Jesse Woodson James
(September 5, 1847 – April 3, 1882) was an American outlaw,
gang leader, bank and train
robber from the state of Missouri
and the most
famous member of the James-Younger
Gang. Already a celebrity when he was alive, he became a
legendary figure of the
Wild West
after his death. Some recent scholars place him in the context of
regional insurgencies of ex-
Confederates following the
American Civil War rather than a
manifestation of
frontier lawlessness or
economic justice.
Jesse and his older brother
Frank James
were Confederate guerrillas during the Civil War. They were accused
of participating in atrocities committed against
Union soldiers. After the war, as members of
one gang or another, they robbed banks and murdered bank employees
or bystanders. They also waylaid stagecoaches and trains. Despite
popular portrayals of James as a kind of
Robin Hood, robbing from the rich and giving to
the poor, there is no evidence that he and his gang used their
robbery gains for anyone but themselves.
The James
brothers were most active with their gang from about 1866 to 1876,
when their attempted robbery of a bank in Northfield,
Minnesota
resulted in the capture or deaths of several
members. They continued in crime for several years,
recruiting new members, but were under increasing pressure from law
enforcement. On April 3, 1882, Jesse James was killed by
Robert Ford, who was a member of the
gang living in the James house and who was hoping to collect a
state reward on James' head.
Early life
Jesse
Woodson James was born in Clay County
, Missouri
, near the
site of present day Kearney
, on
September 5, 1847. Jesse James had two full siblings: his
older brother,
Alexander Franklin
"Frank" and a younger sister, Susan Lavenia James. His father,
Robert S. James, of Welsh
ancestry, was a commercial hemp farmer and Baptist minister in
Kentucky
who migrated
to Missouri after marriage and helped found William Jewell College in Liberty,
Missouri
. He
was prosperous, acquiring six slaves and more than of farmland.
Robert
James travelled to California
during the Gold Rush to
minister to those searching for gold and died there when Jesse was
three years old.After the death of Robert James, his widow
Zerelda remarried twice, first to
Benjamin Simms and then in
1855 to Dr.
Reuben Samuel,
who moved into the James' home. Jesse's mother and Reuben Samuel
had four children together: Sarah Louisa, John Thomas, Fannie
Quantrell, and Archie Peyton Samuel. Zerelda and Reuben Samuel
acquired a total of seven slaves, who served mainly as farmhands in
tobacco cultivation in Missouri.The approach
of the
American Civil War
overshadowed the James-Samuel household. Missouri was a border
state, sharing characteristics of both North and South, but 75% of
the population was from the South or other border states. Clay
County was in a region of Missouri later dubbed "
Little Dixie," as it was a center of migration
from the Upper South. Farmers raised the same crops and livestock
as in the areas from which they had migrated. They brought slaves
with them and purchased more according to need. The county had more
slaveholders, who held more slaves, than in other regions. Aside
from slavery, the culture of Little Dixie was southern in other
ways as well. This influenced how the population acted during and
after the
American Civil War. In
Missouri as a whole, slaves accounted for only 10 percent of the
population, but in Clay County they constituted 25 percent.
After the passage of the
Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854, Clay County
became the scene of great turmoil, as the question of whether
slavery would be expanded into the
neighboring Kansas Territory came to dominate public life. Numerous
people from Missouri migrated to Kansas to try to influence its
future.
Much of the tension that led up to the Civil
War centered on the violence that
erupted in Kansas
between pro-
and anti-slavery militias.
Civil War

Jesse James unknown date
The Civil War ripped Missouri society apart and shaped the life of
Jesse James. After a series of campaigns and battles between
conventional armies in 1861,
guerrilla
warfare gripped the state, waged between secessionist "
bushwhackers" and
Union forces, which largely consisted of local
militia organizations ("jayhawkers"). A
bitter conflict ensued, bringing an escalating cycle of atrocities
by both sides. Guerrillas murdered civilian Unionists, executed
prisoners and
scalped the dead. Union forces
enforced
martial law with
raids on homes, arrests of civilians, summary
executions and
banishment of
Confederate sympathizers from
the state.
The James-Samuel family took the Confederate side at the outset of
the war. Frank James joined a local company recruited for the
secessionist Drew Lobbs Army, and fought at the battle of
Wilson's Creek, though he fell ill and
returned home soon afterward. In 1863, he was identified as a
member of a guerrilla squad that operated in Clay County. In May of
that year, a Union militia company raided the James-Samuel farm,
looking for Frank's group. They
tortured
Reuben Samuel by briefly hanging him from a tree. According to
legend, they lashed young Jesse. Frank eluded capture and is
believed to have joined the guerrilla organization led by
William C. Quantrill.
