William Crooks (colonel)


William "Billy" Crooks was a Colonel during the American Civil War, member of the House of Representatives, U.S. Military Academy graduate, and a veteran railroader. He led the 6th Regiment Minnesota Volunteer Infantry from August of 1862 to October of 1864, mainly contending against the Sioux. Crooks built the first railroad in the U.S. state of Minnesota, St. Paul & Pacific, and became the first to operate in Minnesota. His rail transport, the William Crooks, a 4-4-0 steam locomotive was named after him and began its operation in 1861.

Early life and Career

When William Crooks was seventeen, he enrolled at West Point and graduated in the department of Civil Engineers.. In 1852, William Crooks began his career as an engineer with Morris & Essex Road. From 1853 to 1855 he was assistant engineer for the Michigan Southern & Northern Indiana, and shortly after he occupied a similar position with the New York State Canal from 1855 to 1857. At the same time from 1859 to 1862, Crooks was also chief engineer at St. Paul & Pacific Railroad. Crooks then served the following two years as assistant engineer for the Minnesota & Pacific Railroad. Over the next 38 years, Crooks came to Portland as assistant to A. L. Mohler, general manager of the O.R. & N and was associated with other railroads in various capacities. From 1862 to 1865, he was Colonel of the 6th Minnesota regiment with the Union Army. In 1869 Crooks engaged in railroad contract work until 1890. The following two years until 1892 he was president and chief engineer of . His final job was chief engineer at Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad that lasted three years until 1895. During is life, Colonel Crooks was recognized as one of the best railroaders in the country

Civil War

William Crooks served as Colonel in the 6th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment and lead five companies that fought against the Indians in the U.S.-Dakota War. Formed in Hokah, MN, the 6th Regiment was organized throughout the summer and fall of 1862 in response to President Abraham Lincoln's calls for a total of 600,000 additional troops. Over the course of the next two years, the regiment stayed in Minnesota due to the outbreak of the 1862 Dakota War despite the original plan to head south. Colonel Crooks was also president of a court-martial by which 100 Native American were condemned to death. His task was to bring about a revision of the findings of the bodies so that not more than 40 of the convicted Indians were executed. By the spring of 1864, the members of the Sixth Regiment were directed to carry on to Helena, Arkansas, on the Mississippi River. The Sixth Regiment, 950 total, arrived in Helena on June 23, 1864, and spent the next four months in unpredictable conditions. By this time, 58 enlisted men had died from malaria and over 650 people reported as sick. Finally in November, Colonel Crooks' troops were sent to fight under command of General E.R.S. Canby's campaign in Mobile, Alabama, and were in reserve during the April 9 capture of Fort Blakely. On August 19, 1865, William Crooks and his regiment returned home at last to Fort Snelling after a successful battle with the South.

Death

For years of suffering from a kidney disease, William Crooks' condition became consistently worse until late 1907, when he contracted a severe cold. Many telegrams from prominent railroad officials throughout the country expressed sympathy for Crooks' family when he died at the age of 75 in Portland, Oregon. Crooks' funeral services were held in St. Paul days after his death, and his body was accompanied by his son and family. Colonel Crooks' engines used by the Northern Pacific Railway Company are still preserved in the car shops of the Hill system at St. Paul as a relic of the early railroad history of the country.