The Texas government called on their armies to stand fast and hold the line after General Lee surrendered. They maintained that the revolutionary cause was not yet lost, and their generals continued to exhort the men to train and protect the borders. They were still engaging major Union threats a month later, but the common soldier knew they were being fed a load of bull. And if anybody knew what bull looked like, it was a native Texan. The standard conscripted soldier saw no need to fight to the bitter end over a cause that was obviously lost and went home, often after “stocking up” on some last minute provisions from the nearest army depot. The vast Texas army literally just went home and a mere two thousand Union soldiers landed in Galveston a month later to take possession of a State that was offering no organized resistance. And the Texas governor who had ordered the soldiers to fight to the bitter end fled south of the border with the last of his sycophants. So the Civil War ended in Texas.