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Jesse James: The Most Notorious Outlaw To Have Ever Lived | Wild West Documentary 

Footprints of The Frontier
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The iconography of the old west wouldn’t be what it is today without the fearsome figures and various folk heroes both celebrated and reviled over the course of the last 150 years of American history. These iconic and infamous men and women range from belligerent bandits and the courageous lawmen that chased them down, to the cowboys and Indigenous Americans that took their turns firing warning shots at the other until the entire territory was rife with violence and sabotage, with a few peacekeepers and honorable heroes sprinkled in.
One such figure was none other than the notorious outlaw and former-soldier-turned-guerrilla Jesse James himself. Once the son of a Baptist minister and member of the Confederate Army, Jesse James transformed into one of the most discussed, complex, and undeniably popular figures of wild west lore, despite his violent tactics and unlawful tendencies.
Regardless of his countless crimes and affinity for trouble, Jesse James lived a life emblematic of so many ideas and themes saturating the way we talk about the old west into the modern age. In order to gain a better understanding of how the leader of a train robbing gang became synonymous with the term “wild west” and the focal point for the infinite pool of outlaws that followed him, we present to you a closer inspection into the tales and times of the most infamous outcasts in all of American history. This is Jesse James and his life spent in the shadows of Robin Hood.
0:00 Introduction
1:38 Early Life
8:53 The Civil War
19:43 Outlaw Era
40:49 Final Years
Music produced by CO.AG: / @co.agmusic
Thank you for watching.
DISCLAIMER: All materials in these videos are used for educational purposes and fall within the guidelines of fair use. No copyright infringement is intended. If you are, or represent the copyright owner of materials used in this video, and have an issue with the use of said material, please email us before putting in a claim and we can resolve the issue immediately. We can be reach on this email: info@footprints-of-the-frontier.com
Copyright © 2023 Footprints on The Frontier. All rights reserved.

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13 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 602   
@LegendaryName
@LegendaryName Год назад
They got nothing on the dutch van der linde gang
@markvargas2407
@markvargas2407 4 месяца назад
Thats right
@user-jt1bw8xf8u
@user-jt1bw8xf8u 3 месяца назад
Cause it only about jessie
@danielgreen5335
@danielgreen5335 3 месяца назад
⁠@@user-jt1bw8xf8uyou understood that wrong he meant that the van der linde gang is better than Jesse James
@dondamon4669
@dondamon4669 2 месяца назад
The Dutch?😂😂 "Help us England the Germans are coming"
@hiddentruth1982
@hiddentruth1982 Год назад
interesting little fact. if you scaled up the population to fit modern times there would be less crime than we currently have despite the reputation of the wild west being violent. It is more dangerous to be alive today than it was in the 1800's crime wise.
@aaronrodriguez1410
@aaronrodriguez1410 Год назад
Very true. But there were alot of outlaws back then
@JesseComments
@JesseComments Год назад
Ide have to disagree, people in the 1800s never got caught unless it was getting caught red handed, they didn't have camera, gps locations on phones, DNA evidence, finger prints lol if you got caught commiting a crime back in 1800 you had a low IQ ngl
@BigPapaX23
@BigPapaX23 Год назад
Well this is extremely skewed because many more laws exist today than did back then. Today anything is considered a crime and there is police activity everywhere. but back then police were less formal and organized and had less jurisdiction to arrest people.
@hiddentruth1982
@hiddentruth1982 Год назад
@@BigPapaX23 It isn't skewed. you are more likely to get killed today by someone than you were in the 1800s even if you scaled up the population. it has nothing to do with laws.
@mrr_corleone
@mrr_corleone Год назад
It’s called the Wild West due to the lack of government and laws
@user-km3fl9pr4g
@user-km3fl9pr4g Месяц назад
I'm Robert Degge James. My family left Missouri in 1865 and moved to Garland Texas in Northeast Dallas County. I was always told we were not related to Frank and Jesse James. My great-grandfather deserted from the Confederate Army in Missouri and supposedly rode with the Raiders. Legend has it that Frank and Jesse used to hide out a lot, on our farm on Duck Creek. The Garland newspapers say where the outlaw family of Garland. And historians will come to our house saying they had tracked us down there. I have a statuette that has soot on it from the Yankees burning our house down in Missouri. It amazes me how many people I meet say they're related to Frank and Jesse James! LOL Jesse must have spread his seed far and wide! LOL
@MD-jd6ni
@MD-jd6ni Год назад
Just amazing how many people in the comments say they are related to Jesse James.
@PresJoshington
@PresJoshington 11 месяцев назад
Lol foreal Every other comment
@endermassa
@endermassa 5 месяцев назад
Lots of people want to be related to slavers.
@MD-jd6ni
@MD-jd6ni 5 месяцев назад
@@endermassa Does it hurt to be such a moron?
@eggxecution
@eggxecution 5 месяцев назад
reminds me of pokemon
@brandonfaundez9962
@brandonfaundez9962 5 месяцев назад
​@@endermassaHell ya!
@selfportrait64
@selfportrait64 Год назад
My 3rd Great Grandfather James Gunn from Virginia was in the lumber business and was traveling looking for land and opportunity in Kentucky. At some point in his journey, he was ambushed on the road by the James Gang. He was an older man at this time and was successful. The story goes that they thought he was a yankee sympathizer because of his stage coach and dress. Great grandpa Gunn gave him some kind masonic hand signal as he was a mason. He also had a pocket watch that signaled he was a confederate. Jesse stated he would never harm a true confederate and let him go.
@jackson4404
@jackson4404 Год назад
Remember, the CSA fought to preserve and expand slavery. The "states rights, lost cause" is an invention to make the horrific appear honorable.
@horrorcastles
@horrorcastles Год назад
This is so cool, has this story been passed on in your family?
