Everything about George Crook totally explained
George Crook (
September 8,
1828 –
March 21,
1890) was a career
U.S. Army officer, most noted for his distinguished service during the
American Civil War and the
Indian Wars.
Early life
Crook was born to Thomas and Elizabeth Matthews Crook on a farm near
Taylorsville,
Ohio (near
Dayton). He was nominated to the
United States Military Academy by Congressman
Robert Schenck and graduated in 1852, ranking near the bottom of his class. He was assigned to the
4th U.S. infantry as brevet second lieutenant, serving in California, 1852–61. He served in
Oregon and northern
California, fighting against several
Native American tribes. He commanded the
Pitt River Expedition of 1857 and in one of the several engagements was severely wounded by an Indian arrow. He established
Fort Ter-Wer in what is now
Klamath, California. His promotion to the rank of 1st lieutenant was received in 1856, and to that of captain in 1860. He was ordered east and in 1861 was made
colonel of the
36th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
He married a
Virginian, Mary Tapscott Dailey.
Civil War
Early service
When the Civil War broke out, Crook accepted a commission as
Colonel of Ohio's 36th regiment and led it on duty in western Virginia. He was promoted to the rank of
brigadier general on September 7, 1862. He commanded a
brigade of Ohio
regiments in the Kanawha Division (attached to the
IX Corps,
Army of the Potomac) in the
Maryland Campaign. Crook saw action at the battles of
South Mountain and
Antietam. He developed a life-long friendship with one of his subordinates, Col.
Rutherford B. Hayes of the
23rd Ohio Infantry.
General Crook commanded a cavalry division in the
Army of the Cumberland at the
Battle of Chickamauga, and then returned to the eastern front as chief of the Kanawah Division.
Southwest Virginia
To open the spring campaign of 1864,
Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant ordered a Union advance on all fronts, minor as well as major. Grant sent for Brigadier General Crook, in winter quarters at
Charleston, West Virginia, and ordered him to attack the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad,
Richmond's primary link to
Knoxville and the southwest, and to destroy the Confederate salt works at
Saltville, Virginia.
The 35-year-old Crook, the most magnificently whiskered Civil War general on either side, reported to army headquarters at
City Point, Virginia, where the commanding general explained the mission in person. Grant instructed Crook to march his force, the Kanawha Division, against the railroad at
Dublin, Virginia, 140 miles south of Charleston. At Dublin he'd put the railroad out of business and destroy
Confederate military property. He was then to destroy the railroad bridge over
New River, a few miles to the east. When these actions were accomplished, along with the destruction of the salt works, Crook was to march east and join forces with Major General
Franz Sigel, who meanwhile was to be driving south up the
Shenandoah Valley.
After long dreary months of garrison duty, the men were ready for action. Crook didn't reveal the nature or objective of their mission, but everyone sensed that something important was brewing. "All things point to early action", the commander of the second brigade, Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes, noted in his diary.
On
April 29,
1864, the Kanawha Division marched out of Charleston and headed south. Crook sent a force under Brigadier General
William W. Averell westward towards Saltville, then pushed on towards Dublin with nine infantry regiments, seven cavalry regiments, and 15 artillery pieces, a force of about 6,500 men organized into three brigades. The West Virginia countryside was beautiful that spring, but the mountainous terrain made the march a difficult undertaking. The way was narrow and steep, and spring rains slowed the march as tramping feet churned the roads into mud. In places, Crook's engineers had to build bridges across wash-outs before the army could advance.
The column reached Fayette on May 2, and then passed through Raleigh Court House and Princeton. On the night of May 8, the division camped at Shannon's Bridge, Virginia, 10 miles north of Dublin.
The Confederates at Dublin soon learned the enemy was approaching. Their commander, Colonel
John McCausland, prepared to evacuate his 1100 men, but before transportation could arrive, a courier from Brigadier General
Albert G. Jenkins informed McCausland that the two of them were ordered by General
John C. Breckenridge to stop Crook's advance. The combined forces of Jenkins and McCausland amounted to 2,400 men. Jenkins, the senior officer, took command.
Breaking camp on the morning of May 9, Crook moved his men south to the top of a spur of Cloyd's Mountain. Before the Union troops lay a precipitous, densely wooded slope with a meadow about 400 yards wide at the bottom. On the other side of the meadow, the land rose in another spur of the mountain, and there Jenkins' rebels waited behind hastily erected fortifications.
