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The
Banks House, which served as Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant’s headquarters
following the Breakthrough on April 2, 1865, is one of the Park's
historical treasures and an outstanding story of preservation as
well.
History & Preservation:
This Federal-style building was built in two stages, the first being
a one-and-a-half story structure completed between 1740 and 1760.
A larger, two-story wing, the principal part of the dwelling, was
added about 1790.
In the fall of 1864, the landscape around Margaret Banks’
231-acre farm changed when Petersburg became the focus of conflict
in the Civil War’s eastern theater. Gen. Robert E. Lee, seeking
to protect his lines of communication to the south and west of Petersburg,
extended his main line of defense southwest of the city. Confederate
soldiers dug an imposing line of earthworks just south of the Banks
House. A Confederate general, James Lane, used the yard of the Banks
House as his headquarters. This line was overrun by Union troops
on the early morning of April 2, 1865. Lee was forced to abandon
his entire position around Petersburg and Richmond.

The
Banks House before restoration
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Pamplin Historical
Park acquired the Banks House parcel as a gift from Roslyn Farms Corporation.
TXI Corporation, parent company of nearby Chapparal Steel, donated
$75,000 to assist in the $600,000 restoration project.

Headquarters
of
Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
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General
Grant’s
Headquarters:
Lt. Gen Ulysses
S. Grant chose the Banks House as his command post because it provided
him a vantage point from which he could observe and direct assaults
against the western sector of Gen. Robert E. Lee’s inner defensive
lines.
General Grant dispatched a telegraph message to Maj. Gen. George
Meade, immediately in command of the Army of the Potomac, that read,
“Hd Qrs armies U.S. will be at Banks House, north of [F] ort
Fisher and near the Boydton Plank Road.” By 10:45 that morning,
dispatches from Grant bore the address “T. Banks’ House."
General Grant was known as stoic, deliberate and imperturbable,
especially under fire. Confederate gunners, spotting the knot of
Federal officers in the yard of the Banks House, began lobbing artillery
shells at the group. As exploding missiles fell about the landscape,
Grant sat on the ground writing out dispatches, ignoring the pleas
of his staff to move to a place of safety. Once finished with his
work, Grant arose and walked away, remarking to his aide, “Well,
they do seem to have the range on us.”
Original Slave Quarter and Kitchen:
One
of the few remaining original slave dwellings in Virginia is located
behind the Banks House. The four-room building includes two rooms
on the bottom floor that were used as the plantation kitchen and
laundry. The upper floor contains two rooms that were the living
quarters of the house servants.
This structure has been restored to its wartime appearance.
Visiting the Banks House:
A visit to the Banks House is included with regular Park Admission.
Visitors should obtain a code at the Admissions Desk in the National
Museum of the Civil War Soldier which may be used to open the Banks
House access gate. Exterior exhibits explain the history of both
the main house and kitchen. |