@BensonAndHedgers
@BensonAndHedgers Год назад
@@horrorcastles yeah would be exciting to learn of a story like this in the family.
@williampoff3096
@williampoff3096 11 месяцев назад
Jesse James was a product of Northern Aggression. Had the north left men like him and other Southerners alone instead of pushing us till we were forced to action, there would have been no "Jesse James's" or "Stonewall Jackson's". If you back anyone in a corner, most of the time, THEY WILL COME OUT FIGHTING. The Federal government has a long history of "Forced Compliance". It created men like Jesse James back then, and it will create men like him again. It's the government's fault that men turn this way. And if there is another Civil War, it will be their fault again. Plain and simple. Nuff said y'all
@NoRockinMansLand
@NoRockinMansLand 11 месяцев назад
May he rest in p!ss
@Gordon47789
@Gordon47789 Год назад
Another never mentioned fact: (Not condoning sacking anyone/town) Quantrill & those pesky Missouri ruffians always get a nasty historical blight for the Lawrence raid, but it’s never mentioned that that was retaliation for Jayhawkers burning Osceola, Harrisonville, Butler and multiple other towns, prior to Lawrence… Doesn’t make anything “right,” but it does explain their actions and proves neither side were in the “right.” However, the victors write the history books? Just a little missing context….
@petejones6827
@petejones6827 10 месяцев назад
its the foundation of the missouri kansas rivalry we see to this day in sports
@eduardogonzalez4807
@eduardogonzalez4807 8 месяцев назад
Just one thing. The civil war wasn’t about freeing slaves
@trentondobbs9940
@trentondobbs9940 9 дней назад
Just discovered the channel. It provides excellent listening material while working. Thank you.
@xrated179
@xrated179 11 месяцев назад
This was a well put together and informative documentary. I don’t understand how you don’t have 1m subs by now …
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier 11 месяцев назад
Thank you! We hope you stick around for the day it happens. We'll be here!
@TheSAexpat
@TheSAexpat Год назад
FASCINATING. Balanced and informative with wonderful research. The narrative is excellent too.
@gabepettiford2493
@gabepettiford2493 Год назад
The legendary James-Younger gang are the greatest outlaw's of the wild west. Jesse was so hardcore, from sixteen to thirty-four he live with bullets shells imprinted in his right chest, left arm and he had a blown off middle finger in his right hand. Every famous criminal after him wanted to be him. Good channel.
@MybeautifulandamazingPrincess
I suppose whether someone is a criminal or a hero is a matter of point of view, and which side your on. Cause to us Southern people Jesse James is a hero, basically our version of Robin hood. A civil war veteran who took revenge on the Union by robbing their banks and trains Jesse James and other confederate veterans did this, because the union made the South poor on purpose after the civil war. Not only were they looting and stealing from the South, but the railways were used exclusively to take the resources from the South for years. That plus the fact most of the war was in the South and the bloodiest parts of it were inflicted on southern people
@susanmccormick6022
@susanmccormick6022 Год назад
Yes.Totally agree.May they all RIP
@LegendaryName
@LegendaryName Год назад
Guess you never heard of the dutch van der linde gang
@ToddRobinson13
@ToddRobinson13 Год назад
​@Truer words have never been spoken, My Princess! That's revisionist history. The South made themselves poor by being so conservative. An agrarian society that refused to part with their slave labor and sends all able-bodied men to war for four years isn't a recipe for success.
@jackson4404
@jackson4404 Год назад
"Greatest" if you admire domestic terrorists like Timothy McVeigh. I'll assume this post is made out of ignorance not malice.
@daehr9399
@daehr9399 10 месяцев назад
My family lives about 20 minutes away from the first site of a train robbery west of the Mississippi, committed by Jesse James in 1873. Pretty neat to stop by, as they preserved the rail Jesse broke to derail the train.
@brapbrapson944
@brapbrapson944 Год назад
The level of research and effort you put into these videos is clear and phenomenal! Just earned yourself another subscriber, wish you the best of luck in growing this channel and I'm very much looking forward to any future content you have to give us on these kind of topics
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
We really appreciate the kind words! A lot of hard work is poured into these projects so the support means more than words suffice.
@daviddavis3389
@daviddavis3389 Год назад
What year did "Brushy Bill" die??
@Twinkie-hz2uc
@Twinkie-hz2uc 10 месяцев назад
​@@footprintsofthefrontier can you please do a video of Jesse James stepfather "Mr sins" that was a time traveler who died in 1954 and managed to resurrect for a few moments to let his kinfolks know how when and where he died?
@pleaseenteraname1103
@pleaseenteraname1103 10 месяцев назад
An interesting fact about him was my great grandmother’s great great aunt, actually let Jesse James stay at her house for a few days, when he was wanted, hopefully not knowing he was. Because as far as I’m aware she didn’t get in trouble with the law. And he actually gave her his gun in fact he was in my family for a long time until a couple of years before I was born when my grandma sold it to one of my grandpa’s friends, for like 70 bucks or something like that. I remember she told me that was one of the biggest mistake she ever made.
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
Jesse was known to tote a S&W break barrel .44 Cal. Schofield Russian model. I doubt he would give that one away. Maybe it was another one he had. He was always very careful about who he would let touch his weapon. He would always unload it and keep his hand on another pistol. He loved children and teaching them how to shoot. I know where he hid out after the Northfield Raid in order for his wounds to heal, but I'm not telling.
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 5 месяцев назад
"Reconstruction" was a horrible lawless time in the Southland. Jesse was 15 not 16 when he joined his older brother Frank in the War effort. The family were devout Baptist's and Jesse was known never to swear, curse, or drink alcohol. Jesse James was a true Southern Patriot. War can do horrible things to a young person who is still partly an adultescent and not yet a grown person. Jesse James and family were victim's of their era, infused with the vile hatred and violence of War. The victorious write the history and the vanquished are vilified.
