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Civil War's Last Rebel Town Finally Rejoined the U.S.—in 1946!

Part of the fun of doing family history research in old newspapers is the occasional strange, unusual—and even startling—story you run across. Such certainly is the case with the tiny New York town called Town Line, which joined the Rebel Cause and seceded from the Union in 1861—and did not come back to the United States until 1946, 81 years after the American Civil War ended!

There have been thousands of books and movies produced about the Civil War, hundreds of thousands of eager visitors flock to Civil War battlefields every year, and the nation is in the midst of commemorating the sesquicentennial of this great and tragic conflict that caused more than a million casualties.

With all this interest and knowledge, however, few people know this story: the last Rebel town to rejoin the Union after the Civil War was not south of the Mason-Dixon Line, but was in the Union state of New York.

That town was a tiny hamlet called Town Line, in upstate New York near Buffalo. For reasons no one seems to know anymore, the hamlet's eligible voters (all 125 of them) met in 1861 and, after an intense debate, voted 85 to 40 to secede from the Union! Apparently the hamlet even sent five men to fight in the Confederate army in Virginia. But as the war dragged on the secessionist fever cooled, and the locals appear to have politely decided to quietly forget about their defiant stance.

However: they never officially rejoined the United States, until the patriotic fever following victory in WWII moved the residents of Town Line to rethink this matter of secession. Their surprising story was explained in this 1945 Oregon newspaper article.


Oregonian (Portland, Oregon), 9 September 1945, page 103

The article's coverage of Town Line concludes this way:

"In the years that have come between, Town Line has not officially changed its decision. Technically, by choice of its voters in 1861, it is still not a part of the United States. But the folks that live there now feel that it is time for something to be done about it. 'If our former allies in Mississippi and Georgia feel that the Civil War is over, so do we,' said a prominent citizen of Town Line the other day."

Someone from the town sent President Harry Truman a letter about the situation, and he cheerfully wrote back:

"Why don't you run down the fattest calf in Erie County, barbeque it and serve it with fixin's in the old blacksmith shop where the ruckus started? Who can tell? The dissidents might decide to resume citizenship."


Seattle Daily Times (Seattle, Washington), 8 October 1945, page 8

Well, they did just that, holding the barbeque in October of 1945—during which they agreed to hold a vote soon on the great matter at hand. Finally, January 1946 was chosen for the vote.


Daily Illinois State Journal (Springfield, Illinois), 23 January 1946, page 1

The article goes on to explain:

"Last summer's meeting had originally scheduled the final ballot for July, 1946. But early this month Alvin E. Weber, chairman of a reconstruction committee in charge of the ballot, declared that returning World War II veterans were 'raising an awful clamor to settle the issue immediately.'

"'They went away to fight for their country and returned to find they haven't any,' Weber explained. 'They don't like it.'"

On 24 January 1946, by a vote of 90 to 23, the last Rebel town of the Civil War officially rejoined the Union.


Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, North Carolina), 25 January 1946, page 7

The Union was whole at last!