Posts Tagged ‘Lexington’

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THE RICHMOND MISSOURIAN, RICHMOND, MISSOURI

MONDAY, JULY 4, 1938

(RAY COUNTY CHAPTERS)

Eye-Witness Describes the Battle of Albany and the Killing of

_____________________

The Diary of Thomas , late Banker of Rayville, Mo., Recast Correctly Into Conversational Style, Furnishes the Concisest Report of the Battle of “,” one Mile North of Orrick in Southwest County- A Series of Chapters Giving Exact Date of Important Local Civil War Fight- Chapter Five Ends Series With Additional Anderson Data from Other Sources.

(No. 432 of “ County Chapters” in The Richmond Missourian of July 4, 1938, the fifth and closing chapter of the battle series, to be followed by next Monday by a different topic)

With the publication of chapter No. 431 on Monday last, the personal or eye-witness report of the battle of , fought on Thursday October 27, 1884, as seen by the Thomas of Rayville, Mo, was completed, following today by the fifth and closing chapter of the series, today’s data being from different sources, not chargeable to Mr. , who wrote his narrative from the Federal yet not bitter viewpoint.

WAS ANDERSON KILLED?- The question was raised a few years ago by a Texan, who alleged that was not killed at the battle of , the old man claiming that Anderson lived for many years after the 1864 fight.

Jewell Mayes, inquiring in the interest of historic facts, listened to the late Captain Clayton Tiffin of , Mo., later of Hamilton, Mo., talk about his civil War experiences as a Federal Captain as friendly toward the families of Confederate soldiers as he dared to be under the limitations of civil war.

had contacted Captain Anderson personally when he (Tiffin) was captured at Glasgow. was in front of the courthouse in Richmond when the body of was brought into town- he identified the body and the horse, being positive beyond shadow of a doubt that it was Anderson. was the first man of record who definitely identified Captain Anderson found lying dead on the battlefield.

, a Confederate and fellow soldier with Captain Anderson, told Jewell Mayes that Anderson’s sisters at all times recognized that their brother was killed at Albany, and that they appealed to him to raise money for a monument in the Old City Cemetery in Richmond.

Cole Younger told Jewell Mayes that there was no doubt in the minds of his fellow soldiers that Anderson was killed at , and that his passing was recognized as a serious loss to the Southern cause.

DEATH MASK PICTURE- Photographer , who later located in , Mo., took the photograph of the dead man, and his picture was recognized by relatives and personal friends as that the dead . The late Dye owned a copy of the original print of the Anderson picture.

GOSSAGE AND RED-LEGS- The late , an enlisted Federal militiaman, who had been discharged from the service, was plowing in what was then a corn field opposite the Old City Cemetery within a week after Anderson was buried. He saw a small group of soldiers in Blue stop at the southwest corner of the cemetery.

Gossage left his team, and crossing the road, found the “Red-Legs,” (Jennison’s men), stamping into the loose dirt the flowers that had been on the grave of the dead guerilla Captain.

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, After 56 Years, Explains Why Jesse James Was Killed

Aged and Respected Turns Over to Jewell Mayes and Elmer L. Pigg the Secret Statement of His father, , Who planned to Capture But Not to Kill Jesse James- A Dramatic Yet True Account of the Final Breaking-up of the James Gang.

(RAY COUNTY CHAPTERS)

(No. 458, In the Missourian of January 23, 1939, being the third and final number of the T.R. Shouse Chapters about the passing of Jesse James. See The Missourian of next Monday for a different history topic)

Today, “ County Chapters” present to you herewith the third and final Chapter from the manuscript bearing his signature of Judge Thomas Riley Shouse, as edited with his full approval by Elmer L. Pigg and Jewell Mayes, adding to the known history of the James boys in Clay and Counties telling the true story of the why and wherefore of the killing of Jesse James.

These three Chapters prove that the thoughtless torturing of the Ford youth in trying to force him to tell of the whereabouts of his uncle, , was the real cause of Bob Ford killing instead of capturing Jesse James, again demonstrating that blood is thicker than waters.

The Shouse manuscript is where completed as follows:

BY

My father had never approved of the detectives’ blundering attempts to capture Frank and Jesse. He was particularly resentful of that master blunder when the detectives surrounded the James home on the night of January 15th, 1875 and threw a bomb through the window of the James homes.