@JermaineWV
@JermaineWV 3 месяца назад
Can’t be victims if you owned human bodies
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
@@JermaineWV Anyone can be a victim. Read your Holy Bible!
@JermaineWV
@JermaineWV 3 месяца назад
@@TheGuitarReb Yes anyone can be a victim. But Jesse James family definitely wasn’t.
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
@@JermaineWV I saw on the news this morning a guy opened his front door and a trigger happy cop emptied his 9mm pistol into him killing. I would say that was a victim.
@macbeavers6938
@macbeavers6938 9 месяцев назад
Very well done. Their take in some of those robberies was huge in today's dollars!
@ahoggan230
@ahoggan230 Год назад
WOW! Had no idea he was once a Confederate Soldier 🤯
@1TruNub
@1TruNub Год назад
He wasn't a confederate soldier he was a confederate guerrilla. There were only two bands Of Guerrillas that We're both sanctioned and funded by the C s a Those being mosby's 43rd virginia Battalion and mcneill's rangers both were in virginia. While jesse james Fought against the union as a confederate Guerrilla. He was not a confederate soldier
@KristinkaAranova
@KristinkaAranova Год назад
He was apart of Quantrills raiders
@donaldoneill2117
@donaldoneill2117 10 месяцев назад
U must be stupid then😂
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 5 месяцев назад
Wrong! There were way more guerrilla bands than you named. They were designated "partisan rangers" During the War the partisan ranger act was repealed by the C S government and those troops were absorbed into the regular ranks of the CS Army. How do I know? My ancestor was a partisan ranger who rode with Phillip Dale Roddey & N. B. Forrest.
@travistino247
@travistino247 4 месяца назад
Just because you shot Jesse James don’t make you Jesse James
@notreconstructed
@notreconstructed 11 месяцев назад
Jesse James was a hero and a thorn in the side of the wicked
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 5 месяцев назад
So true, They were devout primitive Baptist's bent on the destruction of the wicked Pinkerton detectives, who murdered his little brother and crippled Jesse & Frank's mother.
@JermaineWV
@JermaineWV 3 месяца назад
His parents were slave owners. 😅
@Dylanmccutcheon747
@Dylanmccutcheon747 3 месяца назад
@@JermaineWV there slaves chose to stay and work for his family after the war, I think that says something, not saying it’s right it’s not but things were just different back then it’s history we learn from it
@JermaineWV
@JermaineWV 3 месяца назад
@@Dylanmccutcheon747 1. Yes staying a slave after the war does say something. 40 acres and a mule was never given. Share cropping after slavery was not any better in fact probably worse. Says a lot about post slavery America. 2. “Things were different back then.” Is usually said when you want to keep your eyes closed to the things that were done wrong to a group of people. 🤦🏽‍♀️
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
@@JermaineWV Well we taught um to love Jesus and not to eat each other.
@ronaldrvvanhook1437
@ronaldrvvanhook1437 Год назад
Jesse James was in fact fighting a corrupt system. No matter how much people try to rewrite history, he will remain a hero to the cause against tyranny and corporate/political corruption.
@Indarow
@Indarow 11 месяцев назад
I struggle to understand how that’s what you took away from this… He ain’t exactly Billy the Kid, who actually *was* fighting a corrupt system. Sounds like he was more of a Lemoyne Raider than an Arthur Morgan. If anything a corrupt system helped him continue his bushwhacking and robbing far longer than otherwise possible.
@CarterCunningham111
@CarterCunningham111 11 месяцев назад
you stupid rebel "corruption" all we did was ensure that the constitusion was followed you were corrupt you hipocryte ok i will say onething lincoln did put sympasizers with the csa in prison but thats way better then literaly making innocents whipped all day working from morning to night sith no pay little food and god knows what else you call the north corupt you should consult your nearest actualy smart person
@luketornblad4605
@luketornblad4605 7 месяцев назад
I have family who live in Missouri. One of my cousins worked as a tour guide at the Jesse James house and another who graduated from Kearney HS
@user-mj5pj9gh1c
@user-mj5pj9gh1c Год назад
Incredible work. Thank you for doing all of that research and putting it together so well. Subscribed.
@jaroddstansberry
@jaroddstansberry 6 месяцев назад
The Ford's were introduced by Ed Miller, not Wood Hite. The Ford's did not go with Jesse because of anything to do with their sister, Martha Bolton! Sources? Also, Bob Ford never turned himself in to Timberlake. You're confusing when Dick Liddil who turned himself in, and Bob helped setup the meeting. Nearly everything you said about the Ford's were incorrect. You probably shouldn't have just gone off of a movie.
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
I just saw a movie in witch Jesse was in a Saloon drinking Whiskey, playing cards and hugging prostitutes. It's a known FACT, the James family were Primitive Baptist's, his Momma was religious and his Dad was a preacher, and his step-dad was an honest man.
@jaroddstansberry
@jaroddstansberry 3 месяца назад
@TheGuitarReb So, because parents are religious, it means their murdering son was a Saint? Lol. The Ford's testified under Oath about Jesse coming to their house, staying up late, gambling and drinking. Also, the Ford's father was a preacher at a church as well.
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
@@jaroddstansberry So you believe "The Ford's" OK I don't care. I just happen to know of the James family and a guy known as Dingus. I know of his character, and where he hid out after the Northfield Raid. I also know about him and Frank as school children and all about their Lady school teacher. I know what kind of children they were. They rode with Quantrill's partisans, fought for the South and sought revenge for the murder of their little retard brother and Mother gettin her arm blown off by Pinkerton Yankees. I know about the suffering endured by the South during the Re-construction and the genocide perpetuated on the American Indian. . .