It is thought that he took part in the
notorious massacre of some 200 men
and boys in Lawrence,
Kansas
, a center of abolitionists.
Frank
James followed Quantrill to Texas
over the
winter of 1863–4. In the spring he returned in a squad
commanded by Fletch Taylor. After they arrived in Clay County,
16-year-old Jesse James joined his brother in Taylor's group. In
the summer of 1864, Taylor was severely wounded, losing his right
arm to a
shotgun blast. The James brothers
joined the bushwhacker group led by
Bloody Bill Anderson. Jesse suffered a
serious wound to the chest that summer. The Clay County provost
marshal reported that both Frank and Jesse James took part in the
Centralia Massacre in
September, in which guerrillas killed or wounded some 22 unarmed
Union troops; the guerrillas scalped and dismembered some of the
dead. The guerrillas
ambushed and defeated a
pursuing regiment of Major A.V.E. Johnson's Union troops, killing
all who tried to surrender (more than 100). Frank later identified
Jesse as a member of the band who had fatally shot Major Johnson.
As a result of the James brothers' activities, the Union military
authorities made their family leave Clay County. Though ordered to
move South beyond Union lines, instead they moved across the nearby
state border into Nebraska.
After Anderson was killed in an ambush in October, the James
brothers separated.
Frank followed Quantrill into Kentucky
; Jesse went
to Texas under the command of Archie
Clement, one of Anderson's lieutenants. He is known to
have returned to Missouri in the spring.
Contrary to legend,
Jesse was not shot while trying to surrender; rather, he and
Clement were still trying to decide on what course to follow after
the Confederate surrender when they ran into a Union cavalry patrol near Lexington, Missouri
. Jesse James suffered the second of two
life-threatening chest wounds.
After the Civil War

Clay County Savings in Liberty
At the end of the Civil War, Missouri was in shambles. The conflict
split the population into three bitterly opposed factions:
anti-slavery Unionists, identified with the
Republican Party; the
segregationist conservative Unionists, identified with the
Democratic Party; and
pro-slavery, ex-Confederate secessionists, many of whom were also
allied with the Democrats, especially the southern part of the
party. The Republican Reconstruction administration passed a new
state constitution that freed Missouri's slaves. It temporarily
excluded former Confederates from voting, serving on juries,
becoming corporate officers, or preaching from church pulpits. The
atmosphere was volatile, with widespread clashes between
individuals, and between armed gangs of veterans from both sides of
the war.
Jesse recovered from his chest wound at his uncle's Missouri
boardinghouse, where he was tended to by his first cousin,
Zerelda "Zee" Mimms, named after Jesse's
mother. Jesse and his cousin began a nine-year courtship,
culminating in marriage. Meanwhile, his old commander
Archie Clement kept his bushwhacker gang
together and began to harass Republican authorities.
These men
were the likely culprits in the first daylight armed bank robbery
in the United States in peacetime, the robbery of the Clay County
Savings Association in the town of Liberty, Missouri
, on February 13, 1866. This bank was owned
by Republican former militia officers who had recently conducted
the first Republican Party rally in Clay County's history. One
innocent bystander, a student of
William Jewell College (which James's
father had helped to found), was shot dead on the street during the
gang's escape. It remains unclear whether Jesse and Frank took
part. After their later robberies took place and they became
legends, there were those who credited them with being the leaders
of the Clay County robbery. It has been argued in rebuttal that
James was at the time still bedridden with his wound. No concrete
evidence has surfaced to connect either brother to the crime, or to
rule them out.
This was
a time of increasing local violence; Governor Fletcher had recently
ordered a company of militia into Johnson
County
to suppress guerrilla activity. Archie Clement continued his career of crime
and harassment of the Republican government, to the extent of
occupying the town of Lexington, Missouri
, on election day in 1866. Shortly afterward,
the state militia shot Clement dead, an event which James wrote
about with bitterness a decade later.
The survivors of Clement's gang continued to conduct bank robberies
over the next two years, though their numbers dwindled through
arrests, gunfights, and
lynchings. While they later tried to justify
robbing the banks, these were small, local banks with local
capital, not part of the national system which was a target of
popular discontent in the 1860s and 1870s.
On May 23, 1867, for
example, they robbed a bank in Richmond
, Missouri, in which they killed the mayor and two others. It remains uncertain
whether either of the James brothers took part, although an
eyewitness who knew the brothers told a newspaper seven years later
"positively and emphatically that he recognized Jesse and Frank
James ... among the robbers."