The exploding bomb killed , Jesse’s eight and one-half year old half-brother, and tore off his mother’s right arm. Frank and Jesse were not at home that night or there would have doubtless been several more detectives killed.

My father had associated with him in his “plan”. William , , , , , and .

The plan was submitted to Governor Thomas T. of , who approved every detail and armed the men for mutual protection. Jesse James was not to be killed, but to be over-powered and turned over to the officers of the law.

For several years every sheriff of Clay County had done his best to capture these outlaws. Sheriff , his deputy James Reed and . Police commissioner of City knew of the organizations and rendered every service possible.

This was about the middle of February, 1882,. The few meetings which this group held were at night under the utmost secrecy. It was so secret that few, very few at the time or to this day knew anything about it. No one has ever known before, prior to this statement made today, the names of the men associated with my father.

After all details were agreed upon, the next thing to do was to locate Jesse James. No one had heard of him for many weeks.All of these men lived near the James farm, and kept a constant watch for Jesse.

For some unknown reason, Jesse had decided to kill , one of the neighbors and his associated. I am of the opinion that one cause of the trouble between Jesse and was due to Jim accusing Jesse of killing . Jim always did a lot of needless talking and bragging.

In the fall of 1881, Jesse James and gave Cummins a hot chase from some point in Arkansas, up through to William Ford’s farm. William Ford married , and was a brother-in-law of . The Ford farm, which was the original Cummins farm, was located in the southwest corner of Washington township, two miles south of my father’s farm, and three miles southeast of the James farm, and about four miles west of Excelsior Springs.

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, After 56 Years, Explains Why Jesse James Was Killed

______________________________

Aged and Respected Turns Over to Jewell Mayes and Elmer L. Pigg the Secret Statement of His father Who planned to Capture But Not To Kill Jesse James- A Dramatic Yet True Account of the Final Breaking-up of the James Gang.

(RAY COUNTY CHAPTERS)

(No. 457, edition of the Missourian of January 16, 1939, the second of the T.R. Shouse articles about Jesse James)

This is the second of the series of articles or Chapters by Judge T. R. Shouse of about the plan to capture Jesse James alive which resulted in his being killer, for reasons told for the first time for reasons told for the first time in the Shouse plan that had been kept secret for 56 years. See the Richmond Missourian of January 2nd for the first chapter, numbered 456, for the important background of this historical revelation. The narrative continues as follows:

By

Some time after the bank robbery, two officers came to , Mo. To see if the Sheriff would go with them to the James farm and help them try to capture Frank and Jesse James.

Deputy Sheriff Captain John Thomason and his son, Deputy Oscar Thomason, consented to go with them. The Sheriff on his way out to remarked that if the James boys should happen to be at home there would be trouble. They replied “We have been up against such propositions before”.

When they arrived at the James far, the sheriff arranged his force for trouble if the James’ should happen to be there. He dismounted- hitched his horse- and ordered his two aids to stand by Oscar to go to the barn, and he started for the house. About the time he was ready to knock at the door, he heard firing at the barn. He ran back to his horse- but his two aids were not in sight!

The two James brothers had gone out of the barn at the back- there was a running fight for about a half-mile northwest, though through the pasture and into the public road.

The Thomasons were well mounted, were gaining on the boys, pressing them hard.

Jesse said to Frank, “What are we going to do?”. Frank replied, “Kill his horse.” Jesse turned in his saddle and killed Thomason’s horse.

Then father and son mounted the same horse and chased further, but the James brothers soon out-distanced them. John Thomason then went back to the James farm, procured a horse to ride back to , sending the horse back soon thereafter.

Oscar Thomason met the James boys in Texas in 1872, after his term had expired. Some time after his term expired, he and some friends were on their way to Texas to purchase cattle. Their outfit, consisted of a covered-wagon and the necessary horses for handling cattle they purposed to buy.

While in Northern Texas on the road, two men passed the wagon in which Oscar Thomason was riding. After they passed Oscar explained “my God boys, that was Frank and Jesse James”

There was excitement. They armed themselves to be ready for what might happen. The James boys rode on a short distance, then stopped. Both parties then started for a clump of trees not far distant. The James boys beat them to the timber. Frank got behind a tree with his gun ready while Jesse kept on his horse and rode toward them with a white handkerchief in his hand and shouted, “Are you boys looking for us?”

