Missouri Outlaws: Bandits, Rebels & Rogues
By Paul Kirkman
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About this ebook
Paul Kirkman
Paul Kirkman is the author of The Battle of Westport: Missouri's Great Confederate Raid and he co-authored Lockdown: Outlaws, Lawmen, and Frontier Justice in Jackson County, Missouri. Kirkman is a past speaker for the State Historical Society of Missouri Speakers' Bureau and he currently presents lectures on several regional history topics.
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Missouri Outlaws - Paul Kirkman
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INTRODUCTION
I was born in Colorado and spent most of my youth in Kansas, but I have lived in Missouri some forty years now. It has taken time to understand this place. From the weather to the politics, Missouri is volatile and unpredictable. It is farm country, with lots of rivers and springs and good bottomland; but much of it is hill country with thick woods and rocky slopes. The sparsely populated Ozarks surround Branson, country music’s second home, a little town overcrowded with thousands of tourists, theaters, stars and ex-stars. St. Louis and Kansas City bookend the east and west sides of the state, respectively, each brimming with people living urban and suburban lives free of country accents and bib overalls. Tiny towns with populations tallied in dozens, as well as several towns that measure in the thousands and tens of thousands, dot the state. Missouri is not just one thing or people. There is a culture, a character here that is both friendly and taciturn. We can’t even agree on how to pronounce our own name; it is Missour-eee
or Missour-uh,
depending on where you live. A wild frontier at the beginning of the nineteenth century, Missouri grew up in the golden years of westward expansion. Trails teeming with immigrants’ wagons stretched the state’s reach out to Santa Fe, California, Oregon and Colorado. The wealth of western farms, ranches and mines was funneled back to the East Coast and beyond. I have been sorting it out for myself over time, and I think this book will at least point the way toward understanding part of Missouri’s role in the shaping of American culture.
When I was relatively new to the state, I saw a bumper sticker on an old pickup that read, I’m from Missouri, and I will shoot you.
I remember asking a friend who grew up here what it meant. He said, Quick, name the two most famous people you know from Missouri.
I thought about it, and he grinned as I came up with Jesse James and Harry Truman. He said, One robbed trains and the other dropped atomic bombs.…We aren’t the sort of folks you want to play chicken with.
It is true that from its difficult entry into the Union and throughout the nineteenth century, Missouri and Missourians developed a reputation for stubbornness (the state animal is the mule), pragmatism (it is, after all, the Show-Me State) and outlawry (far more than just the James Gang). To be fair, the majority of Missourians have been and are peaceful, law-abiding citizens, but a review of the facts (and the fiction) makes clear why nineteenth-century Missouri was labeled the Outlaw State.
My original inclination when considering how to tell the story of the outlaws was to start from the vantage point of the state’s remaining nineteenth-century jails, and you will still find that thread running through the book. In 2009, I was given the opportunity to help Jackson County Historical Society archivist David Jackson research and write a history of the 1859 jail and marshal’s home in Independence. That project taught me how intertwined the local jail could be with a community’s development and history. William Faulkner explored the depth of this sentiment in Intruder in the Dust:
It was old, built in a time when people took time to build, even jails, with grace and care and he remembered how his uncle had said once that not courthouses nor even churches but jails are the true record of a county’s…a community’s history, since not only the cryptic forgotten initials and words and even phrases cries of defiance and indictment scratched into the walls but also even the very bricks and stones themselves held, not in solution but in suspension, intact and biding and potent and indestructible, the agonies and shames and griefs with which hearts long since unmarked and unremembered dust had strained and perhaps burst.
In dozens of Missouri communities, the old county or city jail still stands watch over streets where pioneers drove their wagons, where blue and gray armies spilled their blood and where sheriffs and outlaws faced off with sixguns blazing. Each is a testament to a time and people apart, a place that scarcely resembles the state we know today. Built in Missouri’s first century, these buildings were a response to the needs of a society that grew up as the line of frontier moved west. Everything from minor infractions to riots, war and murder became attached to these buildings. The old marshal’s home and jail on the Independence square is one of those survivors. The steel doors and stone walls compel the senses to a more personal awareness of the place’s storied past, where one can touch the cells and breathe the air and feel the closeness of it all. Still, it is the people as much as the place that we want to know. Other lives, other people we can judge or emulate, empathize with or revile help to give meaning, color and context to a place and time. The sheriff who cleaned up a town, the bad guys he fought, the stalwart citizens who backed him up or turned their backs—this is the stuff of legend. And legend is the part of history we tend to hold dearest. I don’t discount the many empty cells in want of a prisoner, the trains that successfully delivered the payroll or the thousands of quiet nights that saw no gunplay, but history in the telling is big, even if its parts are small. There is a big story in the making of the Outlaw State, and to convey it I had to choose some way to contain it. The nineteenth century is not the perfect vessel, but it is a good one for my purposes. I will spill a little over into the next era in the last chapter, but I will try to keep most of this story within its confines.
