The town is named for the
Appomattox River, which was named after the
Appomattoc Native American tribe, one of the
Algonquian-speaking
Powhatan Confederacy, historically based in the coastal area and encountered by the English before the tribes of the
Piedmont. The Appamatuck historically lived somewhat to the east of the present town, around the area of present-day Petersburg. At the time of European encounter, the area of Appomattox County above the
Fall Line was part of the territory of the
Manahoac tribe, who spoke a
Siouan language. At the time of the Civil War, the present community of Appomattox was the site of a railroad
depot, called
Appomattox Station on the line between
Petersburg and
Lynchburg, a stop on the
Southside Railroad. The station is three miles west of the restored historic
village of
Appomattox Court House, the site of
Confederate General
Robert E. Lee's surrender to Union General
Ulysses S. Grant on April 9, 1865, which essentially
ended the American Civil War. The area is preserved as
Appomattox Court House National Historical Park and is administered by the
National Park Service. The town was first named "Nebraska" in 1855. In 1895 it was renamed "West Appomattox". The first postmaster of "Nebraska, Virginia", was
Samuel D. McDearmon. Near the end of the Civil War,
Robert E. Lee made a last attempt to reach the depot, hoping to transport the
Army of Northern Virginia south by railroad to meet
Joseph E. Johnston's larger
Army of Tennessee, then located in Greensboro, North Carolina. The arrival of Federal troops and their blocking Lee's army from the depot led to Lee's surrender in the home of
Wilmer McLean, on April 9. Johnston later surrendered 98,270 Confederate troops (the largest surrender of the war) on April 26, 1865. Today, each April, the Appomattox Court House National Historical Park commemorates this event with a luminary ceremony, wherein a lantern is lit for each of the 4,600 slaves freed in Appomattox County alone. The railroad became the
Atlantic, Mississippi and Ohio Railroad in 1870. The inconvenience of the railroad's location to the original Appomattox Court House in the village of Clover Hill led to the decline of the courthouse community. After
fire destroyed the courthouse building in 1892, the county relocated the court to the depot area, which formally became the
county seat in 1894. The railroad became a line in the
Norfolk and Western Railway and then the
Norfolk Southern Railway. In 1990, there were 11,971 residents reported for Appomattox County; the Town of Appomattox had 1,703 residents. In addition to Appomattox Court House National Historical Park, the
Appomattox River Bridge,
Appomattox Historic District,
Holiday Lake 4-H Educational Center, and
Holliday Lake State Park are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. The
2010 Appomattox shootings occurred from January 17 to 20 and left eight people dead. ==Geography==