Photograph as originally submitted to this page in the Historical Marker Database www.HMdb.org. Click on photo to resize in browser. Scroll down to see metadata.
Fall of Richmond (right panel)
Photographer: Bernard Fisher
Taken: October 25, 2009
Caption: Fall of Richmond (right panel)
Additional Description: The next day, Abraham Lincoln arrived unannounced in the city and walked up Main Street toward Capitol Square.

Some 1,000 buildings in 15 blocks of the industrial and commercial riverfront were burned to the ground. The Tredegar Iron Works was spared when its owner, Confederate general Joseph Reid Anderson, armed a group of employees, who stood guard against the arsonists.

Accompanied by his son and a small military escort, Lincoln was greeted by hundreds of black Richmonders, thus becoming part of Richmond’s emancipation story. After visiting the Confederate White House, he made a brief tour of the city by carriage.

When Richmond fell, so did the Confederate cause. Exactly one week after Jefferson Davis fled the city, General Lee surrendered at Appomattox. Five days later, President Lincoln was assassinated.

No other city had experienced so much concentrated fighting in its environs as Richmond during the war, or anything like the drama of its final days. In a city with such a diverse population, these events meant different things to different people. To some, they meant the end of a hope for a separate new nation; to others, they meant emancipation; and still others, they marked the beginning of a new, strengthened Union. One thing is certain — few people ever forgot where they were and what they witnessed during those fateful days of April 1865.

On the left is a “View of Tredegar Iron Works, showing how near the fire came to the buildings.” National Archives

In the center is an illustration of “President Abraham Lincoln entering Richmond, April 4, 1865.” Valentine Museum

On the right is a photo of “A Federal soldier among the ruins, 1865.” Valentine Museum
Submitted: October 28, 2009, by Bernard Fisher of Richmond, Virginia.
Database Locator Identification Number: p82417
File Size: 0.908 Megabytes

To see the metadata that may be embedded in this photo, sign in and then return to this page.