Oscar Thomason replied “no, we are not looking for you. I am not Sheriff now- we are on our way to buy cattle in Texas.”

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JUDGE , AFTER 56 YEARS, EXPLAINS WHY JESSE JAMES WAS KILLED.

Aged and Respected Turns Over to Jewell Mayes and Elmer L. Pigg the Secret Statement of his father , Who planned to capture but Not to Kill Jesse James- A Dramatic yet True Account of the Final Breaking-up of the James Gang.

( County Chapters)

(No 456 of “ County Chapters” January 9, 1939, the first of this special series in the Richmond Missourian)

As announced in the Richmond Missourian herewith is begun the publication of the unabridged manuscript of Judge Thomas Riley Shouse of , , making public in full the details of the final breaking up of the James Brothers gang.

Judge Shouse turned over his father’s statement (made to him 56 years ago) to Jewell Mayes and Elmer L. Pigg, who prepared it for publication. Mr. Pigg did most of the writing and research. Mr. Mayes submitted the manuscript to E.B. Garnett, Sunday editor of the City Star, version in the edition of December 18th.

This Shouse manuscript is especially timely because of the current release of the Jesse James movie-talkie, which is wide of the mark of the true life history of the James boys. This new movie will further muddle the history of the James gang, yet this series of Chapters will clarify the why of the killing of Jesse James.

The unabridged and complete manuscript, exactly as approved by Judge Shouse, begins as follows, entitled “My Father and Jesse James”:

BY

At 5 o’clock on Thursday afternoon, October 5th, 1882, there walked into the office of Governor Thomas T. at Jefferson City, , a man who was thirty-eight years old, a little bald, and with three bullet wounds in his mouth, partly hidden by a moustache. He was rather soft spoken, but cool and calm as a statue, yet the quickest and deadliest man in a personal encounter.

He paused at the door of the office, glancing at every man there before moving toward the governor’s desk. When only a few feet from the Governor, he stopped, and with a clear, cool voice, calmly addressed him as follows:

“Governor, I am . I surrender my arms to you- I removed the loads from them-they have not been out of my possession since 1864-I now give the to you, personally. I deliver myself to you and the law.”

, who was accompanied to the Governor’s office by the noted Major, , unbuckled his belt containing “44” and “42” cartridges, and handed them to .

This was the last act of the last man of the James gang, Jesse James having been killed on April 3, 1882 at St. Joseph, .

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River Flood

l993

Some of these pictures, I took
during the . Some I scanned from the book “The Flood of
‘93″ written and published by Gary and Liz Schroeder. They
wrote the book as a testimony, not of the , the devastation, but, of
the people who were our Heroes. They survived the trauma, we all
pitched in to help our fellow neighbors.

We Survived.

The lands are planted again,
the new levees have been built. Thanks to the farmers who all gathered
their Own resources, , rebuilt the levees and started anew.

The problems started in l992
with heavy rains all during the season, heavy snows that winter. The
grounds were already saturated, and then,. the Spring rains of l993
started. By August, ..the devastation began.

From South Dakota, the
snow-melt filled the river and came downstream, from the and
Illinois, the river filled, and backed up into the . We were the
‘axis’ of the mingling of two Mighty and raging rivers.

Houses, cattle, whole slices of
river banks, and then fields, trees were all tumbling into the raging
waters.

One person in this area was
killed while trying to escape the waters. Thousands were homeless in
the area. Richmond was the ‘high’ point of land and we were an ‘island’ of
land for the homeless for miles.

There wasn’t One soul for
several counties who didn’t pitch in and help in Some way. Giving
meals to the ones sand-bagging, sand-baggers, clean up crews, giving
shelter, food and clothing.

There was no way to get to
City from any direction. We were ’stranded’ as a town for
weeks. Trains didn’t run, boats were the only transportation,
fishing boats, in-boards, they were All in use. And, a VERY
dangerous trip they took! You never knew what was in the waters to
run into.

The Hardin cemetery was the
lowest point. People around here still can’t really talk about it.

