Several sources have held that this was the last battle of the war. In 1935, seeking support for a national battlefield park to be established here, the
Georgia state government declared this to be the "last battle of the war between the states." Insofar as the surrender of the bulk of Confederates on April 26, 1865, at
Bennett Place, North Carolina, marked the effective end of the war (as many state governments maintained), the Battle at Columbus was the last battle of the Civil War. President
Andrew Johnson, who had succeeded Lincoln, declared the war over on May 10, 1865. This was the day that President
Jefferson Davis was captured. Johnson characterized remaining resisters as no longer combatants, but "fugitives." The
Battle of Palmito Ranch took place on May 13. Some claim that this was the last battle of the war, rejecting President Johnson's definition and preferring to refer to the Confederates there as "organized forces" of the Confederacy. The officers who led Union forces in the battle insisted that Columbus was the last battle of the war. On May 30, 1865
Brevet Major General Emory Upton reported for his division in the Wilson Raid, in the
Official Records, that the Battle of Columbus was the "closing conflict of the war." In 1868, General Wilson gave a speech to a soldier's reunion, wherein he detailed the Battle of Columbus and concluded "the last battle had been fought." In 1913 Wilson wrote that there were "no grounds left for doubting that 'Columbus was the last battle of the war.'" General Edward F. Winslow wrote, "I have always considered that engagement, by the number present and the results achieved, to be the final battle of the war." Colonel Theodore Allen wrote, "It is true that there was some desultory fighting and scrapping after the battle at Columbus, Georgia, but nothing of sufficient size to entitle it to the name of a battle." A movement to preserve the Girard/Columbus battlefield as a national park was active from the 1890s through the 1930s. The director of the
National Park Service,
Arno B. Cammerer, rejected the proposal in 1934. In response, in 1935 the Georgia state legislature passed a resolution identifying the battle as the last of the Civil War and calling again for a national battlefield park to be established there. In the 21st century, some people have begun a renewed effort to commemorate the battlefield as a park. Representatives of
Auburn University posted an appeal in 2013 to help preserve Ft. Gilmer, one of the earthwork redoubts on the Alabama side of the Chattahoochee River. In 2015,
Columbus State University Professor Virginia Causey addressed the topic of last battle status in an article in the local
Ledger-Enquirer paper. She suggested that this status was based on myth, according to a 45-page report prepared by the Department of the Interior in 1934. In 2015 Daniel Bellware rebutted her account in his article "How Columbus Lost the Last Battle of the Civil War." Bellware said that the report had numerous factual errors, has no date and credits no author calling into question its attribution to the Department of the Interior. The report argues that the engagement in Columbus, which included major generals and thousands of combatants on both sides, does not rise to the level of a battle. However, it concludes that Palmito Ranch, a much smaller engagement with colonels commanding and a few hundred combatants, should be ranked as the last battle of the war. The report refers to former Confederate President Jefferson Davis's account in his book
The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government. Bellware said that it might be more appropriate to rank the Battle of Columbus as “the last major military engagement of the Civil War,” to avoid the argument of whether a particular engagement qualifies as a battle. ==Representation in other media==