来,关上几十年或一辈子。这对他所代表的一方,有用吗?是化解矛盾呢?还是进一步强化仇恨呢? 因此,我认为,战争结束后,惩办战争罪犯,是为下一次战争做准备。而宽恕,那么无论是对自己,还是对他人,都是是医治战争创伤的{zh0}良药,也是阻止再次战争的{zh0}良药。 The Final Surrender
Abraham Lincoln did not live to see the final surrender of the armies of the Confederacy. A Confederate sympathizer shot the president at Ford's Theatre in Washington on April fourteenth, eighteen sixty-five. By that time, however, the American Civil War really was over. General Robert E. Lee surrendered in early April, bringing an end to four years of fighting. Several other Confederate armies were still in the field. But they were too small and too weak to continue the fight. This week in our series, we tell the story of the final surrender of the Confederate armies.
One army was in North Carolina, commanded by General Joe Johnston. Five days after Lee's surrender, Johnston asked for a meeting with General William Sherman, the commander of Union forces in North Carolina. Sherman met with Johnston a few days later. He offered him the same surrender terms that General Lee had accepted. He said the Confederates must give up their weapons and promise to fight no more. Then they would be free to return to their homes. Johnston said he could not accept these terms. Johnston said he had the power to surrender all the Confederate armies everywhere in the South he said he would do so if Sherman agreed on a political settlement. The two generals met again the next day. Sherman listened as Johnston explained his demands. Most of them, Sherman accepted. He believed that President Lincoln wanted to help the South as much as possible. He had heard Lincoln say that he wanted to make it easy for the southern states to return to the Union. When the agreement was completed, Sherman sent it immediately to Washington for approval by the new president, Andrew
Instead of surrendering to Sherman, the Confederate Armies would break up. The soldiers would return to their homes, taking their weapons with them. They would sign a promise not to fight again and to obey state and federal laws. In exchange for this, Sherman said the president would recognize state governments in the south which promised to support the Constitution. He said federal courts would be established in the south again. And he said the president -- as well as he could -- would protect the political rights promised to all people by the Constitution of the United States and the state constitutions. And Sherman said the United States government would not interfere with any of the southern people, if they remained peaceful and obeyed the laws. President Johnson held a cabinet meeting to discuss the agreement Sherman had signed. War Secretary Stanton and the other members of the cabinet were violently opposed to it. They said Sherman had no power to make any kind of political settlement. President Johnson rejected the agreement. He said Johnston's army must surrender within forty-eight hours or be destroyed. He said the surrender terms could be no better than those given General Lee. Johnston decided to surrender. On April twenty-sixth, his army laid down its weapons. One by one, the remaining armies surrendered. The soldiers began returning home.
Many of them were bitter. They wanted to continue to fight. They spoke of guerrilla war against the Yankees. But most of the Confederate commanders opposed this. Many, like cavalry General Nathan Bedford Forrest, urged their men to accept defeat. Said Forrest in a farewell speech to his men: "It is a clear fact that we are beaten. We would be foolish to try to fight further. The government which we tried to establish is at an end. Civil War -- such as you have just passed through -- naturally causes feelings of bitterness and hatred. We must put these feelings aside. Whatever your responsibilities may be, meet them like men. You have been good soldiers. You can be good citizens." Confederate President Jefferson Davis fled south after the fall of his government. He hoped to get across the Mississippi River. He believed that he could form a new Confederate army. If this failed, he planned to escape to Mexico. President Lincoln had hoped that Davis would escape. He felt that punishing Davis would only create more bitterness and make reconstruction -- the rebuilding of the South -- more difficult. But President Johnson did not share Lincoln's feelings. He believed Davis had a part in the plot to kill Lincoln. He said Davis must be captured. On May tenth, Union forces found the Confederate president's camp in southern Georgia. They seized him and took him to Fort Monroe, Virginia. He remained there for many months under close guard. His trial was never held. And finally, in eighteen sixty-seven, he was freed.
Late in May, one hundred fifty thousand Union soldiers, representing every one of the Union armies, came to Washington. They came to take part in a big parade -- a victory march through the city. For two days, the soldiers marched past the White House. Many of the marching men had fought at Bull Run, at Fredericksburg, Antietam, Gettysburg, Petersburg, and Appomattox. Sherman's western army was there from battles at Shiloh, Vicksburg, Murfreesboro, Chickamauga and Atlanta. The soldiers marched proudly past the president and other government leaders. All along the way, from the Capitol building to the White House, were huge crowds of cheering people. Hour after hour, the soldiers passed. Never had the city seen such a celebration. Each group of soldiers had its band and carried its own battle flags. Some proudly carried flags that had been torn in fierce fighting. Finally, late on the second day, the final group of soldiers passed the White House. The grand parade was over. The battle flags were put away, and the marching bands fell silent. The war was ended. Now, men could look about them and count the cost of the war. Four years of bloody fighting had saved the Union of states. The northern victory had settled for all time the question of whether states could leave the Union. And it had put to rest the great problem of slavery, which had troubled the nation for so many years. But the costs were great. More than six hundred thousand men of the North and South lost their lives. Hundreds of thousands more were wounded. Many had lost their arms or legs. The war cost the North almost three-and-one-half thousand million dollars. It was almost as costly to the Confederates. Most of the war was fought in the southern states. And most of the war damage was there. Hundreds of cities and towns suffered damage. Some -- like Atlanta -- were completely destroyed by Union forces. The damage outside the populated areas was almost as great. Union armies had marched across the South leaving behind them widespread destruction. Farm houses and buildings had been burned; animals and crops seized or destroyed. Transport in the South was especially hard hit. Union soldiers had destroyed most of the railroads. The few Confederate trains that escaped capture were worn out from heavy use. River boats had been destroyed. And roads and bridges were in terrible condition. The South had no money to rebuild. Businessmen and rich landowners had put their money in Confederate bonds, now completely worthless. Confederate war debts would never be paid. There was also the question of the four million former slaves. They were free now. But few could take care of themselves. They needed jobs and training. The people of the South faced a difficult future. They had been defeated in battle. Their economy was destroyed. In many areas, there was little food and the people were hungry. Farmers could not plant crops, because they had no seed and no animals to break the ground. There was no money for rebuilding.
To add to all these problems, radical Republicans in Washington were demanding severe punishment for the South. Instead of offering aid, they demanded that the government sell the property of southerners to pay Union war debts. President Andrew Johnson, himself a southerner from Tennessee, opposed the radical plans. He had his own program of reconstruction for the South. |