Crook dispatched the third brigade under Colonel
Carr B. White to work its way through the woods and deliver a flank attack on the rebel right. At 11 am, he sent Hayes' first brigade and Colonel
Horatio G. Sickel's second brigade down the slope to the edge of the meadow, where they were to launch a frontal assault on the Confederates as soon as they heard the sound of White's guns.
The slope before them was so steep that the officers had to dismount and descend on foot. Crook stationed himself with Hayes' brigade, which was to lead the assault. After a long, anxious wait, Hayes at last heard cannon fire off to his left and led his men at a slow double time out onto the meadow and into the rebels' musketry and artillery fire, which Crook called "galling". Their pace quickened as they neared the other side, but just before the up-slope they came to a waist-deep creek. The barrier caused little delay and the Yankee infantry stormed up the hill and engaged the rebel defenders at close range.
The only man to have trouble with the creek was General Crook. Dismounted, he still wore his high riding boots, and as he stepped into the stream, the boots filled with water and bogged him down. Nearby soldiers grabbed their commander's arms and hauled him to the other side.
Vicious hand-to-hand fighting erupted as the Yankees reached the crude rebel defenses. The Southerners gave way, tried to re-form, then broke and retreated up and over the hill towards Dublin.
The Yankees rounded up rebel prisoners by the hundreds and seized General Jenkins, who had fallen wounded. At this point the discipline of the Union men wavered, and there was no organized pursuit of the fleeing enemy. General Crook was unable to provide leadership as the excitement and exertion had sent him into a faint.
Colonel Hayes kept his head and organized a force of about 500 men from the soldiers milling about the site of their victory. With his improvised command, he set off, closely pressing the rebels.
While the
fight at Cloyd's Mountain was going on, a train pulled into the Dublin station and disgorged 500 fresh troops of General
John Hunt Morgan's cavalry, which had just defeated Averell at Saltville. The fresh troops hastened towards the battlefield, where they soon met their compatriots retreating from Cloyd's Mountain. The reinforcements halted the rout, but Colonel Hayes, although ignorant of the strength of the force now before him, immediately ordered his men to "yell like devils" and rush the enemy. Within a few minutes General Crook arrived with the rest of the division, and the defenders broke and ran.
Cloyd's Mountain cost the Union army 688 casualties, while the rebels suffered 538 killed, wounded, and captured.
Unopposed, Crook moved his command into Dublin, where he laid waste to the railroad and the military stores. He then sent a party eastward to tear up the tracks and burn the ties. The next morning the main body set out for their next objective, the New River bridge, a key point on the railroad, a few miles to the east.
The Confederates, now commanded by Colonel McCausland, waited on the east side of the New River to defend the bridge. Crook pulled up on the west bank, and a long, ineffective artillery duel ensued. Seeing that there was little danger from the rebel cannon, Crook ordered the bridge destroyed, and both sides watched in awe as the structure collapsed magnificently into the river. McCausland, without the resources to oppose the Yankees any further, withdrew his battered command to the east.
General Crook, supplies running low in a country not suited for major foraging, now entertained second thoughts about his orders to push on east and join Sigel in the Shenandoah Valley. At Dublin he'd intercepted an unconfirmed report that General
Robert E. Lee had beaten Grant badly in the
Wilderness, which led him to consider whether the Confederate commander might not soon move against Crook with a vastly superior force.
Having accomplished the major part of his mission, destruction of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, Crook turned his men north and after another hard march, reached the Union base at Meadow Bluff, West Virginia.
Shenandoah Valley
The following August, Crook took command of the Department and Army of Western Virginia, the forces of which became the
VIII Corps in Major General
Philip Sheridan's
Army of the Shenandoah. Crook led his corps in the
Valley Campaigns of 1864 at the battles of
Opequon (Third Winchester),
Fisher's Hill, and
Cedar Creek. On
October 21,
1864, he was promoted to major general of volunteers.
In February 1865, General Crook was captured by Confederate raiders at
Cumberland, Maryland, and held as a
prisoner of war in Richmond until exchanged a month later, when he took command of a cavalry division in the Army of the Potomac during the
Appomattox Campaign.