In 1868, Frank and Jesse James allegedly
joined Cole Younger in robbing a bank
at Russellville, Kentucky
.
Jesse
James did not become famous, however, until December 1869, when he
and (most likely) Frank robbed the Daviess County Savings
Association in Gallatin, Missouri
. The robbery netted little money, but it
appears that Jesse shot and killed the cashier, Captain John
Sheets, mistakenly believing him to be Samuel P. Cox, the
militia officer who had killed
"Bloody Bill" Anderson during the Civil
War. James's self-proclaimed attempt at revenge, and the daring
escape he and Frank made through the middle of a posse shortly
afterward, put his name in the newspapers for the first time. An
1882 history of Daviess County said, "The history of Daviess County
has no blacker crime in its pages than the murder of John W.
Sheets."
The 1869 robbery marked the emergence of Jesse James as the most
famous of the former guerrillas turned outlaw. It marked the first
time he was publicly labeled an "outlaw", as Missouri Governor
Thomas T. Crittenden set a reward for his
capture. This was the beginning of an alliance between James and
John Newman Edwards, editor and
founder of the
Kansas City
Times. Edwards, a former Confederate cavalryman, was
campaigning to return former secessionists to power in Missouri.
Six months after the Gallatin robbery, Edwards published the first
of many letters from Jesse James to the public, asserting his
innocence. Over time, the letters gradually became more political
in tone, denouncing the Republicans and voicing James' pride in his
Confederate loyalties. Together with Edwards's admiring editorials,
the letters turned James into a symbol of Confederate defiance of
Reconstruction.
Jesse James's initiative in creating his rising public profile is
debated by historians and biographers, though the tense politics
certainly surrounded his outlaw career and enhanced his
notoriety.
Meanwhile, the James brothers joined with Cole Younger and his
brothers John, Jim, and Bob; as well as Clell Miller and other
former Confederates, to form what came to be known as the
James-Younger Gang.
With Jesse James as the public face of the
gang (though with operational leadership likely shared among the
group), the gang carried out a string of robberies from Iowa
to Texas
, and from
Kansas to West
Virginia
.
They
robbed banks, stagecoaches, and a fair in Kansas
City
, often in front of large crowds, even hamming it up
for the bystanders.
On July
21, 1873, they turned to train
robbery, derailing the Rock Island train
in Adair,
Iowa
and stealing approximately $3,000 ($51,000 in 2007). For this, they
wore
Ku Klux Klan masks, deliberately
taking on a potent symbol years after the Klan had been suppressed
in the South by President Grant's use of the
Force Acts. Former rebels attacked the railroads
as symbols of threatening centralization.The James' gang's later
train robberies had a lighter touch—in fact only twice in all of
Jesse James's train hold-ups did he rob passengers, because he
typically limited himself to the express safe in the baggage car.
Such techniques fostered the
Robin Hood
image which Edwards was creating in his newspapers, but the James
gang never shared any of the robbery money outside their
circle.
Pinkertons
The
Adams Express Company
turned to the
Pinkerton National Detective
Agency in 1874 to stop the James-Younger Gang.
The Chicago
-based agency worked primarily against urban
professional criminals, as well as providing industrial security,
such as strike breaking.
Because the James-Younger gang received support by many former
Confederates in Missouri, they eluded the Pinkertons. Joseph
Whicher, an agent dispatched to infiltrate Zerelda Samuel's farm,
shortly afterwards was found killed. Two others, Louis J. Lull and
John Boyle, were sent after the Youngers; Lull was killed by two of
the Youngers in a roadside gunfight on March 17, 1874, fatally
shooting
John Younger before he died. A
deputy sheriff named Edwin Daniels was also killed in the
skirmish.
Allan Pinkerton, the agency's
founder and leader, took on the case as a personal vendetta. He
began to work with former Unionists who lived near the James family
farm. On the night of January 25, 1875, he staged a raid on the
homestead. Detectives threw an incendiary device into the house; it
exploded, killing James's young half-brother Archie (named for
Archie Clement) and blowing off one of the arms of mother Zerelda
Samuel. Afterward, Pinkerton denied that the raid's intent was
arson.
But biographer Ted
Yeatman located a letter by Pinkerton in the Library of
Congress
in which Pinkerton declared his intention to "burn
the house down."