I must admit that I didn’t pick this topic out of a hat. The subject of my senior thesis was the notorious characters of the Missouri/Kansas border. I even took a class on social outlaws in American history at the University of Missouri in the early 1980s. It goes back further than that, though. As a kid, I used to enjoy watching old Westerns on television with my dad. The heroes were always larger than life, and the bad guys always lost in the end. The characters often were named after real people, and as I grew up, I wanted to know more about them. The border of Kansas and Missouri was truly fertile ground for growing larger-than-life outlaws and lawmen. There was a twenty- to thirty-year period in the middle of the nineteenth century that found some of the best-known characters in American history living along that line of fire. Wyatt Earp, Wild Bill Hickok, Frank and Jesse James, Buffalo Bill Cody, George Armstrong Custer, John Brown, Calamity Jane, Belle Starr, William Quantrill, the Dalton brothers and many more left their mark or traced their roots to that blood-soaked ground. The Border War, the fight over slavery, gave the area a head start on the Civil War and tore Missouri apart. So many of those who made up the upper class before the war found themselves disenfranchised and financially ruined after. Outlaws like Cole Younger (whose father was a state senator) and the James brothers (whose father was a successful farmer and preacher) found fame and claimed vindication by attacking institutions run by their former enemies.
There was no shortage of sympathetic supporters for the former Rebels who took back
from the railroads, banks and carpetbaggers.
Newspapermen like John Newman Edwards (a former adjutant to Confederate general Joseph O. Shelby), as founding editor of the Kansas City Times, compared the former rebels to Robin Hood. In Noted Guerrillas, or the Warfare of the Border, he wrote of the James brothers: They have more friends than the officers who hunt them and more defenders than the armed men who seek to secure their bodies, dead or alive.
Families who lost fathers and sons to the lost cause, who lost homes and land to the new order, could strike back at the victors vicariously through the outlaw gangs, and many provided assistance for the gangs or withheld it from the lawmen and Pinkerton agents who sought to end their careers. This era and its spawn have been fodder for dime novels, pulp magazines, silent films, talkies, television shows and more for over a hundred years. The story of America, even that of Missouri, cannot be rightly told without it. Though much has changed, it is still the same land, and the people are still a unique breed. I have been fortunate enough to visit many of the old towns where some of the buildings, banks, jails and courthouses still remain; where you can see and touch and take in the feel of their storied past. I hope I can convey a sense of how special, how valuable they are and do justice to the men and women who lived on both sides of the bars. Enjoy.
1
FRONTIER ROOTS
The frontier experience has often been cited as the catalyst that produced a unique American character. Historian Frederick Jackson Turner stated: To the frontier the American intellect owes its striking characteristics, that coarseness and strength combined with acuteness and inquisitiveness; that practical, inventive turn of mind, quick to find expedients, that masterful grasp of material things, lacking in the artistic but powerful to great ends; that restless, nervous energy; that dominant individualism, working for good and for evil, and withal that buoyancy and exuberance which comes with freedom—these are the traits of the frontier.
Critics might find Turner’s view romanticized, but it is difficult to see how the frontier experience could not have influenced the development of the character of Missouri’s first generation. In 1800, Missouri was not yet a state or even a territory of the United States. As part of New France, it had been passed from French to Spanish control and back again, with Native Americans—as well as British and American settlers—vying for possession. Though Native Americans had lived there for thousands of years, Spain, France and England all had greater influence over the territory’s destiny in the eighteenth century.
Political and military actions thousands of miles away would continually mold the character and nature of everyday life in Missouri. The Seven Years’ War cost France its holdings in the Louisiana Territory, which it ceded to Spain. The Spanish, however, did not settle in large numbers. Rather, they set up military/trading posts and tried to govern the French and Native American inhabitants living there. British expansion and control of the northern waterways after the war led to an influx of French residents from Illinois and other points east of the Mississippi into Missouri, swelling their numbers and influence in the area. French fur traders based in St. Louis added a more prosperous political class to the community. The American Revolution again rearranged the deck, with the Spanish trying to induce Americans to settle in Missouri on the hope that they would help defend it