@jeffknowles1857
@jeffknowles1857 Год назад
Really enjoyed this story thank you 😊
@keithmauldin6815
@keithmauldin6815 Год назад
Did I miss it or was the Pinkerton raid on Jesses Moms home mentioned? This resulted in the death of his half Brother and his Mom losing an arm. In those times it was very violent on both sides.
@sandidavis820
@sandidavis820 Год назад
You missed it. It was there.
@n00bikscube1
@n00bikscube1 Год назад
30:42
@TheRealEclipse1
@TheRealEclipse1 Год назад
Both sides? It was one bomb lol. Pretty much asked for it at that point.
@ThemissouriTraveler
@ThemissouriTraveler 11 месяцев назад
@@TheRealEclipse1killing a child? There is no reasonable reasoning for that
@TheRealEclipse1
@TheRealEclipse1 11 месяцев назад
@@ThemissouriTraveler "Shouldn't have been standing there." - Happy Gilmore
@ForgoneConclusionInc
@ForgoneConclusionInc Год назад
Well, this just makes my day!
@esjaymac
@esjaymac Год назад
Nice documentary! Thanks for mentioning my great-grandad Arthur. But I'm not sure what is meant by "The Arthur McCoy outfit". I'll need to look into that.
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
Hey, Steve! Thanks so much for your viewership and feedback! The "Arthur McCoy outfit" was referring to the collection of outlaws that were said to have branched out from the larger James-Younger Gang, led by your great-grandad. It was rumored the Gads Hill robbery was led by the Arthur McCoy gang due to a reporting error in various local newspapers, until Jesse James and co. personally gave details to the St. Louis Dispatch for their publication on 02/02/1874. Here's a link to the edition! stltoday.newspapers.com/image/137648147/
@archieclement2977
@archieclement2977 8 месяцев назад
"I've done what I always said I would do.... die before I'd surrender."
@jamesdeen3011
@jamesdeen3011 Год назад
I've never heard or read that the gang burned 14 mills after the Minnesota bank robbery. This doesn't sound plausible giving how bad they were shot up. If this is documented where can I find it? Thank you for all your hard work in producing these videos. Always entertaining and sometimes I even learn something. Enjoyed.
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
Hi James! We agreed it was a bit far fetched, and should note the burning of the mills is a belief based on the change in the bank inventory as recorded here. www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00861.xml Feel free to take a look and make a judgement yourself! To us, it's in the eye of the beholder if one thought that was factual explanation or simply an assumption. Thanks for your viewership, we hope you stick around.
@jamesdeen3011
@jamesdeen3011 Год назад
@@footprintsofthefrontier l've been a subscriber for a few months now, can't remember if I've commented or not but definitely enjoy your videos. I enjoy all things history. My favorite era is the bronze age in all regions. I will look up the above for sure. As you said subjective, so I'm a little bit skeptical already but maybe I will learn something new. It just doesn't seem plausible as they are wounded with a posse on their tail leaving a smoke signal for all to see. Maybe 1 but 14 ! As for sticking around I definitely will, thanks for the information and the invite.
@BlueBird-vi8vo
@BlueBird-vi8vo Год назад
He was a brutal murderer, but just like all things, if one is not actually present and living in that time, with all it's unknowable nuances, it's impossible for modern day minds to adequately understand Jesse James.
@BlueBird-vi8vo
@BlueBird-vi8vo Год назад
He appears to be wearing eye makeup in the photo with his Raiders cap - which is actually my favorite photo of him.
@jamesdeen3011
@jamesdeen3011 Год назад
@@BlueBird-vi8vo are you responding to one of my comments or to Jesse Hutchins ? If you are responding to me I don't understand your comment in relation to mine. You have 2 comments like that. See Jesse J Hutchins comment obove mine I think your response maybe to him.
@frankbalazs8816
@frankbalazs8816 Год назад
Jesse was my great X 6 cousin!!! God bless him!!!❤
@danielblackburn1241
@danielblackburn1241 Год назад
And all the people he killed
@MD-jd6ni
@MD-jd6ni Год назад
He was a psychopath. Interesting character, but definitely nuttier than squirrel shit.
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
@@danielblackburn1241 You mean all the Yankees he killed.
@GG-vq6ro
@GG-vq6ro Месяц назад
Really? So?
@goochI034
@goochI034 Месяц назад
No he wasnt.
@waltmooredanwilson8754
@waltmooredanwilson8754 Год назад
Thanks for sharing your video. I enjoyed watching. Take care and God Bless.
@LastofusEllie
@LastofusEllie Год назад
DUTCH: OH BOY THE PINKERTONS OH HOW I HATE THEM
@catherineaiello7136
@catherineaiello7136 Год назад
Very informative. Thanks.
@scottgarmon4865
@scottgarmon4865 Год назад
Mr Simms died in 1954? Dang, he lived a long life.
@robertmaddox7977
@robertmaddox7977 Год назад
I caught that too. Thought I would peek at the comments to see others.
@GG-vq6ro
@GG-vq6ro Месяц назад
Obviously 1854. Do you have a brain?
@user-dh5vo6gj2j
@user-dh5vo6gj2j 4 месяца назад
Is there anything more to the lineage of the younger family as I'm curious about the fact my great grandmother was realated not sure how but she was a younger and grew up with stories about all this but I'm vary thankful for this as it a far more accurate description of what happened to the farm house bye the Pinkertons and is something meny people leave out why they where driven to this life
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
It was called "Reconstruction" It was "I've got my boot on your neck."
@cmwanders
@cmwanders Год назад
Great Documentary! Subscribed.