The raid on the family home outraged many, and did more than all of
Edwards's columns to create sympathy for Jesse James. The Missouri
state legislature only narrowly defeated a bill that praised the
James and Younger brothers and offered them
amnesty. Allowed to vote and hold office again,
former Confederates voted a limit on reward offers which the
governor could make for fugitives. This extended a measure of
protection over the James-Younger gang. (Only Frank and Jesse James
previously had been singled out for rewards larger than the new
limit.)
Downfall of the gang
Jesse and his cousin
Zee married on
April 24, 1874, and had two children who survived to adulthood:
Jesse James, Jr. (b. 1875) and
Mary Susan James (b. 1879). Twins
Gould and Montgomery James (b. 1878) died in infancy. Jesse, Jr.
became a lawyer and made a career as a respected member of the bar
in Kansas City, Missouri.
On
September 7, 1876, the James-Younger gang attempted a raid on the
First National Bank of Northfield,
Minnesota
. After this robbery and a manhunt, only
Frank and Jesse James were left alive and uncaptured.
Cole and Bob Younger
later stated that they selected the bank because they believed it
was associated with the Republican politician Adelbert Ames, the governor of Mississippi
during Reconstruction, and Union general Benjamin Butler, Ames's father-in-law and
the Union commander of occupied New Orleans
. Ames was a stockholder in the bank, but
Butler had no direct connection to it.
To carry out the robbery, the gang divided into two groups. Three
men entered the bank, two guarded the door outside, and three
remained near a bridge across an adjacent square. The robbers
inside the bank were thwarted when acting cashier
Joseph Lee Heywood refused to open the
safe, falsely claiming that it was secured by a
time lock even as they held a
bowie knife to his
throat
and cracked his
skull with a pistol butt.
Assistant cashier Alonzo Enos Bunker was wounded in the shoulder as
he fled out the back door of the bank. Meanwhile, the citizens of
Northfield grew suspicious of the men guarding the door and raised
the alarm. The five bandits outside fired in the air to clear the
streets, which drove the townspeople to take cover and fire back
from protected positions. Two bandits were shot dead and the rest
were wounded in the barrage. Inside, the outlaws turned to flee. As
they left, one shot the unarmed cashier Heywood in the head.
Historians have speculated about the identity of the shooter but
have not reached consensus on his identity.
The gang barely escaped Northfield, leaving two dead companions
behind. They killed two innocent victims (Heywood and
Nicholas Gustafson, a Swedish immigrant
from the Millersburg community west of Northfield.) A massive
manhunt ensued. The James brothers eventually split from the others
and escaped to Missouri. The militia soon discovered the Youngers
and one other bandit, Charlie Pitts. In a gunfight, Pitts died and
the Youngers were taken prisoner. Except for Frank and Jesse James,
the James-Younger Gang was destroyed.
Later in
1876, Jesse and Frank James surfaced in the Nashville,
Tennessee
area, where they went by the names of Thomas Howard
and B. J. Woodson, respectively. Frank seemed to settle
down, but Jesse remained restless.
He recruited a new gang in 1879 and
returned to crime, holding up a train at Glendale, Missouri (now
part of Independence, Missouri
), on October 8, 1879. The robbery was the
first of a spree of crimes, including the holdup of the federal
paymaster of a canal project in Killen, Alabama
, and two more train robberies. But the new
gang did not consist of battle-hardened guerrillas; they soon
turned against each other or were captured, while James grew
paranoid, killing one gang member and frightening away
another.
With authorities' growing suspicious, by 1881 the brothers returned
to Missouri where they felt more safe. In December, Jesse rented a
house in
Saint Joseph,
Missouri, not far from where he had been born and raised.
Frank,
however, decided to move to safer territory, heading east to
Virginia
.
Assassination

Jesse James's home in St. Joseph,
where he was shot
With his gang nearly annihilated, James trusted only brothers
Charley and
Robert Ford. Although Charley had been
out on raids with James, Bob was an eager new recruit. For
protection, James asked the Ford brothers to move in with him and
his family. James had often stayed with their sister Martha Bolton
and, according to rumor, he was "smitten" with her. James did not
know that Bob Ford had been conducting secret negotiations with
Thomas T. Crittenden, the Missouri
governor, to bring in the famous outlaw. Crittenden had made
capture of the James brothers his top priority; in his inaugural
address he declared that no political motives could be allowed to
keep them from justice. Barred by law from offering a sufficiently
large reward, he had turned to the railroad and express
corporations to put up a $5,000 bounty for each of them.
