Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Look at What's New in Southside Virginia!

Another state park visitor's center has opened. This one is very dear to my heart. I stumbled upon it during my run the other day. Care to take a brief peek?

The High Bridge State Park Visitor's Center at Camp Paradise near the town of Farmville, VA, is on the exact spot where one of the last battles of the Civil War took place. On April 3, 1865, Union general George Meade wrote to his wife, "The telegraph will have conveyed to you, long before this reaches you, the joyful intelligence that Petersburg and Richmond have fallen, and that Lee, broken and dispirited, has retreated toward Lynchburg and Danville." He added, "We are now moving after Lee, and if we are successful in striking him another blow before he can rally his troops, I think the Confederacy will be at an end."

Thus Meade began the great pursuit west. He would catch up to Lee alongside a little waterway called Sailor's Creek. The battle was a disaster for Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. It lost 8,000 men, including 8 generals. Moving further westward, the Union troops arrived at the town of Farmville, but only after the Confederates had attempted to burn the High Bridge over the Appomattox River to stymie their pursuers. They failed, and the rest is literally history. 

The situation of Lee's army was hopeless. Writing from a hotel in Farmville on April 7, Grant wrote to Lee, asking him to surrender. Two days later, Lee's army was finished.

The Virginia state park service deserves my thanks -- and the thanks of people everywhere -- for the work they do to preserve and share the many state battlefields I have visited. I always leave impressed by the friendly and knowledgeable people I encounter on such visits. The Civil War remains a fascinating and compelling period of American history for many people. Why is that? My guess is that, as William Faulkner once observed, "The past is never dead. It's not even past." The past is always present. It permeates everything. It's the ether in which we live. 

Which is one reason I love to run here so often.