Action at Ladybrand After the outbreak of the Second Boer War in October 1899 Crowther became the commander of the Ladybrand and
Ficksburg commandos and later fighting general (
Afrikaans:
veggeneraal). When the British under
Thomas Pilcher had captured Ladybrand, Crowther at the request of President
Martinus Theunis Steyn reoccupied the town on 26 March 1900 after the British had fled and arrested traitors who had cooperated with Pilcher. Upon the British breakthrough Commandant-General
Christiaan de Wet marched to the
Sand River to check the advance of the British there. He ordered Crowther with other generals to stay behind to protect the eastern Free State, the granary of the Republic.
Surrender in Brandwater Basin rifles to the British, near Surrender Hill, Brandwater Basin, South Africa, 1900. Crowther retreated to positions in the
Brandwater Basin guarding the passes of the
Drakensberg escarpment, under the higher command of
Marthinus Prinsloo. De Wet left the Basin on the night of 15 July 1900 with 2000 men and president Steyn and the other members of the Orange Free State government. Another 2000 men were to escape the Basin to the south-west, led by general
Paul Hendrik Roux. Crowther would go east with 500 men. However, after the departure of De Wet and his party the remaining Boers dithered and the British captured the mountain passes of Slabbert's Nek and Retief's Nek on 23 and 24 July 1900. They locked Prinsloo, Roux and Crowther in by also blocking the passes of Witnek, Kommandonek, Noupoortsnek (Nauwpoortsnek) and the
Golden Gate. Prinsloo felt forced to surrender with all his troops, including Crowther's, to the British general
Archibald Hunter on
30 July 1900. Some 4300 troops with Prinsloo, Roux and Crowther were taken prisoner of war near
Fouriesburg, most of them at Surrender Hill. Subsequently, they were transported to a prisoner of war camp at
Diyatalawa,
Ceylon, where a total of 4785 Boer war prisoners were kept.
Release from Ceylon After the conclusion of the war by the
Treaty of Vereeniging on 31 May 1902, they were to be released and returned by ship to South Africa. Crowther left Ceylon for South Africa on August 7, 1902, with 26 other released Boer officers in a second batch of 400 prisoners of war. ==Literature==