The Mysterious Life and Faked Death of Jesse James : Based on Family Records, Forensic Evidence, and His Personal Journals
The Mysterious Life and Faked Death of Jesse James : Based on Family Records, Forensic Evidence, and His Personal Journals
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Author(s): Duke, Daniel J.
ISBN No.: 9781620559666
Pages: 208
Year: 202007
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 23.28
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

From Chapter 1. A Legend Is Born Jesse James is a name recognized to this day by more people around the world than many other United States historical figures. Much of that is due, in our opinion, to the perfect combination of fact and myth. Jesse James was an outlaw to most, a hero to others, and to some, a terrorist. He has been the subject of Hollywood movies and scores of books. Jesse James, for better or worse, has captured the minds of the public around the world and holds them to this day, captivated at just the sound of his name. How is it that a man, branded an outlaw could have had such a great impact on the minds of people around the globe for well over a century? Some say that so many people think of Jesse James as a folk hero because "Jesse James represents every man who ever felt the boot of the Man on his neck." We also believe a large part of it has to do with a need for closure.


Most people like to know what really happened. It doesn''t matter if the story relates to a good person or a bad person, a hero, outlaw, celebrity, or any public figure. Mystery is nice, but people like answers. They want the whole story and until they get an answer that satisfies them, they won''t be satisfied, and neither will we. From Chapter 2. Family Stories For as long as she could remember our late mother, Betty Dorsett Duke, had heard family stories that her paternal great-grandfather was really Jesse James. Her cousins had heard the same stories. The story goes that Jesse James left Missouri for Texas in 1871 using the alias of James Lafayette Courtney.


The saddlebags on the horse he was riding and the one he was leading were full of gold. By October 31st he had married Mary Ellen Barron, daughter of Texas Ranger Captain Thomas Hudson Barron and settled down on a farm in Blevins, Falls County, Texas, which he purchased from his father-in-law, Captain Barron, with gold. He and Mary Ellen eventually had eight children, two boys and six girls, one of whom was Ida Florence "Courtney," our great-grandmother. Jesse James portrayed himself as James L. Courtney, an ex-Union Soldier who came to Texas after the Civil War and became an ordinary farmer. He was anything but ordinary. Ordinary farmers at that time didn''t travel around with sacks full of gold. Gold was scarce in those days and even more so for ordinary farmers.


Some of the evidence from family, people who knew Jesse, and records, which we will investigate in this book, are as follows: In 1874 he paid "Eight-hundred (gold) dollars" for a 160 acre tract of land that he purchased from Thomas Hudson Barron. Our grandfather, his siblings, and my great-great-grandfather''s old neighbors said he was extremely cautious. When someone would ride up to his house after dark, he would blow out all the coal-oil lanterns and lie down across the doorway with his pistols cocked. He was never further than arm''s reach from a gun. He had gold and silver buried in different locations and drew maps with symbols and coded messages documenting their location. The late George Roming of El Paso, Texas, saw around twenty ingots of gold weighing fifteen to twenty pounds each stacked on a shelf in his barn. Our great-great-grandfather and a group of men buried 680 ingots of gold. He had five-gallon buckets of silver dollars sitting around his house.


Money was stored in the outhouse. He had more than $50,000 in "greenbacks" stored in one of his trunks. He made his son Byron C. Courtney Sr. count them each and every day. He had thirteen five-gallon lard cans full of gold coins. He and his associates "sailed through the Great Depression" because they had plenty of money. He purchased large farms for each of his eight children when they were married.


Later in his life he owned Ford automobiles, and when any minor thing would go wrong with one of them he got a new one. His shooting prowess was legendary--he could shoot the head off of a chicken while riding his horse at a dead run. Facial identification experts have determined that historically accepted photographs of Jesse James and his family match family photographs of our great-great-grandfather and his family. Our great-great-grandfather''s personal diaries also offer clues that he was not James L. Courtney the Union soldier: He named two of his horses "John" and "Reb". "Johnny Reb" is a term used to describe a Confederate soldier. He named another horse "Copperhead." Copperhead was a term used to identify members of the Knights of the Golden Circle, a pre-Civil War, pro-Southern secret society founded in Ohio in 1854 by George W.


L. Bickley, a Virginian, who soon moved the KGC to the South. Members were known as Copperheads. Many claim the James Gang was the military arm of the KGC. A small booklet describing the rituals of the secret order known as the Knights of Labor, also known as the Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor, was found in our great-great-grandfather''s personal belongings. This organization is said to have been the KGC reorganized under a different name. His diaries show that he consorted with known members of the James Gang including Bud Singleton, Bill Wilkerson, Thompson "Tom" McDaniels, and Jim Cummings aka Jim Clark. Diary entries also show that he was on a stagecoach in Shreveport, Louisiana, on January 8, 1874, with Jim Clark (a known alias of James Gang member Jim Cummings).


The fact is that a Louisiana stagecoach was robbed on January 8, 1874, in the same vicinity that is credited to the James Gang. And most striking: He signed his diary J. James and J W J.


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