Indian Wars
At the end of the Civil War, George Crook received a
brevet as major general in the regular army, but reverted to the permanent rank of
lieutenant colonel, serving with the 23rd Infantry on frontier duty in the Pacific Northwest. He campaigned against the
Paiute Indians where he won the recognition of
President Ulysses S. Grant. Grant placed Crook in command of the
Arizona Territory. Crook's use of Apache scouts brought him much success in forcing the Apache Indians, under chief
Cochise onto reservations. In 1872 the Arizona Territory was at peace and Crook was appointed
brigadier general in the regular army, a promotion that passed over and angered several full colonels next in line for promotion to general. He next served against the
Sioux in the
1876 Powder River Expedition. He fought the
Lakota at the
Battle of the Rosebud, as well as at the Tongue River.
He was the Commander of the
Department of the Platte from 1875 to 1882, with headquarters at
Fort Omaha in
North Omaha, Nebraska. During this period, in 1879, he spoke on behalf of the
Ponca tribe and
Native American rights during the trial of
Standing Bear v. Crook. That same year his home, now called the
General Crook House, was completed.
By 1882, Crook was back in command in Arizona. The Apaches had once again taken up arms against the U.S. army under the leadership of
Geronimo. Crook repeatedly forced the surrender of the Apaches but saw Geronimo escape. The Apache, as a mark of respect, nicknamed Crook
Nantan Lupan, which means "Grey Fox".
Nelson A. Miles replaced Crook in command of the Arizona Territory and brought an end to the
Apache Wars when he sent
Geronimo, the
Chiricahua Apache tribe and the
Chiricahua scouts serving in the U.S. Army into exile in
Florida. (Crook was reportedly furious and appalled that the scouts, who had faithfully served the Army against their own tribe, were sent as well and telegrammed numerous protests to Washington.) After years of campaigning in the
Indian Wars, Crook won steady promotion back up the ranks to the permanent grade of Major General, and President
Grover Cleveland placed him in command of the "Military Division of the Missouri" in 1888.
Crook served in Omaha again as the Commander of the
Department of the Platte from 1886 to 1888.
He spent his last years speaking out against the unjust treatment of his former Indian adversaries. He died suddenly in
Chicago while serving as commander of the Division of the Missouri. Crook was originally buried in
Oakland, Maryland, but was moved to Section 2 of
Arlington National Cemetery on
November 11,
1898.
Red Cloud, a war leader of the
Oglala Lakota (
Sioux), said of Crook when he died, "He, at least, never lied to us. His words gave us hope."
In memoriam
Crook County, Wyoming, and
Crook County, Oregon, are named in George Crook's honor, and the Crook Walk in
Arlington National Cemetery is near George Crook's gravesite.
Fort Crook (1857 – 1869) was an Army post near
Glenburn, California, used during the Indian Wars, and later for the protection of San Francisco during the Civil War. It was named for then Lt. Crook by Captain John W. T. Gardiner, 1st Dragoons, as Crook had been injured and was recovering there. California State Historical Marker 355 marks the site in
Shasta County.
Fort Crook (1890 – 1946) was an Army Depot in
Bellevue, Nebraska, first used as a dispatch point for Indian conflicts on the Great Plains, then later as an airfield for the 61st Balloon Company of the Army Air Corp. It was named for Brig. Gen. Crook due to his many successful Indian campaigns in the west. The site formerly known as Fort Crook is now part of
Offutt AFB,
Nebraska.
3rd Brigade Combat Team,
1st Cavalry Division is nicknamed "Greywolf" in his honor, in an odd mutation of his Apache nickname "Grey Fox". Forest Road 300 in the
Coconino National Forest is named the "General Crook Trail", and is a section of the trail which General Crook blazed from
Fort Verde to
Fort Whipple through Central Arizona, and his good friend and
Union Army comrade,
President Rutherford B. Hayes, named one of his sons George Crook Hayes in respect of his commanding officer.
The
General Crook House at
Fort Omaha in
Omaha, Nebraska is also named in his honor, as he was the first and only Commander of the
Department of the Platte to live there.
In popular media
Crook was portrayed by
Peter Coyote in the television series
Deadwood. He was also portrayed by
Gene Hackman in the 1993 movie .
Further Information
Get more info on 'George Crook'.
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