Jesse James

Actor

Birthday September 14, 1989

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace near Kearney, Missouri, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1882-4-3, St. Joseph, Missouri, U.S. (106 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 5' 10" (1.78 m)

#2515 Most Popular

1847

Jesse Woodson James (September 5, 1847 – April 3, 1882) was an American outlaw, bank and train robber, guerrilla and leader of the James–Younger Gang.

Raised in the "Little Dixie" area of Western Missouri, James and his family maintained strong Southern sympathies.

He and his brother Frank James joined pro-Confederate guerrillas known as "bushwhackers" operating in Missouri and Kansas during the American Civil War.

Jesse Woodson James was born on September 5, 1847, in Clay County, Missouri, near the site of present-day Kearney.

This area of Missouri was largely settled by people from the Upper South, especially Kentucky and Tennessee, and became known as Little Dixie for this reason.

James had two full siblings: his elder brother, Alexander Franklin "Frank" James, and a younger sister, Susan Lavenia James.

He was of English and Scottish descent.

His father, Robert S. James, farmed commercial hemp in Kentucky and was a Baptist minister before coming to Missouri.

After he married, he migrated to Bradford, Missouri and helped found William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri.

He held six slaves and more than 100 acre of farmland.

Robert traveled to California during the Gold Rush to minister to those searching for gold; he died there when James was three years old.

1852

After Robert's death, his widow Zerelda remarried twice, first to Benjamin Simms in 1852 and then in 1855 to Dr. Reuben Samuel, who moved into the James family home.

Jesse's mother and Samuel had four children together: Sarah Louisa, John Thomas, Fannie Quantrell, and Archie Peyton Samuel.

Zerelda and Samuel acquired a total of seven slaves, who served mainly as farmhands in tobacco cultivation.

The approach of the American Civil War loomed large in 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 in particular was strongly influenced by the Southern culture of its rural pioneer families.

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 their needs.

The county counted more slaveholders and more slaves than most other regions of the state; in Missouri as a whole, slaves accounted for only 10 percent of the population, but in Clay County, they constituted 25 percent.

Aside from slavery, the culture of Little Dixie was Southern in other ways as well.

This influenced how the population acted during and for a period of time after the war.

1854

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 bred tension and hostility.

Many people from Missouri migrated to Kansas to try to influence its future.

Much of the dramatic build-up to the Civil War centered on the violence that erupted on the Kansas–Missouri border between pro- and anti-slavery militias.

1861

After a series of campaigns and battles between conventional armies in 1861, guerrilla warfare gripped Missouri, waged between secessionist "bushwhackers" and Union forces which largely consisted of local militias known as "jayhawkers".

A bitter conflict ensued, resulting in an escalating cycle of atrocities committed by both sides.

Confederate guerrillas murdered civilian Unionists, executed prisoners, and scalped the dead.

The Union presence enforced martial law with raids on homes, arrests of civilians, summary executions, and banishment of Confederate sympathizers from the state.

The James–Samuel family sided with the Confederates at the outbreak of war.

Frank James joined a local company recruited for the secessionist Drew Lobbs Army, and fought at the Battle of Wilson's Creek in August 1861.

1864

As followers of William Quantrill and "Bloody Bill" Anderson, they were accused of committing atrocities against Union soldiers and civilian abolitionists, including the Centralia Massacre in 1864.

After the war, as members of various gangs of outlaws, Jesse and Frank robbed banks, stagecoaches, and trains across the Midwest, gaining national fame and often popular sympathy despite the brutality of their crimes.

1866

The James brothers were most active as members of their own gang from about 1866 until 1876, when as a result of their attempted robbery of a bank in Northfield, Minnesota, several members of the gang were captured or killed.

They continued in crime for several years afterward, recruiting new members, but came under increasing pressure from law enforcement seeking to bring them to justice.

1882

On April 3, 1882, Jesse James was shot and killed by Robert Ford, a new recruit to the gang who hoped to collect a reward on James's head and a promised amnesty for his previous crimes.

Already a celebrity in life, James became a legendary figure of the Wild West after his death.

Popular portrayals of James as an embodiment of Robin Hood, robbing from the rich and giving to the poor, are a case of romantic revisionism as there is no evidence his gang shared any loot from their robberies with anyone outside their network.

Scholars and historians have characterized James as one of many criminals inspired by the regional insurgencies of ex-Confederates following the Civil War, rather than as a manifestation of alleged economic justice or of frontier lawlessness.

James continues to be one of the most famous figures from the era, and his life has been dramatized and memorialized numerous times.