$200.00 SOLD
Quantity Available: None
Item Code: 173-4308
On the day preceding the surrender at Appomattox, the last cavalry engagement of the Eastern Theater took place at Appomattox Station. Identifying an opportunity to neutralize and capture an entire Confederate artillery brigade with mixed stragglers, Custer’s Cavalry Brigade launched a daring attack. The first US units captured unguarded supply trains, and more units were fed into the station to contend with organized enemy resistance. By night, after 4-5 hours of combat, Custer troopers broke the Confederate defenses – comprised most of artillery, dismounted artillerymen armed with muskets and rifle muskets, dismounted cavalry, and a large contingent of exhausted infantry stragglers who were pressed into the fight by Confederate general Lindsay Walker. A running fight ensued, and Custer’s men stopped to establish a new line along the Lynchburg Road in the darkness. Tragically, up to 32 of Custer’s men lost their lives outright and a further 18 died of wounds during the final full day of fighting in Virginia. They did, however, capture over 1,000 prisoners, prevent supplies from reaching Lee’s army, destroyed the railroad tracks that drew Lee to the area initially, and provided more motivation for him to surrender on the 9th.
This grouping of relics was on display at a private museum near Appomattox Station and was acquired by the Horse Soldier in 1995 as part of an extensive surrender-related dug artifact grouping. This truly remarkable lot includes some very uniquely identifiable items, including a Lynchburg Railroad stamped boxcar lock – very likely from one of the aforementioned supply trains. Also included is a mule shoe, presumably from one of the many teams used by the Confederate army to move supplies, 5 enlisted brass US coat buttons, another box car lock that may have been marked the same as the other at one time, a Confederate cannon pointing ring, 2 very rare Union Corps badges, another boxcar lock featuring a key, a Confederate horse buckle – used for harnessing and heavy saddlery, 3 enlisted US cuff or mounted service jacket buttons, an incomplete box car lock (faceplate only), an O-ring from a Confederate cannon, and 10 dropped Confederate Gardner bullets in an oxidized state.
This grouping has broad appeal to Custer enthusiasts, artillery collectors, cavalry aficionados, and students of the final days of the war. Seldom do relics with such tracible provenance find their way to the collector market. [cm][ph:L]
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