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Jesse Edwards "Tim" James, Jr

Male 1875 - 1951  (75 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Jesse Edwards "Tim" James, Jr was born 31 Aug 1875, Nashville, Tennessee (son of Jesse Woodson 'the outlaw' James and Zerelda Amanda "Zee" Mimms); died 26 Mar 1951, Los Angeles County, California; was buried , Forest Lawn Memorial Park Glendale, California.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Jesse Woodson 'the outlaw' JamesJesse Woodson 'the outlaw' James was born 15 Sep 1847 (son of Rev. Robert Sallee James and Zerelda Elizabeth Cole); died 3 Apr 1882, Saint Joseph, Missouri; was buried , Mount Olivet Cemetery, Clay County, Missouri.

    Notes:

    Birth: Sep. 5, 1847
    Death: Apr. 3, 1882
    Saint Joseph
    Buchanan County
    Missouri, USA

    Western Outlaw. He was born Jesse Woodson James in Kearney, Missouri to Baptist minister Reverend Robert and Zerelda James and the younger brother of James. His father heeding a calling left for California with the intent of preaching to gold miners but contracted cholera and died. He is buried in an unmarked lost grave in Placerville. By the time Jesse was eight, his mother had remarried twice more. From the third marriage, he gained two stepbrothers and two stepsisters. As a youth, he was churchgoer, baptized at the Kearney Baptist Church and sang in the choir wanting to emulate his father and become a Baptist preacher. Jesse had very little formal education but was skilled with horses and a natural leader. When but fifteen, he followed his brother James into the ranks of Quantrill's Raiders. After the war ended, he attempted to surrender at Lexington, Missouri and gain amnesty along with his brother Frank, Cole Younger and others but a gun battle ensured. The remnants of the "Raiders" were forced to hide out in the woods. With no means of livelihood, the James-Younger gang came into being. For the next fifteen years they robbed banks and when security made that difficult, they turned to stagecoaches and trains. After the failed disastrous attempt to rob the bank in Northfield, Minnesota, many of the gang member were wounded and captured, However, Jesse slipped away and lived quietly in St. Joseph Missouri under an assumed name. Two of his gang members were tempted by a reward for his capture dead or alive. They went to his house and while his back was turned, Robert Ford shot him one time in the back of the head. His mother had him buried in the front yard of the James Farm with an imposing monument with a inscription condemning the assassin. The house in St Joseph where Jesse met his death is preserved and is the epitome of morbidity. Here you can see the bullet hole made as it passed thought the skull of Jesse. The structure is filled with James memorabilia. The house was actually moved here after being saved from the jaws of demolition. Now more has been added. Artifacts from the controversial exhumation of 1995. A bullet from his right lung stemming from an old civil War injury, the tie tack he was wearing when first buried and fragments of wood, the handles and the glass fragments from the coffin front piece grace a glass cabinet. Jesse James boyhood home today remains relatively secluded in the countryside near the small town of Kearney. After Zerelda's third and very successful marriage to her neighbor a country doctor, the two farms became one and was very prosperous with several slaves doing most of the work. After the death of her son, a defiant mother sat on the front porch giving tours of the house and selling stones from the grave and supposed pistols owned by her famous son. It was here Union soldiers harassed the family known as confederate sympathizers and attacked Zerelda and tried to hang her third husband. The incident defined young Jessie's determination to join the Confederate army. It was here Pinkerton detectives threw an incendiary bomb into the residence killing a younger step brother and maiming Zerelda. After her death and Jesse's wife, his body was moved from the farm to the family plot in Mount Olivet Cemetery Kearney and interred beside her. Frank James in his old age kept up the tours by charging 50 cents until his death. Clay County purchased the rundown property and after two restorations, 75 percent of the original material remains. It contains original furnishings. The James home is perhaps one of the most authentic birthplace sites in America today. Now, the Clay County government at the Jesse James Farm and Museum is still selling pebbles for 25 cents along with shirts, books and toys. The Jesse James Bank Museum, formerly the Clay County Savings Assoc., located on the historic square in Liberty, Missouri, was the site of the nation's first successful daylight peacetime bank robbery on February 13, 1866, when the James-Younger gang robbed the bank of $60,000 in cash, gold and negotiable instruments. During their getaway, they shot and killed an innocent bystander, 17-year old college student, George C. 'Jolly' Wymore, who was standing across the street. (bio by: Donald Greyfield (inactive))