@hmj1116
@hmj1116 Год назад
They made movies of these characters from Hollywood I think and showed on tv I've watched them very interesting!
@michaelhiggs8657
@michaelhiggs8657 Год назад
An interesting fact is that Jessie actually turned up for the John L.Sullivan/Jake Kilrain fight @ Richburg, Mississipi 1889. Rumour has it that Bat Masterson was Kilrain's timekeeper.
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
A fascinating bit of history trivia! Thanks for sharing, Michael.
@susanmccormick6022
@susanmccormick6022 Год назад
Michael Higgs:Really?Not doubting u but where did u get the info from?
@michaelhiggs8657
@michaelhiggs8657 Год назад
@@susanmccormick6022 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-sgaphoX4IY4.html&pp=ygUPam9obiBsLnN1bGxpdmFu It was Paddy Ryan in 1882 not Jake in 1889.
@daviddavis3389
@daviddavis3389 Год назад
Hate to be the one to spoil it for you, but Jesse did not live in till 1889. Died in 1882..
@daviddavis3389
@daviddavis3389 Год назад
Seriously? Impossible!! He died 7 years prior...sf Joseph Missouri (Mr Howard) Jesse wasn't a good person, he was a robber, Crook, & Coward..
@blumobean
@blumobean Год назад
How ironic, outlaws (the James Gang) being tracked by outlaws (Pinkertons).
@1TruNub
@1TruNub Год назад
The difference between jesse james and the pinkerton's. The pinkertons were funded and Paid for by the government and government aligned interests
@Bigpunz67
@Bigpunz67 Год назад
Me realizing that Rdr2 is just about jeeie James
@tylercraigg5383
@tylercraigg5383 Год назад
Which is badass cause I only live 15-20 from kearney his birthplace
@MD-jd6ni
@MD-jd6ni Год назад
Not even close.
@nelsonandersen6866
@nelsonandersen6866 10 месяцев назад
I've read quite a number on books on Jesse James. It's a shame quite a number of people still romanticize him. Don't get me wrong he's had reason for a few of his actions, Pinkerton's killing his half brother and taking off his mothers arm/Unionist almost hanging his step father and beating Jesse at a young age to get information on the whereabouts of his brother. But in the end he was a cold-blooded killer.
@patrickdolan.
@patrickdolan. 8 месяцев назад
Yep agreed. I live south of Northfield Minnesota and never understand the romanticism of him. They even have Jesse James days...
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
@@patrickdolan. I live South of Northfield, way South. I do understand.
@brodystearns7819
@brodystearns7819 6 месяцев назад
7:15 if you listen closely he states that smith died in 1954 which he clearly meant to say 1854 but just thought id share that error😂
@arwynevans6068
@arwynevans6068 Год назад
His grandparents came from Pembrokeshire Wales .If somebody has a named Christian name with an s on the end are usually Welsh or Welsh descent Jones ,Davies ,Williams Evans ,James ect even said St Patrick was Welsh.
@Floridaboi-Woody
@Floridaboi-Woody Год назад
Great and fair video. Thanks.
@YoutubeluvsGroomers
@YoutubeluvsGroomers 6 месяцев назад
Crime was so little that it was big news that lasted through history.
@Kpapa91
@Kpapa91 Год назад
Omg, is this the origin of Team Rocket?!
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
They say historians are still looking for evidence of the outlaw's rumored talking cat to this day...
@jeffreycalderwood9893
@jeffreycalderwood9893 Год назад
Oh I highly believe that the fact that there was less violence back in the 1800s is because everyone had a gun
@Gordon47789
@Gordon47789 Год назад
A couple corrections, sorry… But, Northfield was a secondary plan, the initial plans was a bank in Mankato, which they didn’t feel good about and they changed to Northfield. And you said Jesse was shot in the thigh… that was Frank. Jesse was the only member not wounded. Good show though.
@daviddavis3389
@daviddavis3389 Год назад
True! That Bonehead plan to Rob 2 Banks simultaneously came from Cell Miller...He consisted the Swedish people/ " jarhead" farmers ignorant & unsofisticated...but they actually smarter the the Jame gang..( Sept, 1876)
@AnnaMontanaa
@AnnaMontanaa 5 месяцев назад
My baby sister has been working on our family tree and come to find out he's a distant relative. I couldn't believe it 😭
@ItIsAllgood1219
@ItIsAllgood1219 4 месяца назад
Hey Fam
@AnnaMontanaa
@AnnaMontanaa 3 месяца назад
@@ItIsAllgood1219that’s crazy 😭😭😭😂
@ww1andww2history
@ww1andww2history 3 месяца назад
My relative too
@SWIM-02354
@SWIM-02354 3 месяца назад
​@@ItIsAllgood1219that's like your 3rd "hey fam" you're NOT related to him you losers 😂
@jessewellman
@jessewellman 4 месяца назад
Hearing this story is amazing because i,m related to Jesse James
@ww1andww2history
@ww1andww2history 3 месяца назад
Me too!
@GG-vq6ro
@GG-vq6ro Месяц назад
Me too! Also Al Capone and Atilla the Hun and supposedly Cleopatra
@ww1andww2history
@ww1andww2history Месяц назад
@@GG-vq6ro are you serious?
@goochI034
@goochI034 Месяц назад
Haha we have yet another Jesse James “relative”!
@kidfox3971
@kidfox3971 9 месяцев назад
As a Tennessean i am very pleased to hear that Jesse James was a fellow Dixie, his brother really gave it to those Yanks.
