In the text, you read this about the surrender at Appomattox:

At Appomattox Court House, Grant offered generous terms of surrender to the defeated Confederate army. Soldiers were required to tum over their rifles, but officers were allowed to keep their pistols. Soldiers who had horses could keep them. Grant knew that southerners would need the animals for spring plowing. Finally, ordered Grant, "each officer and man will be allowed to retum to his home, not to be disturbed by the United States authorities."
As the Confederates surrendered, Union soldiers began to cheer. Grant ordered them to be silent. "The war is over," he said. "The rebels are our countrymen again."
Use the passage to answer the question.
Why did Grant not want his troops to celebrate the surrender of the Confederate troops?
(1 point)
• It could bring surprise attacks on the North.
• It would not help in unifying the nation again.
• It would cause his troops to view Southerners as countrymen.
• It could cause the South to revoke their surrender.
#8
Oregon Country
key
Missouri Compromise

Grant did not want his troops to celebrate the surrender of the Confederate troops because it would not help in unifying the nation again. Grant's focus was on bringing the country back together and not further dividing it through celebrations or taunting of the defeated Confederates. Celebrating the surrender could potentially hinder the reconciliation process and make it more difficult for the North and South to come together as one nation again.