Crampton's Gap At the southernmost point of the battle, near
Burkittsville, Confederate cavalry and a small portion of Maj. Gen.
Lafayette McLaws's division defended Brownsville Pass and
Crampton's Gap. McLaws was unaware of the approach of 12,000 Federals and had only 500 men under Col.
William A. Parham thinly deployed behind a three-quarter-mile-long stone wall at the eastern base of
Crampton's Gap. Franklin spent three hours deploying his forces. A Confederate later wrote of a "lion making exceedingly careful preparations to spring on a plucky little mouse." Franklin deployed the division of Maj. Gen.
Henry Warner Slocum on the right and Maj. Gen.
William F. "Baldy" Smith on the left. They seized the gap and captured 400 prisoners, mostly men who were arriving as late reinforcements from
Brig. Gen. Howell Cobb's brigade.
Turner's Gap Confederate Maj. Gen.
D. H. Hill, deploying 5,000 men over more than 2 miles, defended both Turner's Gap and Fox's Gap. Burnside sent Hooker's I Corps to the right and Turner's Gap. The Union
Iron Brigade attacked
Colonel Alfred H. Colquitt's brigade along the
National Road, driving it back up the mountain, but it refused to yield the pass. Hooker positioned three divisions opposite two peaks located one mile north of the gap. The Alabama Brigade of Brig. Gen.
Robert E. Rodes was forced to withdraw because of his isolated position, despite the arrival of reinforcements from Brig. Gen.
David R. Jones's division and Brig. Gen.
Nathan G. Evans's brigade. Darkness and the difficult terrain prevented the complete collapse of Lee's line. At nightfall, the Federals held the high ground while the Confederates still held the gap. In the 1890s, the United States War Department placed six markers at the summit of Turner’s Pass, also known as Turner’s Gap, across from the Old South Mountain Inn. They are on the north side of Alternate U.S. 40, the old National Pike, the main highway west from the Chesapeake Bay to the Ohio Valley during the Civil War. They provide specific details of the events during the battle.
Fox's Gap Just to the south, other elements of Hill's division (most notably
Drayton's Brigade) defended Fox's Gap against Reno's IX Corps. A 9 a.m. attack by Union Brig. Gen.
Jacob D. Cox's Kanawha Division secured much of the land south of the gap. In the movement, Lt. Col.
Rutherford B. Hayes of the 23rd Ohio led a flank attack and was seriously wounded. Cox pushed through the North Carolinians positioned behind a stone wall at the gap's crest, but he failed to capitalize on his gains as his men were exhausted, allowing Confederate reinforcements to deploy in the gap around the Daniel Wise farm. Reno sent forward the rest of his corps, but due to the timely arrival of Southern reinforcements under Confederate Brig. Gen.
John Bell Hood, they failed to dislodge the defenders. Gen. Jesse Reno and Confederate Brig. Gen.
Samuel Garland, Jr., were killed at Fox's Gap. After Farmer Wise was paid one dollar each to bury the Confederate soldiers who died behind the stone walls on or near his property, sixty (or more) bodies were dumped down his dry well. ==Aftermath==