@tylerbickford-xi6ry
@tylerbickford-xi6ry Год назад
I enjoy these stories and I share the same birthdays as Jesse !🎉
@patriciaarreguin7885
@patriciaarreguin7885 Год назад
Same here ! 🎉
@cameronbehnke7017
@cameronbehnke7017 14 дней назад
Great documentary: few things, I don't believe the Jesse was staying at the fords brother house when he was killed. I believe it was Jesse's home due to Jesse's wife Z and children being present at the assignation. Additionally, the home of Jesse's mother where the bomb was thrown through the window only exploded once thrown in the fireplace out of fear and confusion. The original home is displayed and did not burn down as mentioned in the documentary. Great video and narration regardless.
@plymouthduster225
@plymouthduster225 Год назад
Interesting documentary about Jesse James. I decided to watch because I was thinking about purchasing the book Shot All To Hell, Jesse James The Northfield Raid And The Wild West Greatest Escape by Mark Lee Gardner. Supposedly I have some ancestors that rode with the James Gang and served with Cole and Frank in the Civil War.
@joncasey8077
@joncasey8077 Год назад
That Shot All To Hell book is damn good! I owned a 72 Plymouth Duster waaaaaayyyy back in the day!😂
@14varricchio
@14varricchio 10 месяцев назад
Appreciate the video and learned quite a bit, overall very informative. Had to laugh, though, at the mention of the Civil War era Battle of Lexington in Missouri, there was a painting of the Revolutionary War Battle of Lexington and Concord. It looks as if the editor just Googled "Battle of Lexington" and took the first image that popped up! 😂
@chrisingram4559
@chrisingram4559 5 месяцев назад
Very pro union “facts” in the video also.
@tnt-hv6qw
@tnt-hv6qw 4 месяца назад
i know u don’t have time to cover every detail but i would like to add to anyone who reads this that the raid on kansas was because union troops famously k own as red legs who raided and murdered had many of the raiders sisters cousins wives girlfriends in a old two story make shift prison. it collapsed killing many. when the raiders got word they wanted revenge. when they approached the town that morning yankee soldiers were in camped outside around the town. they went after them. most fleeing on foot into the town.
@bobnoon253
@bobnoon253 5 месяцев назад
Liked & subscribed. It is so refreshing to see something other than Wyatt Earp, Billy the Kid, & Jesse James. I always suspected that there was other noteworthy individuals.
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier 5 месяцев назад
We're happy to have you along for the ride. Enjoy!
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
Years after his alleged death Jesse signed a roll at a reunion of Confederate Soldiers & members of the Golden Circle.. How is that?
@Twinkie-hz2uc
@Twinkie-hz2uc 10 месяцев назад
It's amazing not only is he an outlaw, but his stepfather secretly owned a delorian and crashed in 1954 but managed to let his widow and stepchildren know the exact location ehat he was doing at the time and year!
@zeldahyrule543
@zeldahyrule543 9 месяцев назад
facts
@bobpuslkr5025
@bobpuslkr5025 6 месяцев назад
Its alleged im a decendant of jesse james, ive heard it my whole life, my fathers side are the james' . ive done ancestory, but cant seem to find my way backwards, any advice to legitamize this? Im from north carolina.
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier 6 месяцев назад
A lot of folks wonder about this! We use MyHeritage to research old family trees and potential descendants of frontier legends. The service requires a subscription, but if you are serious about tracing your family's roots, it's a great place to start!
@bobpuslkr5025
@bobpuslkr5025 6 месяцев назад
@@footprintsofthefrontier thank you! I have used ancestory but i actually lack a couple dates, the closest i had found was a grandchild that died in 51, i did not get Any closer, and am starting to believe it may be a myth! But i will definitely try that app instead!
@josephshultz6659
@josephshultz6659 6 месяцев назад
My grandparents were Mormon and did a genealogy search. And apparently I'm distantly related to jesse
@bobpuslkr5025
@bobpuslkr5025 6 месяцев назад
@@josephshultz6659 where do you happen to be from
@RobertBlackmon-wo8mp
@RobertBlackmon-wo8mp 11 месяцев назад
Not all of us were slavers!!!!! Only 8 percent of south was slavers!!!slavery!!!! We fought for our family and friends .we root hogged be. or died!!!!!!!
@byazura9824
@byazura9824 Месяц назад
Placerville, that's where I'm from. That old village is still there.
@jeffscott8323
@jeffscott8323 8 месяцев назад
Are there any known direct descendants. Of Jessie James. Living today
@hotpiegravy2347
@hotpiegravy2347 Год назад
Good documentary!
@AustinHunter8
@AustinHunter8 3 месяца назад
If you’re going to tell it, tell it all. Slavery actually had very little to do with the reasoning behind the James brothers joining the Confederacy……
@nathansteinfromarkham7109
@nathansteinfromarkham7109 3 месяца назад
What was the reason? As far as I know the mother was a very anti north entity and that MAY have been an influence. I’m rust on my Jesse James history so I would love to hear the reason.
@user-hr2oi6jd7m
@user-hr2oi6jd7m Год назад
I do believe this generation is the only time in human history that men have been this big of do nothing cowards. The times we are living in right now inside of this fake internet matrix world instead of the real world is sickening. But, here we are. I guess we did it to ourselves.
@dailyfb5481
@dailyfb5481 Год назад
Apparently according to my grandma Jesse James was my distant cousin
@ItIsAllgood1219
@ItIsAllgood1219 4 месяца назад
Hey Fam
@timyowell4278
@timyowell4278 Год назад
I'm curious as to why. Nothing was mentioned about one of their favorite hideouts. Meramec caverns near Sullivan Missouri. They were known to have used the caverns for many years off and on.
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
Thank you for watching! While the Meramec caverns hold a unique role in the legend of Jesse James, we weren't able to fit everything into the documentary. The historical proof to support the theory that the James gang used the caverns as a hideout is lacking. However, it is much more likely the caverns were visited by James and company during the Civil War era when they were used as a saltpeter plant by the Union Army. Confederate bushwhackers found and desecrated the plant, and its thought James and Cole Younger were of these guerillas. It's all fascinating history nonetheless!
