lepley.consultchris.us Lepley Family History Research
lepleys.blogspot.com Genealogy Stories and News

04 March 2026

The Last Guard, Chapter 1

 Author’s Note: The following narrative is a work of historical fiction based on the life of Sergeant James R. Crooks (1840–1936). While the specific dialogue is imagined, the events described—from the surrender at Harper's Ferry to the tragic loss of his children—are grounded in primary historical records. To view the original military documents, photographs, and census records that inspired this story, please visit lepley.consultchris.us - James & Mary Crooks .



The Last Guard

A Fictionalized Memoir of Sgt James R. Crooks Based on the true events and records of the Lepley-Crooks family archive. 

Chapter 1: The Shame of the Valley (1862)

You know me as an old man who sits on the porch, watching the cars go by on Elm Street. But in June of 1862, I was younger than you are now. I was twenty-two, clean-shaven, and naive.

I left the farm in Tuscarawas County thinking I would be back by harvest. I promised my sister Elizabeth—she was just fourteen then, that I would bring her a silk ribbon from Maryland. I joined Company K of the 87th Ohio Infantry.

Now, you might read books someday written by men in universities who say we only fought to "Preserve the Union." They say maybe one in ten of us cared about the Negro or the sin of slavery.

Perhaps that was the way for some. I had plenty of tangible reasons to stay support my widower father and young sister to survive the winter.

You have to understand the land we lived on. Ohio is separated from Kentucky by nothing but a river. If my father, Robert, or his father before him, had wanted to own other men, they could have walked across a bridge. They didn't. They stayed on the free side of the river because they believed that a man should sweat for his own bread.

We didn't leave our plows in the field just to draw a line on a map. We left the harvest—the wheat that would feed us and all those around us through the unpredictable Ohio valley winter.

My brother Josiah—was the one who made me see it. He was ten years older than me, and he saw the war not just as a rebellion, but as a Reckoning. He used to say, "James, the Lord will not let this nation stand if we build our house on the backs of slaves."

So when I signed my name that summer, it wasn't just for adventure. It was because I couldn't look across that river anymore and do nothing. I was willing to let the harvest rot in the field if it meant tearing the rot out of the country's soul.

1 July 1862, The Pittsburgh Post, Pg3 1 July 1862, The Pittsburgh Post, Pg3

They sent us to Harper's Ferry. If you look at a map, it looks like a masterpiece of God—where the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers crash together at the feet of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

The town sits at the bottom of a bowl. We were stationed on Bolivar Heights, a long ridge to the west. We dug our trenches and thought we were safe. We looked at the mountains towering above us—Maryland Heights to the north, Loudoun Heights to the south—and we assumed our generals had secured them.

But confusion is the first child of war. Orders were shouted and countermanded. We heard rumors that the troops on Maryland Heights—the most important position—had abandoned their posts. We didn't believe it. How could they give up the high ground?

But on September 13th, we looked up, and the sky turned black. Stonewall Jackson had dragged his cannons up those cliffs. The enemy wasn't in front of us. They were above us. They looked right down into our trenches. We were rats in a barrel.

The air was filled with the cacophony of sound, with the world shaking, and acrid smell of war, violence and death.

  • September 13: The shelling began. It wasn't a battle; it was an execution. We lay flat in the dirt, pressing our faces into the mud, while iron rained down on us.

  • September 14: The confusion turned to rage. We tried to fire back, but our cannons couldn't elevate high enough to hit the mountain peaks. We were helpless. Men were screaming, asking where our support was. Where was the Army of the Potomac? Why was Colonel Miles, our commander, doing nothing?

The rumors flew down the line like wildfire. Some said Colonel Miles was drunk. Others said he was a traitor. We didn't know the truth, only that we were being strangled.

My Major, Joab Stafford, was a good man. He walked the line while the shells burst, his hand on his sword. He told us to check our caps. He told us to fix bayonets. We thought, This is it. We are going to charge out of this hole or die trying. I gripped my Enfield rifle until my knuckles turned white. I was ready to die. I was not ready for what happened next.

Enfield Rifle
The morning of September 15th dawned with a heavy, wet fog. The river mist mixed with the black powder smoke, blinding us. The cannon fire started early, shaking the ground so hard my teeth rattled.

And then, through the mist, the shouting started. Not the rebel yell, but our own officers. "Cease fire! Cease fire!"

We looked down the line. A white flag was waving in the wind.

But here is where the chaos of life truly shows its teeth. The fog was so thick that the Confederates on the mountains couldn't see the white flag. They kept firing. The shells kept screaming in.

We watched in horror as a shell exploded right behind Colonel Miles. It shattered his leg. He fell, mortally wounded, killed by the very surrender he had ordered. It was a chaotic, bloody mess. Men were running, officers were shouting, and the ground was soaked in blood and shame.

When the firing finally stopped, a silence fell over the valley that was heavier than the noise.

We were ordered to "Stack Arms." I want you to picture this: 12,000 men, the largest surrender in the history of our country. We stood in ranks. I looked at Major Stafford. He had tears running down into his beard. He looked like he had aged twenty years in twenty minutes.

I stepped forward. I held my rifle—the weapon I hadn't fired a single shot with to save us—and I placed it on the pile. I saw men around me smashing their guns against the rocks. They broke the stocks so the Rebels wouldn't get them. They tore the colors from the flagpoles and hid the scraps in their shirts. It was a scene of utter heartbreak.

Then, the enemy marched in. They were A.P. Hill's men—Confederates. The victors were skinny, ragged, barefoot, and dirty. They walked past our polished lines and ate our rations while we stood there with empty hands.

Because the South couldn't feed 12,000 prisoners, they "paroled" us. They made us sign papers swearing not to fight again until we were "exchanged."

 18 Sep 1862, The Cleveland Morning Leader, pg1

I walked out of that valley, a long, dusty walk toward Annapolis. I sat in the dirt that night and tried to write to my father. I couldn't write to Elizabeth. I couldn't tell my little sister that her brother was a prisoner.

September 18, 1862 Camp of the Paroled, Annapolis

Dear Father, I am coming home, but not the way I intended. We have been surrendered. The shame of it sits heavy on me. It was confusion, Father. We wanted to fight. I saw Major Stafford turn his face away when the flag went up; I felt the same.

20 Sep 1862, The Baltimore Sun, pg 1
I came home to the quiet of the farm. But I couldn't stay. I couldn't live with the memory of that white flag in the fog.

I had fallen as low as a soldier could fall. But my brother Josiah—was out there serving as a Chaplain. He was preaching the gospel of freedom to dying men. I knew I couldn't stay home while he did God's work.

I wiped the mud of Harper's Ferry off my boots. I looked toward the mountains of Tennessee, and I signed my name again.

                                                  16 Sep 1862, The Richmond Dispatch, pg 1.            19 Sep 1862, The Philadelphia Inquirer

 
22 Sep 1862, The Daily Pittsburg Gazette, pg 3

This is the further installment of a fictional short story of the life of a very real man, "JR" Crooks.  Visit Lepley-Crooks family archive for more.  Follow this blog for the next installment.


Enjoyed this update? Don't miss the next one.

Subscribe via Email