On April 3, 1882, after eating breakfast, the Fords and James
prepared to depart for another robbery. They went in and out of the
house to ready the horses. As it was an unusually hot day, James
removed his coat, then declared that he should remove his firearms
as well, lest he look suspicious. Noticing a dusty picture on the
wall, he stood on a chair to clean it. Bob Ford shot James in the
back of the head.James' two previous bullet wounds and partially
missing middle finger served to positively identify the body.
The murder of Jesse James was a national sensation. The Fords made
no attempt to hide their role. Indeed, Robert Ford wired the
governor to claim his reward. Crowds pressed into the little house
in St. Joseph to see the dead bandit, even while the Ford brothers
surrendered to the authorities—but they were dismayed to find that
they were charged with
first degree
murder. In the course of a single day, the Ford brothers were
indicted, pleaded guilty, were sentenced to death by
hanging, and two hours later were granted a full
pardon by Governor Crittenden.
The governor's quick pardon suggested that he knew that the
brothers intended to kill James rather than capture him. Like many
who knew James, the Ford brothers never believed it was practical
to try to take him into custody. The implication that the chief
executive of Missouri conspired to kill a private citizen startled
the public and added to James' notoriety.
After receiving a small portion of the reward, the Fords fled
Missouri. Law enforcement officials active in the plan also shared
the bounty. Later the Ford brothers starred in a touring stage show
in which they reenacted the shooting.
Suffering
from tuberculosis (then incurable) and
a morphine addiction, Charley Ford
committed suicide on May 6, 1884, in
Richmond,
Missouri
. Bob Ford operated a tent saloon in Creede,
Colorado
. On June 8, 1892, he was killed there by a
shotgun blast to the throat. His killer,
Edward Capehart O'Kelley, was
sentenced to life in prison. When O'Kelley's sentence was commuted
because of a medical condition, he was released on October 3,
1902.
James' mother Zerelda Samuel wrote the following epitaph for him:
In Loving Memory of my Beloved Son, Murdered by a Traitor and
Coward Whose Name is not Worthy to Appear Here. James's widow
Zee died alone and in
poverty.
Rumors of survival
Rumors of Jesse James's survival proliferated almost as soon as the
newspapers announced his death. Some said that Robert Ford killed
someone other than James, in an elaborate plot to allow him to
escape justice. These tales have received little credence, then or
later. None of James's biographers has accepted them as plausible.
The body buried in Kearney, Missouri, as Jesse James's was exhumed
in 1995 and subjected to
mitochondrial
DNA typing. The report, prepared by Anne C. Stone, Ph.D., James
E. Starrs, L.L.M., and Mark Stoneking, Ph.D., stated the mtDNA
recovered from the remains was consistent with the mtDNA of one of
James's relatives in the female line.
One prominent claimant was J.
Frank Dalton, who died August 15, 1951, in
Granbury,
Texas
. Dalton was allegedly 101 years old at the
time of his first public appearance, in May 1948. His story did not
hold up to questioning from James's surviving relatives.
Legacy and controversies
James's turn to crime after the end of
Reconstruction era
helped cement his place in American life and memory as a simple but
remarkably effective bandit. After 1873 he was covered by the
national media as part of social banditry. During his lifetime,
James was celebrated chiefly by former Confederates, to whom he
appealed directly in his letters to the press. Displaced by
Reconstruction, the
antebellum political
leadership mythologized the James Gang exploits. Frank Triplett
wrote about James as a "progressive neo-aristocrat" with purity of
race. Indeed, some historians credit James' myth as contributing to
the rise of former Confederates to dominance in Missouri politics
(in the 1880s, for example, both
U.S. Senators from the state,
Confederate military commander
Francis Cockrell and
Confederate Congressman
George Graham Vest, were
identified with the
Confederate cause).
In the 1880s, after James' death, the James Gang became the subject
of
dime novels which set the bandits up
as
pre-industrial models of
resistance. During the
Populist and
Progressive eras, James became a symbol as
America's
Robin Hood, standing up against
corporations in defense of the small
farmer, robbing from the rich and giving to the poor while there is
no evidence that his robberies enriched anyone other than his
gang and himself, though they attacked small
banks that benefited local farmers.
In portrayals of the 1950s, James was pictured as a psychologically
troubled individual rather than a social rebel. Some filmmakers
portrayed the former outlaw as a revenger, replacing "social with
exclusively personal motives."