@daviddavis3389
@daviddavis3389 Год назад
Well if they'd mentioned about their famous hideout, then it would No longer be a secret hide out right?
@markevans5648
@markevans5648 3 месяца назад
For those of us from this area who hear whispers from our elders about all of these stories and remember celebrating the James gang in local festivals this is our culture. Yes, we celebrated the James gang “cole younger days” in the 2000’s.
@T-3.
@T-3. Год назад
Jesse James Great grandfather, William James was from Wales, his grandmother was from Devon. Not sure about your Scottish link?
@TheGuitarReb
@TheGuitarReb 3 месяца назад
Only Scot's DNA would be mean and hard headed enough to become a Jesse James. I know because Grand daddy was Scots/Irish.
@chewiescustompuzzles
@chewiescustompuzzles 11 месяцев назад
Mr Sims died in 1954? We should all be so lucky to live over 130 years.😂
@paulmc3457
@paulmc3457 9 месяцев назад
When I worked in Wyoming, I often heard about the gang hiding out in a desolate little town called Baggs, which is in the high red desert. Anyone who knows whether it's a true historical part of this story?
@tiedyehobo
@tiedyehobo Год назад
Jessie James is a hero. The railroad took his land. The railroad killed off the buffalo to starve the Indians.
@kerrywatkins2648
@kerrywatkins2648 Год назад
Frank was my great cousin. We are still here. JW..
@petejones6827
@petejones6827 10 месяцев назад
damn i never knew thats where litt;e dixie came from a great damn fishing hole called little dixie too, i also didnt know there was hemp farms in the area thats why there is ditch weed growing all over the place
@hellatubbies882yt
@hellatubbies882yt 7 месяцев назад
not sure as to the validity of the claim, but i remember more than once as a child, being told that somewhere along the line, Jesse James was in our family tree, but again, not sure how valid the claim was, or where/how he was related
@wheresmymoneyat2482
@wheresmymoneyat2482 11 месяцев назад
@7:11...1954? did you mean to say "1854"?
@mrletsplayit
@mrletsplayit Месяц назад
Why cant you just call them slaves? Every few years some self righteous person has to replace a perfectly good term so they can pat themselves on the back
@patrickforget5088
@patrickforget5088 Год назад
(Who you calling rebel you blue scum belly)what movie is that from
@travishendrix7026
@travishendrix7026 8 месяцев назад
Outlaw Josie Wales ol son! Great movie!!
@Atrenu
@Atrenu 11 месяцев назад
I wonder if Rockstar got inspiration for Red Dead Redemption 2 from James and his exploits (specifically the Northfield Bank Robbery - it feels like the Saint Denis bank robbery paralleled that to some degree)
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier 11 месяцев назад
While Jesse James most certainly inspired bits of RDR2, Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch is actually the more influential frontier gang on the game's development and plot! If I remember correctly, they were pushing fans to watch the 1969 classic "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" as a companion piece to their RDR2 play. However you might be right in regards to the Saint Denis/Northfield connection. We hadn't thought of that before!
@tyhosier5513
@tyhosier5513 Год назад
Fun fact he was actually buried in neodasha, kansas
@marcboblee1863
@marcboblee1863 Год назад
Sir, a great narrative, and piece of history. Thank you for posting this video.....
@Baruch-c3e
@Baruch-c3e 19 дней назад
👑JESUS IS LORD👑🙏 AND ♥LOVES♥ YOU ↩REPENT↩ AND BELIEVE IN THE ✝GOSPEL✝I LOVE YOU
@charlesrabas7001
@charlesrabas7001 Год назад
As one who has studied the subject for over four decades, and have personally known some of the most respected James historians and two of Jesse's grandchildren, i'; give this video a C-. It contains enough truth, but its many misrepresentations and omissions to spoil it. The frequent use of photographs well-known to be misidentified, as well as many that are hotly debated further hinder its credibility.
@Jesusistheonlyway549
@Jesusistheonlyway549 Год назад
Did he actually give to the poor? I was told that was true but you know how they try to twist history today so I still believe it despite being told otherwise
@charlesrabas7001
@charlesrabas7001 Год назад
@@Jesusistheonlyway549 The short answer is a resounding NO!!! He spent it all. There are no known contemporary accounts to support the myth that he was a Robin Hood. Jesse is suspected of having participated in a total of about thirty robberies between February 13, 1866 to Sept. 7, 1876 (while a member of the James-Younger gang, which was led by Frank James and Cole Younger) and Oct. 8, 1879 to December 7, 1881 (when, after a three-year hiatus, he finally led his own gang), for an average of about two per year. While a few were very profitable, some yielded little more than pocket change. The proceeds had to be split between all the participants, who usually numbered around five but as many as nine on occasion. Jesse was very fond of horse racing, both owning and betting on them, and was a frequent loser. He had a wife and two children to support, and his occupation necessitated their frequent moves on top of his own extensive travels. At the time of his death, he was virtually penniless, and his wife had to sell the family's goods (even his son's dog) at auction.
@Mysticfiles72
@Mysticfiles72 Год назад
seems you know a lot about this, are you related?
@charlesrabas7001
@charlesrabas7001 Год назад
@@Mysticfiles72 No, I'm not related. However, as I stated, I've studied the subject for over four decades, including extensive research into primary sources and have personally known some of Jesse's direct descendants.. I've talked with a number of the most respected James historians, some of whom were/are friends of mine. (Some of them such as Ted Yeatman, Dr. Robert Settle, and Jack Koblas, are now deceased.) While working at the Excelsior Springs, Missouri hospital, I was friends with the physician of Frank James' son (Robert James) and Robert's wife (Mae). He relayed to me many of the family stories they had told him. (For what it's worth, Mae was one of my patients.) I'm currently working on a book that focuses on Jesse's gang from its formation in the spring of 1879 to his death in 1882, with an epilogue dealing with the eventual fate of his immediate family and the survivors of his gang. In the process, I've discovered some very relevant information that has previously been overlooked or ignored.
