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    • Jesse E. JamesJesse E. James
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jesse_JamesJesse James - Wikipedia

    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.

  3. Apr 3, 2014 · Jesse James was a bank and train robber in the American Old West, best known as the leading member of the James-Younger gang of outlaws. Updated: May 27, 2021. Photo: MPI/Getty Images....

  4. Sep 15, 2021 · (Library of Congress) Information about the former Confederate soldier and famous outlaw from the Wild West. Born: September 5, 1847. Died: April 3, 1882. Spouse: Zerelda Mimms. Jesse James summary: Jesse Woodson James was born into a hardworking family. His parents lived in Clay County, Missouri, where Jesse and his two full siblings were born.

  5. Jesse Woodson James was a famous, legendary bank robber, train robber and a gang leader from the 19th century America. He was born in Missouri in a prosperous family and had a happy childhood with his brother Frank until his father left them forever.

  6. Jesse James and Frank James were two brothers who were among the most notorious outlaws of the American West, engaging in robberies that came to typify the hazards of the 19th-century frontier as it has been portrayed in motion-picture westerns. Reared on a Missouri farm, Jesse and Frank shared.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Elizabeth Nix
    • Jesse James was a preacher’s son. Frank and Jesse James’ mother, Zerelda. Jesse Woodson James, born in Clay County, Missouri, on September 5, 1847, was the son of Kentucky native Zerelda Cole James and her husband, Robert James, a Baptist minister and slave-owning hemp farmer who assisted in founding William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri.
    • He fought as a Confederate guerrilla in the U.S. Civil War. During the Civil War, the border state of Missouri was home to bitter fighting in which both sides of the conflict regularly murdered prisoners and civilians alike, mutilated enemy dead, looted property and livestock, and left towns and homes ablaze.
    • James wasn’t a Wild West Robin Hood. During the 1869 bank robbery in Gallatin, the incident that first brought Jesse public notice as an outlaw, he shot and killed the bank’s cashier in an act of revenge, thinking the man was Samuel Cox, commander of the pro-Union militia troops who had murdered guerrilla leader Bloody Bill Anderson in October 1864.
    • James and his cohorts eluded the Pinkertons. Allen Pinkerton (left) with President Abraham Lincoln and a Union general during the Civil War. After Jesse and Frank robbed a train at Gads Hill, Missouri, in January 1874, the Pinkerton’s National Detective Agency was called in to hunt them down.
  7. Biography: Jesse James. Young Jesse James, 1882. Library of Congress. A teenager when he rode off to join Confederate guerrillas in 1864, Jesse James never really stopped fighting the...

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