Jesse James remains a controversial symbol, one who can always be
interpreted in various ways, according to cultural tensions and
needs. Renewed cultural battles over the place of the Civil War in
American history have replaced the longstanding interpretation of
James as a Western frontier hero. Some of the
neo-Confederate movement regard him as a
hero. While his "heroic outlaw" image is still commonly portrayed
in films, as well as in songs and
folklore,
recent historians place him as a self-aware vigilante and terrorist
who used local tensions to create his own
myth
among the widespread
insurgent guerrillas and
vigilantes
following the
Civil War.
Museums
Some museums and sites devoted to Jesse James:
- James
Farm in Kearney,
Missouri
: In 1974 Clay County, Missouri
bought it. The county operates the site as a
house museum and historic site.
- Jesse James Home Museum
: The house where Jesse James was killed in south
St. Joseph was moved in 1939
to the Belt Highway on St. Joseph's east side to attract
tourists. In 1977 it was moved to its current
location, near Patee
House
, which was the headquarters of the Pony Express. The house is now owned and
operated by the Pony Express Historical Association.
- First
National Bank of Northfield: The Northfield Historical Society in
Northfield,
Minnesota
, has restored the building that housed the First
National Bank, the scene of the 1876 raid.
- Heaton Bowman Funeral Home, 36th and Frederick Avenue, St. Joseph, Missouri. The funeral
home's predecessor conducted the original autopsy and funeral for
Jesse James. A room in the back holds the log book and other
documentation.
- The
Jesse James Tavern is in his father's birthplace in Asdee, County
Kerry, Ireland
, from where his father immigrated to the US in the
1840s as a young man. The parish priest, Canon William
Ferris, says a solemn requiem mass for Jesse James every year on
April 3.
Cultural depictions
Festivals
The Defeat of
Jesse James Days in Northfield, Minnesota
, is among the largest outdoor celebrations in the
state. Thousands of visitors can watch reenactments of the
robbery, a championship
rodeo, a
carnival, and a
parade.
During
the Jersey
County, Illinois
, Victorian Festival at the 1866 Col. William
H. Fulkerson estate
Hazel Dell,
Jesse James's history is told in stories and by reenactments of
stagecoach holdups. Over the three-day
event, thousands of spectators learn of the documented James Gang's
stopping point at Hazel Dell, and of the connection between
ex-Confederates Fulkerson and Jesse James.
Historical Civil War
reenactments, arts and crafts, and music all compose this
family-oriented event, one of the largest historical festivals in
the Midwest, held every Labor Day weekend in Jerseyville,
Illinois
.
Jesse James's boyhood home in Kearney, Missouri, is a museum
dedicated to the town's most famous resident. Each year during the
third weekend in September, the Jesse James Festival, a
recreational fair, is held.
Russellville, Kentucky
, the site of the robbery of the Southern Bank in
1868, holds the Jesse James International Arts and Film
Festival. The JJIAFF completed its second annual event in
April 2008 and the third annual is planned for April 25, 2009.
The
festival has featured a bluegrass band from San Francisco
and experimental bands from southern Kentucky as
well as painters, sculptors, photographers and comic
artists. Children's activities are a mainstay of the
festival. A highlight for adults is the film festival held at the
Logan County Public Library in Russellville.
Past entrants have
included films from Norway
and
northwestern Kentucky, modern silent film projects, nature studies
and fan films.
The annual
Tobacco and
Heritage Festival in Russellville features a reenactment of the
James-Younger Gang's robbery of the Southern Bank. Today used as a
residence, the historic structure on South Main Street has been
preserved by the town and county.
The small
town of Oak Grove,
Louisiana
, also hosts a townwide Jesse James Trade Days every
year, usually in the early to mid fall. This is supposedly a
reference to a short time James spent near this area.
Literature
Jesse James is often used as a
fictional character in many
Western novels, including some that were
published while he was alive. For instance, in
Willa Cather's
My
Antonia, the
narrator reads a book
entitled 'Life of Jesse James' - probably a
dime novel.
In
Charles Portis's 1968 novel,
True Grit, the U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn describes
fighting with Cole Younger and Frank James for the Confederacy
during the Civil War. Long after his adventure with Mattie Ross,
Cogburn ends his days in a traveling road show with the aged Cole
Younger and Frank James.
During his travel to the "Wilde West",
Oscar
Wilde had also visited Jesse James' hometown in Missouri.
Learning that James had been assassinated by his own gang member,
"an event that sent the town into mourning and scrambling to buy
Jesse's artifacts", "romantic appeal of the
social outcast" in his mind, Wilde wrote in
one of his letters to home that: "Americans are certainly great
hero-worshippers, and always take [their] heroes from the criminal
classes."