@Mysticfiles72
@Mysticfiles72 Год назад
@@charlesrabas7001 interesting information. Curious about you're book
@barbarawitt9581
@barbarawitt9581 Год назад
Like one of the comments said it didn't mention the meramec caverns also they didn't mention Utah they were in cahoots with the knights of the Golden circle the KGC and the Masons and there's no mention of Queen Victoria there's a lot not being said in this video just look up Queen Victoria and the civil war, also look up oak Island civil war gold they talk about rocks with all kinds of symbols that connect the Masons with Jesse James and the Golden circle.
@backwithabang5842
@backwithabang5842 4 месяца назад
Jesse James was a real rebel soldier. 🙌🏻
@alexgrayafc49
@alexgrayafc49 Год назад
Superb documentary the research must have taken forever new sub for u 👍
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
Thank you, Alex! Welcome aboard!
@LindaMerchant-bq2hp
@LindaMerchant-bq2hp 11 месяцев назад
Modern day robin hood
@Showtime231
@Showtime231 Год назад
Dang he fell in love with his cousin 😳😳
@markcourtney1088
@markcourtney1088 Год назад
It wasn't platte County that he lived and died in.. It was st joseph mo Buchanan county
@whatonearth11
@whatonearth11 Год назад
Is he the one George strait mentions in his song troubadour?
@jonathanrowan8977
@jonathanrowan8977 29 дней назад
Yes
@jonathanrowan8977
@jonathanrowan8977 29 дней назад
Yes
@petejones6827
@petejones6827 10 месяцев назад
sometimes when im in the woods where i live i sit back and think jesse james and many legends of great and bad men walked on this same dirt through some of these same trees. shot and killed men in this area.
@dwightcurrie8316
@dwightcurrie8316 Год назад
Jesse was never a Confederate Soldier. He followed Frank into Quantrill's Guerrillas, flying The Black Flag when he was only sixteen, and fought with Bloody Bill Anderson until the end of the Civil War. These guerrillas were not considered as "Soldiers" by either side in that conflict, and often looked down upon by the rank and file soldiers
@ChristopherMartin-hv9hl
@ChristopherMartin-hv9hl Год назад
You should ask yourself why people think they supported slavery middle class and poor being surrounded by pro slavery corporations should tell you everything you need to know bought like today everything is racist folks you should also ask yourself who is that man with the grown mountain man beard in that casket because it isn't the guy in this photo
@user-uz3bh3ru6s
@user-uz3bh3ru6s 11 месяцев назад
He is my great great uncle.n I was born in Liberty Mo
@garynewis8293
@garynewis8293 9 месяцев назад
Jesse was such a colourful personality.His life was so fascinating,his life story was unsurpassed
@Jesusistheonlyway549
@Jesusistheonlyway549 Год назад
I don’t believe that he didn’t give to the poor. I think it’s a lie to say he didn’t because they can’t have him or what he represents as a hero.
@brapbrapson944
@brapbrapson944 Год назад
@bloobabboon ditto. the delusion so many southerners have about Jessie and his gang are just sad. The guy was a vile, murderous, thieving psychopath. As were most of the bushwhackers he rode with. to twist the truth into some kind of antihero robin hood stereotype does an immense disservice to many of the innocent victims who suffered and died at his and his allies' hands.
@jameslipke354
@jameslipke354 Год назад
I'm assuming that the narrator meant Simms died in 1854 - not 1954 - in a horseriding accident before Zerelda James Simms application for divorce could be granted. ~ APRIL LIPKE
@daviddavis3389
@daviddavis3389 Год назад
How bout the Dalton gang boys?
@deliaabc8519
@deliaabc8519 2 месяца назад
What’s the deal with everybody in the pictures being all beat up? At 24:19
@jessehutchings
@jessehutchings Год назад
It's shocking how beautiful of a man he was. His eyes look like they were a light glacial blue or green color and his face almost had a feminine charm. If he hadn't been a brutal outlaw he could have easily been a stage performer or charismatic political figure. Truly a fascinating historic character. (I was named after him)
@footprintsofthefrontier
@footprintsofthefrontier Год назад
How fascinating! We agree, there is definitely a deeper meaning why Brat Pitt was cast as Jesse James. He could have been the 19th century version of Pitt!
@carywest9256
@carywest9256 Год назад
@@footprintsofthefrontier Read my comments, and read more books. Don't depend on the internet for information. It's biased to say the least. Where are you from? I can tell by your voice, you are young. If you produce anymore videos, do as much research as possible and be neutral narrating. I'm at my last minute. I only watched because l was born 80 years after Mr. Howard was murdered in his home. DEO VINDICE
@VanishedPNW
@VanishedPNW Год назад
​@@carywest9256Oh god. Sit down.
@stevewheatley243
@stevewheatley243 Год назад
​@@VanishedPNW Lmfao!🤣
@notapplicable761
@notapplicable761 Год назад
@@VanishedPNW From the sounds of it he might be laying down… in his coffin 🤷
@tonyanthony824
@tonyanthony824 11 месяцев назад
Dutch van der linde could never..
@jonmoore2867
@jonmoore2867 Год назад
Thank you Jesse James the cause ain't lost yet
@tysonchambliss1584
@tysonchambliss1584 9 месяцев назад
The way you casually said he fell in love with his first cousin 😭 I know back then it was normal but geez
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