Combat changes many men. Confederate General John R. Jones seemed to be one of those men. Born in Rockingham County, Virginia, in 1827, John Robert Jones was a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute, and then ran a military school in Urbana, Maryland. When the war came, he raised a company that became a part of the 33rd Virginia Infantry. He was commissioned a captain in June 1861, fought at First Manassas, and then was promoted lieutenant colonel in August of that year. In 1862, when the 33rd Virginia was reorganized, Jones ran for colonel, and he lost. He attempted to regain his old position of lieutenant colonel, and again, he lost. At Jackson’s urging, Jones was promoted over others to brigadier general in June 1862, leading a Virginia brigade in the Seven Days campaign.
Southern Illustrated News, January 16, 1864 |
Jones returned to Harrisonburg, Virginia, sold farm
equipment, and was a commissioner in chancery of the county court. He was
married twice, divorced once, and had two different African-American families.
Jones died in 1901.[3]
Stonewall Jackson, who had nominated Jones for promotion,
was troubled and humiliated at the court martial of Jones. Jackson told Tucker
Lacy “I have almost lost confidence in man. When I thought I had found just
such a man as I needed, and was about to rest satisfied in him, I found
something lacking in him. But I suppose it is to teach me to put my trust only
in God.”[4]
So how have historians viewed the career of John R.
Jones? Douglas Southall Freeman wrote
that he even hated to mention John R. Jones’s name in connection
with the Army of Northern Virginia. Later, in chronicling the part of Jones’s
role at Chancellorsville, Freeman wrote that the general “probably had written
himself off the army roster by leaving the field because of an ulcerated leg.”[5]
Joseph L. Harsh held the view that Jones was “clearly
wanting in ability.”[6]
Robert E. L. Krick thought Jones “spectacularly awful as a
Confederate officer.”[7]
Robert K. Krick wrote that Jones “performed with so little
personal poise at Sharpsburg that he came under formal charges.”[8]
John R. Jones’s post-war relationships with African-American
women certainly influenced late 19th and early 20th
century historians and their treatment of his role in history. However, given
the charges of cowardice leveled at him after the Seven Days campaign, his
military career came to an ignoble end following the battle of Chancellorsville.
It seems very likely that his issues may have been related to
PTSD. One has to
ask – what happened to John R. Jones?
If you are interested in Jones’s romantic entanglements,
please check out Freedom’s Child: The Life of a Confederate General’s Black
Daughter, by Carrie Allen McCray (1998).
[1] Southern
Illustrated News, January 16, 1864.
[2] A
note in his file from the National Archives concerning his capture states that
Jones was “Formally in C.S. Army – now a citizen.”
[3] Davis,
Confederate General, 3:206-207.
[4] Quoted
in Freeman, Lee’s Lieutenants, 2:500.
[5] Freeman,
Lee’s Lieutenants, 2:500n, 665.
[6] Harsh,
Sounding the Shallows, 142.
[7] Krick,
The Smoothbore Volley That Doomed the Confederacy, 122.
[8] Gallagher, Antietam: Essays on the 1862 Maryland
Campaign, 50.
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