    Name:
    Over the years Jesse's death is subject to speculation..Is he buried with his mother or not, and is that really him... His grave was exhumed and DNA was done. results inconclusive as of this date 2/28/2015

    Jesse married Zerelda Amanda "Zee" Mimms 24 Apr 1874. Zerelda was born 21 Jul 1845, Missouri; died 13 Nov 1900, Jackson County, Missouri; was buried , Mount Olivet Cemetery Kearney, Missouri. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Zerelda Amanda "Zee" Mimms was born 21 Jul 1845, Missouri; died 13 Nov 1900, Jackson County, Missouri; was buried , Mount Olivet Cemetery Kearney, Missouri.
    Children:
    1. 1. Jesse Edwards "Tim" James, Jr was born 31 Aug 1875, Nashville, Tennessee; died 26 Mar 1951, Los Angeles County, California; was buried , Forest Lawn Memorial Park Glendale, California.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Rev. Robert Sallee JamesRev. Robert Sallee James was born 17 Sep 1818, Lick Skillet, Logan County, Kentucky; died 19 Aug 1850, Placerville, El Dorado, California; was buried , Maybe Hangtown Gold Camp (unmarked grave) Placerville, El Dorado County, California.

    Notes:

    Robert James was a Baptist pastor. He died from food poisoning during his quest for gold in California.

    Robert married Zerelda Elizabeth Cole Dec 1841. Zerelda (daughter of James Cole and Sarah 'Sallie' Lindsay) was born 29 Jan 1825, Kentucky; died 10 Feb 1911, On a Friday at 3pm on a Frisco train enroute to Oklahoma ; was buried , Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Kearney, Clay County, Missouri. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Zerelda Elizabeth ColeZerelda Elizabeth Cole was born 29 Jan 1825, Kentucky (daughter of James Cole and Sarah 'Sallie' Lindsay); died 10 Feb 1911, On a Friday at 3pm on a Frisco train enroute to Oklahoma ; was buried , Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Kearney, Clay County, Missouri.
    Children:
    1. Alexander Franklin "Frank" James was born 10 Jan 1843, Clay County, Missouri; died 18 Feb 1915, Clay County, Missouri; was buried , Hill Park Cemetery, Jackson County, Missouri.
    2. 2. Jesse Woodson 'the outlaw' James was born 15 Sep 1847; died 3 Apr 1882, Saint Joseph, Missouri; was buried , Mount Olivet Cemetery, Clay County, Missouri.
    3. Susan Lavenia James was born 25 Nov 1849, Clay County, Missouri; died 3 Mar 1889, Wichita Falls, Texas; was buried , Riverside Cemetery, Witchita Falls, texas.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  James Cole was born 8 Sep 1804, Woodford County, Kentucky (son of Richard James Cole, Jr. and Sarah 'Sallie' Yates/Yeatts); died 27 Feb 1827; was buried , Cole Family Cemetery, Woodford County, Kentucky.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    James Cole was the Grandfather of Frank and Jesse James by courtesy of their mother Zerelda Cole James.

    James married Sarah 'Sallie' Lindsay. Sarah (daughter of Anthony Lindsay, III and Ailsey [Alice] Cole) was born 15 Apr 1803, Scott County, Kentucky; died 12 Oct 1851, Clay County, Missouri; was buried , New Hope Cemetery, Clay County, Missouri. [Group Sheet]


  2. 11.  Sarah 'Sallie' LindsaySarah 'Sallie' Lindsay was born 15 Apr 1803, Scott County, Kentucky (daughter of Anthony Lindsay, III and Ailsey [Alice] Cole); died 12 Oct 1851, Clay County, Missouri; was buried , New Hope Cemetery, Clay County, Missouri.

    Notes:

    Sallie remarried after James Cole died in a horse accident.

    Children:
    1. 5. Zerelda Elizabeth Cole was born 29 Jan 1825, Kentucky; died 10 Feb 1911, On a Friday at 3pm on a Frisco train enroute to Oklahoma ; was buried , Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Kearney, Clay County, Missouri.
    2. Jesse Richard Cole was born 29 Nov 1826, Scott County, Kentucky; died 16 Nov 1895, Kearney, Missouri; was buried , New Hope Cemetery Clay County, Missouri.