It
was reputed to be the first the first armed, daylight bank robbery in American history. On February 13, 1866 in Liberty, Missouri a passing college
student was shot dead in the escape.
17 year old Jesse James, still
recovering from a gunshot wound to the chest by Union troops, and his
older brother Frank James have been credited with the robbery.
Not quite, but certainly
an early heist, one that set the stage for bold gang assaults on banks that spread across post-Civil War
America and continued—with some
continuity of gang membership—into the Bonnie
and Clyde/Dillinger era.
The
very first American bank robbery may have occurred on March 19, 1831 when
someone made off with $250,000—a truly vast fortune in those days—from the City Bank of New York. The Directors
of the bank, anxious to avoid
publicity around their catastrophic
loss provided scant information. Only sketchy
press accounts survive and historians
are unsure if the theft was an armed
robbery or a burglary.
During
the Civil Way in 1864 Confederate
raiders based in Canada staged
an assault on St. Albans, Vermont which included the robbery of
the town’s three banks. But historians
tend to count that as an act of war rather than a common crime.
On
December 15, 1863 a man walked into a bank in Middlesex County, Massachusetts,
shot the 17-year-old bookkeeper and
stole about $5000 in bank notes.
The
James boys certainly were familiar
with the St. Albans Raid, which made national
headlines. They were probably
unaware of the New England solo
robbery. At any rate their modus
operendi in the Liberty robbery resembled
a guerilla raid.
Both
James boys had ridden with various Confederate
irregular bands, including those of William Quantrill, Bloody Bill Anderson,
and Archie Clement. One or both of them had participated in the massacre of more
than 200 pro-Union men and boys in the raid on Lawrence, Kansas and the ambush and
massacre of more than 100 Union troops
under the command of Major A.V.E.
Johnson near Centralia. Most of the men were killed and scalped after surrendering and Jesse
was reported to have personally
dispatched the Major.
The James gang robbed the bank at Gallitin, Missouri in December in 1869. Things went badly. |
The
Liberty bank robbery was the beginning
of the transition from Rebel guerillas into simple outlawry. By 1869, with
numerous murders and robberies under their belts, Jesse and Frank James and
their cousins the Dalton boys were famous across the country. Jesse became his own press agent dispatching
letters denying specific murder
charges but painting himself as
a proud Confederate out to avenge his people on the oppressive Republican administration of the state. Sympathetic
journalists wrote glowing editorials.
All
the while the body count climbed. The gang pulled raids from West Virginia to Texas. In 1873 they turned
to train robbery when they derailed a locomotive at Adair, Iowa and robbed both passengers and the express box while
garbed in Ku Klux Klan hoods. More train robberies followed resulting in railroad interests hiring the Pinkerton Detective Agency to track down and eradicate the gang.
Allan Pinkerton himself planned
a raid on the farm home of Zerelda
Samuel, the James boy’s mother. In the attack their young half-brother Archie Samuel was killed and Zerelda’s
arm was blown off by a grenade. The botched
operation resulted in considerable
public sympathy for Frank and Jesse.
In
1874 Jesse married his first cousin Zee and soon was raising a family in-between robberies. But when the James-Dalton Gang attempted a
bank robbery in Northfield, Minnesota in
1876 the outraged locals, many of them Union veterans fought back. In a wild gun fight two gang members were
killed and others wounded. A militia posse chased the gang and
killed another member and arrested the gravely wounded Younger brothers. Somehow the James boys managed to escape
unhurt.
The
brothers laid low in Nashville, Tennessee for some years.
Frank seems to have given up crime
entirely, but Jesse felt the siren
call of the old ways and assembled a new gang in 1879 that committed a
string of high profile robberies. The
band lacked the battlefield cohesion of the old Confederate raiders and its members
were killed, arrested, or fell to fighting among themselves. Jesse reportedly killed one himself.
Living
under the assumed name of Thomas Howard in
St. Joseph, Missouri, Jesse was
trying to reassemble his gang and was boarding the last surviving members of
his last outfit, the brothers Charles
and Robert Ford. While preparing to go on other job, Jesse stopped to straighten a picture. Bob
Ford shot him at close range in the back
of his head hoping to earn a $5,000 railroad reward. James was identified by old wounds and a missing finger.
Stories
that the man killed was not Jesse
and that he lived into the 20th Century
persist. But like most of the romantic nonsense associated with the Jesse James story there is no
real evidence for any of a number of claimants
to his identity.
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