Comics
In 1969, artist
Morris and writer
René Goscinny (co-creator of
Asterix) had
Lucky Luke confronting Jesse James, his brother
Frank and Cole Younger. The adventure poked fun at the image of
Jesse as a new
Robin Hood. Although he
passes himself off as such and does indeed steal from the rich (who
are, logically, the only ones worth stealing from), he and his gang
take turns being "poor," thus keeping the loot for themselves.
Frank quotes from
Shakespeare,
and Younger is portrayed as a fun-loving joker, full of good humor.
One critic has likened this version of the James brothers as
"intellectuals bandits, who won't stop theorising their outlaw
activities and hear themselves talk." In the end, the
at-first-cowed people of a town fight back against the James gang
and send them packing in
tar and
feathers.
Another Belgian comic series,
Les Tuniques Bleues ("The Blue
Coats"), is set during the
American
Civil War. Again the emphasis is on humour, though there is
also a good deal of drama. An adventure published in 1994 had the
main protagonists, Sergeant Cornelius Chesterfield and Corporal
Blutch of the
Union Army, confronting the
infamous
William Quantrill and his
henchmen Jesse and Frank James.
Music
In his adaptation of the traditional song "Jesse James,"
Woody Guthrie magnified James's hero status.
"Jesse James" was later covered by the Irish band
The Pogues on their 1985 album
Rum, Sodomy, and the Lash,
and by
Bruce Springsteen on his
2006 tribute to
Pete Seeger,
We Shall
Overcome: The Seeger Sessions.
A somewhat different song titled "Jesse James," referring to
Jesse's "wife to mourn for his life; three children, they were
brave," and calling Robert Ford "the dirty little coward who shot
Mr. Howard," was also the first track recorded by the "Stewart
Years" version of the
Kingston Trio at
their initial recording session in 1961 (and included on that
year's release "Close-Up").
Echoing the Confederate hero aspect,
Hank Williams, Jr.'s 1983 Southern
anthem "Whole Lot Of Hank" has the lyrics
"Frank and Jesse James knowed how to rob them trains, they always
took it from the rich and gave it to the poor, they might have had
a bad name but they sure had a heart of gold."
Warren Zevon's 1976 self-titled album
Warren Zevon includes the song
"Frank and Jesse James," a romantic tribute to the James Gang's
exploits, expressing much sympathy with their "cause." Its lyrics
encapsulate the many legends that grew up around the life and death
of Jesse James. The album contains a second reference to Jesse
James in the song "Poor Poor Pitiful Me" with the lyric "Well, I
met a girl in West Hollywood, I ain't naming names. She really
worked me over good, she was just like Jesse James."
Linda Ronstadt covered the song a year later
with slightly altered lyrics.
In her album
Heart of
Stone (1989),
Cher included a song
titled "
Just Like Jesse
James," written by Diane Warren. This
single, which was released in 1990, achieved
high positions in the
charts and sold 1,500,000 copies worldwide.
The
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band's
album
Uncle Charlie and His Dog Teddy features the song
"Jesse James," ostensibly recorded on a wire recorder.
Jon Chandler has also written a song about Jesse and Frank James
entitled "He Was No Hero," written from the perspective of Joe
Hayward's widow cursing Bob Ford for cheating her out of killing
Jesse James.
Around 1980 a concept album titled
The Legend of Jesse James was
released. It was written by
Paul
Kennerley and starred
Levon Helm
(
The Band) as Jesse James,
Johnny Cash as Frank James,
Emmylou Harris as Zee James,
Charlie Daniels as Cole Younger and
Albert Lee as Jim Younger. There are also
appearances by
Rodney Crowell,
Jody Payne, and
Roseanne Cash. The album highlights Jesse's
life from 1863 to his death in 1882. In 1999 a double CD was
released containing
The Legend Of Jesse James and
White Mansions, another concept album by Kennerley about
life in the Confederate States of America between 1861-1865.
Films
There have been numerous portrayals of Jesse James in film and
television, including two wherein Jesse James, Jr. depicts his
father. In many of the films, James is portrayed as a Robin
Hood-like character.
- 1921: Jesse James Under the
Black Flag, played by Jesse James, Jr.
- 1921: Jesse James as the
Outlaw, played by Jesse James, Jr.
