Marshall Conferences
The Marshall Conferences were a series of three meetings by Confederate leaders at Marshall, Texas, the capital of the exiled Confederate government of Missouri, at the suggestion of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
First conference
The first conference took place in June 1862, and was between Texas governor Francis R. Lubbock and Confederate Missouri governor Claiborne F. Jackson. The two governors produced three recommendations for Jefferson that were later endorsed by the governors of Arkansas and Louisiana, who did not attend the meeting. The recommendations were as follows: establish a branch of the Confederate treasury located west of the Mississippi River, appoint a general with commanding jurisdiction over the Trans-Mississippi states, and establish more ammunition depots in the region to alleviate an arms shortage.
Second conference
The second conference taking place in August 1863, brought in leaders from Arkansas, Confederate Indian Territory, Louisiana, Confederate Missouri, and Texas.
Third conference
The third and final conference took place in May 1865 and produced unrealistic terms of surrender which the Union rejected.
- Articles lacking sources from August 2008
- Political history of the Confederate States
- Texas in the American Civil War
- Missouri in the American Civil War
- Marshall, Texas
- Arkansas in the American Civil War
- Louisiana in the American Civil War
- Indian Territory in the American Civil War
- 1862 in the Confederate States of America
- 1862 in Texas
- 1863 in Texas
- 1865 in Texas
- 1862 conferences
- 1863 conferences
- 1865 conferences