It wasn’t the first time the
cemetery has been flooded, but, in My life-time, I don’t know of anything
worse than what happened there. The National news stations picked up
on the tumbling caskets, families trying to retrieve them after the waters
went down. National Guard units were trying to hoist the coffins from the
waters, IF they could find them. Hundreds were lost forever.
Remains were found. Most couldn’t be identified. The cemetery
had family members buried there from the l800’s. Now, a memorial
remains in the cemetery for all the ones that DID have a resting place
there, and then,…..were gone.

JANUARY
2003

On the
East end of Willow Creek bridge, January, 2003

…NO BRIDGE, NO ROAD….LOTS OF
RIVER!!!!!!! I (MY HOUSE) WAS 9 1/2 MILES FROM THE RIVER, …..THE
NEXT RAIN, It WAS 6 1/2 MILES FROM THE RIVER

THEN….FIVE
MILES FROM MY HOUSE TO THE RIVER

This is the South end of the bridge. Would you believe, some people came from
to Richmond in a Fishing boat and had to DUCK to keep their
heads from hitting the bridge!?

The
Henrietta Flats- Bowling ally And other businesses

No, we’re
not building a Homecoming Float. Those are sand bags and the whole
community got their ‘ shots’ (tetanus shots) and joined together to
pile sand bags.

The Trauma
of the Hardin Cemetery= July 12, l993

National guard unit digging up the caskets from
the sludge and slime
.

The cemetery
‘is’ in the center of this picture (birds eye view from a plane)

I won’t show
any more pictures of the cemetery. It’s still too fresh in our minds. The
loss of the caskets rolling down the river, the families who had to deal
with this loss is still too great.

Out of
l544 burials in the cemetery, less than 400 remain.

Caskets,
body parts were un=earthed. There are still many that haven’t ever been
retrieved. Skulls, etc were found in fields, some never will be.

As of l994,
The Federal government denied funds to rebuild levees so this wouldn’t
happen again.

WHERE THERE USED TO BE CROPS AND HOUSES, …..NOTHING BUT
WATER AS FAR AS THE EYE COULD SEE.

THESE  PICTURES, TO ME, JUST ABOUT
SAYS IT ALL.

THAT’S NOT THE END OF THIS STORY…..

New Levees have been built and, we have our NEW bridge!

Ike Skelton Bridge- Missouri River

Ike Skelton Bridge- River

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RICHMOND CONSERVATOR
RICHMOND, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1896
vOLUME #-NUMBER 33

HORRIBLE TRIPLE MURDER

MRS JESSIE WINNER AND HER TWO CHILDREN BRUTALLY MURDERED.  ONLY RIVALED IN ITS SICKENING DETAILS BY THE MEEKS MURDER IN LINN COUNTY

Coroner’s Jury Ask That the Husband and Father be Held for the Murder.

The crowd with the sheriff after the murder at the cabin

A horrible , rivaling in all its sickening details that of the Meeks family in Linn county a year or two since, was perpetrated in a small log cabin on the E.T. Watkins farm, eight miles northeast of this city, some time during Monday night.
For four years past has rented a few acres of land from Mr. Watkins and each year has raised a crop of corn.  is a coal miner and when work was to be had in the mines in this city he has accepted it.  It has been his custom to work in the mines during the week and go to the farm and spend Sunday with his family.  Last Sunday he was out as usual, coming back to town Sunday evening.  On Monday he cleaned up his room at Mine No.11, where he had been employed and prepared to go home Tuesday morning to gather his corn.  Tuesday morning while he was sitting on the court house fence a messenger arrived in town and brought the startling news that his wife and two children had been murdered.

Click the link just below for a lot more, full details and (warning) very graphic photographs

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James Family Timeline
Researched and contributed by Rod Fields, Richmond, Mo
December 28, 1841 —Robert James and Zerelda Elizabeth Cole were married in Stamping Ground, .
•    Jan. 10, 1843 —Alexander Franklin (Frank) James is born to Rev. Robert Sallee James and Zerelda Cole James at the family farm in , .
•    Jan. 15, 1844 —Thomas Coleman (Cole) Younger is born to Henry Washington Younger and Bursheba Fristoe Younger at the family farm in Lee’s Summit , .
•    1844 (exact date unknown)— is born at Commerce, Oklahoma .
•    July 19, 1845 —Robert James Jr. was born on the James family farm. However, the baby died just 33 days later.
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