For anyone who grew up in the Ozarks, the James brothers are not just historical figures, they are local legends.
Conspiracies Abound
Despite being shot dead by “the coward Robert Ford” in St. Joseph, Missouri, on April 3, 1882, conspiracy theories and rumors of Jesse James’ survival into old age continue into the 21st century. Although a 1995 exhumation and DNA test confirmed that Jesse James was indeed the man resting in his grave, a woman named Betty Dorsett Duke was still hawking books claiming to refute the DNA evidence up until her death in 2015. A site claiming to be the official website of the Frank and Jesse James family had some rather unkind things to say about Duke’s claim that she was Jesse James’s great granddaughter. Several theorists suggest the man killed by Robert Ford was actually an acquaintance of Jesse James named Charlie Bigelow. So while a bullet in the head may have killed Jesse James in 1882, rumors and conspiracies surrounding the notorious outlaw are a lot harder to kill.
J. Frank Dalton
J. Frank Dalton, the man Sheriff Baker claimed to be Jesse James, convinced many people he was the real thing, including the owner of Meramac Caverns in Stanton, Missouri, who hosted a reunion for him and surviving members of the James Gang on September 5,1949, the 102nd birthday of Jesse James. That owner, Mr. Rudy Turilli, later made public declarations that J. Frank Dalton was the real Jesse James, and offered a $10,000 reward to anyone who could prove him wrong. Jesse’s daughter-in-law, Stella James, and two of his granddaughters provided witness affidavits which a trial court as well as the St. Louis Court of Appeals declared were sufficient evidence that Jesse James did indeed die in 1882. Turilli died in 1972 without paying the reward, and the conspiracy theories continued despite the court rulings.
Skeptics Persist
With a settled court case and two exhumations yielding unsatisfactory results, it seems unlikely that definitive answers to questions surrounding the death of Jesse James will ever be universally accepted.