- 1927: Jesse James, played
by Fred Thomson
- 1939: Jesse James, played by Tyrone Power with Henry
Fonda as Frank James and John
Carradine as Bob Ford
- 1939: Days of Jesse James,
played by Don 'Red' Barry
- 1941: Jesse James at Bay,
played by Roy Rogers
- 1947: Jesse James Rides Again, played
by Clayton Moore
- 1949: I Shot Jesse James, played by
Reed Hadley
- 1950: Kansas Raiders,
played by Audie Murphy
- 1951: The Great Missouri
Raid, played by Macdonald
Carey
- 1957: True Story of Jesse
James, played by Robert
Wagner
- 1959: Alias Jesse James, played by Wendell Corey in a comedy starring Bob Hope
- 1960: Young Jesse James,
played by Ray Stricklyn
- 1965: The Legend of Jesse
James, TV series starred by Allen
Case
- 1966: Jesse James Meets
Frankenstein's Daughter, played by John Lupton
- 1969: A Time for Dying,
played by Audie Murphy
- 1972: The Great Northfield,
Minnesota Raid, played by Robert
Duvall
- 1980: The Long Riders, played by James Keach
- 1986: The Last Days of Frank
and Jesse James, played by Kris
Kristofferson with Johnny Cash as
Frank James and Willie Nelson as Gen.
Jo Shelby
- 1994: Frank and Jesse, played by Rob Lowe
- 1999: Purgatory, played by J.D. Souther
- 2001: American Outlaws, played by Colin Farrell
- 2005: Just like Jesse
James is the title of a movie that appears in Wim Wenders'
Don't Come Knocking, in
which Sam Shepard plays an aging western
movie star whose first success was with that movie.
- 2005: Jesse James: Legend,
Outlaw, Terrorist (Discovery HD),
played by Daniel Lennox
- 2007: The
Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford,
played by Brad Pitt, with Casey Affleck as Bob Ford
Television
- The actor Lee Van Cleef played
Jesse James in a 1954 episode of Jim
Davis's syndicated
television series, Stories of the Century, the
first western series to win an Emmy
Award.
- The ABC series
The Legend of
Jesse James aired during the 1965-1966 television season,
with Christopher Jones as
Jesse, Allen Case as Frank James,
Ann Doran as Zerelda Cole James Samuel,
Robert J. Wilke as Marshal Sam Corbett, and John Milford as Cole Younger.
- In the episode of Little House on the
Prairie titled "The
Aftermath" (aired November 7, 1977), Jesse (Dennis Rucker) and Frank James (John Bennett Perry) took refuge in Walnut
Grove after a failed robbery attempt.
- In the American Western series The Young Riders (1989-1992), Jesse
James is portrayed by the late actor Christopher Pettiet. He appeared in 17
episodes as a Pony Express rider.
See also
References
- Stiles, .
- "Friends
of the James Farm"
- "St. Joseph History - Jesse James Home", City
of St. Joseph, Missouri
- "Bank Site." Northfield Historical
Society
- "Asdee- where Jesse Jame`s ancestors
originated-County Kerry, Ireland," 1st Stop County Kerry,
accessed 20 Jun 2008
- "Defeat of Jesse
James Days." djjd.org.
- "Jersey County Victorian Festival."
GreatRiverRoad.com.
- "Jesse James Festival." JesseJamesFestival.com.
- Fans de Lucky Luke website."
fandeluckyluke.com. (in French)
Bibliography
- Fellman, Michael. Inside War: The Guerrilla Conflict in
Missouri onto the American Civil War. Oxford University Press,
1990. ISBN 0195064712.
- Settle, William A. Jesse James Was His Name, or, Fact and
Fiction Concerning the Careers of the Notorious James Brothers of
Missouri. University of Nebraska Press, 1977. ISBN
0803258607.
- Stiles, T. J. Jesse James: Last Rebel of the Civil
War. Knopf Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0375405836.
- Yeatman, Ted P. Frank and Jesse James: The Story Behind the
Legend. Cumberland House Publishing, 2000. ISBN
1581823258.
Further reading
- Dyer, Robert. "Jesse James and the Civil War in
Missouri,"University of
Missouri Press, 1994
- Hobsbawm, Eric J. Bandits, Pantheon, 1981
- Koblas, John J. Faithful Unto Death, Northfield
Historical Society Press, 2001
- Thelen, David. Paths of Resistance: Tradition and Dignity
in Industrializing Missouri, Oxford University Press, 1986
- Wellman, Paul I. A Dynasty of Western Outlaws.
Doubleday, 1961; 1986.
- White, Richard. "Outlaw Gangs of the Middle Border: American
Social Bandits," Western Historical
Quarterly 12, no. 4 (October 1981)
External links