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Robert Newton Ford

Robert Ford in an undated photograph with the weapon he used to kill Jesse James.
Born January 31, 1862(1862-01-31)
Ray County, Missouri, USA
Died June 8, 1892 (aged 30)
Creede, Colorado, USA

Robert Newton Ford (January 31, 1862 – June 8, 1892) was an American outlaw who gained fame by killing the criminal Jesse James in 1882.

Contents

Early years

Robert Ford was born in Ray County, Missouri, to James Thomas Ford and his wife Mary Bruin. As a young man, he became an admirer of Jesse James for his war record and his daring career in crime. In 1880 he finally managed to meet James. Ford's brother Charles is believed to have taken part in the James gang's Blue Cut train robbery in Jackson County near Glendale, Missouri (now part of Independence, MO), on September 7, 1881.[citation needed]

Joining the James Gang

In November 1881, James moved his family to St. Joseph. He intended to give up crime, but first wanted to stage one last robbery at Blue Cut, Missouri. The James gang had been greatly reduced in number by that time. Some had fled the gang in fear of prosecution, and many of the original members were either dead or in prison. After the train robbery, Frank James decided to retire from crime by settling east in Baltimore.[citation needed]

By the spring of 1882, Robert and Charles Ford were the only active members of the gang other than Jesse, and resided in St. Joseph with the James family, where Jesse went by the alias of Thomas Howard. The Ford brothers passed themselves off as Bob and Charles Johnson, Howard's cousins.[citation needed]

Hoping to keep the gang alive, James invited the Fords to take part in the robbery of the Platte City Bank, but unfortunately for him, the brothers had already decided not to take part in the robbery in order to collect the $10,000 bounty placed on James by Missouri Governor Thomas T. Crittenden. Robert Ford had been brought into a meeting with Crittenden for being in the presence of Jesse James' cousin Wood Hite the day Hite was murdered. As a result, Crittenden promised Ford a full pardon if he would also kill Jesse James, who was by then the most wanted criminal in America. The governor gave the Fords ten days for James' assassination.[citation needed]

The Assassination

On April 3, 1882, after eating breakfast, the Fords and James went into the living room in preparation for the trip to Platte City. James had just learned of gang member Dick Liddil's confession for participating in Wood Hite's murder while reading the daily newspaper, and grew increasingly suspicious of the Fords for never reporting this matter to him. According to Robert Ford, it became clear to him that James had realized they were there to betray him. However, instead of scolding the Fords, James walked across the living room to lay his revolvers on a sofa. He then turned around and noticed a dusty picture above the mantle, and stood on a chair in order to clean it. His motive for doing so is still not entirely clear, since the picture was already reachable standing. Nevertheless, Robert Ford took advantage of this opportunity, drew his weapon, and shot the unarmed Jesse James in the back of the head. Zee ran into the room and screamed, "You've killed him." Robert Ford's immediate response was, "I swear to God I didn't." After the assassination, the Fords wired the governor to claim their reward. They turned themselves in to the law, but were dismayed to find that they were charged with first degree murder. The Ford brothers were tried and convicted, and sentenced to death by hanging, but within two hours were granted a full pardon by the Governor of Missouri. The Fords then received their portions of the reward money.[citation needed]

Robert Ford's letter to Governor Thomas Crittenden

Ford wrote a letter to Governor Thomas Crittenden, telling his version of how he killed Jesse James (April, 1882):[citation needed]

"On the morning of April 3, Jess and I went downtown, as usual, before breakfast, for the papers. We got to the house about eight o'clock and sat down in the front room. Jess was sitting with his back to me, reading the St. Louis Republican. I picked up the Times, and the first thing I saw in big headlines was the story about Dick Liddil's surrender. Just then Mrs. James came in and said breakfast was ready. Beside me was a chair with a shawl on it, and as quick as a flash I lifted it and shoved the paper under. Jess couldn't have seen me, but he got up, walked over to the chair, picked up the shawl and threw it on the bed, and taking the paper, went out to the kitchen. I felt that the jig was up, but I followed and sat down at the table opposite Jess.
Mrs. James poured out the coffee and then sat down at one end of the table. Jesse spread the paper on the table in front of him and began to look over the headlines. All at once Jess said: "Hello, here. The surrender of Dick Liddil." And he looked across at me with a glare in his eyes.
"Young man, I thought you told me you didn't know that Dick Liddil had surrendered," he said.
I told him I didn't know it.
"'Well," he said, "it's very strange. He surrendered three weeks ago and you was right there in the neighborhood. It looks fishy."
He continued to glare at me, and I got up and went into the front room. In a minute I heard Jess push his chair back and walk to the door. He came in smiling, and said pleasantly: "Well, Bob, it's all right, anyway."
Instantly his real purpose flashed upon my mind. I knew I had not fooled him. He was too sharp for that. He knew at that moment as well as I did that I was there to betray him. But he was not going to kill me in the presence of his wife and children. He walked over to the bed, and deliberately unbuckled his belt, with four revolvers in it, and threw it on the bed. It was the first time in my life I had seen him without that belt on, and I knew that he threw it off to further quiet any suspicions I might have.
He seemed to want to busy himself with something to make an impression on my mind that he had forgotten the incident at the breakfast table, and said: "That picture is awful dusty." There wasn't a speck of dust that I could see on the picture, but he stood a chair beneath it and then got upon it and began to dust the picture on the wall.
As he stood there, unarmed, with his back to me, it came to me suddenly, 'Now or never is your chance. If you don't get him now he'll get you tonight.' Without further thought or a moment's delay I pulled my revolver and leveled it as I sat. He heard the hammer click as I cocked it with my thumb and started to turn as I pulled the trigger. The ball struck him just behind the ear and he fell like a log, dead."

Creede, Colorado

Bob Ford earned his living by posing for photographs as "the man who killed Jesse James" in dime museums. He also appeared on stage, reenacting the murder, but his performance was not well received. Bob's brother Charlie, terminally ill with tuberculosis and addicted to morphine, committed suicide on May 4, 1884. Soon afterward, Bob Ford and Dick Liddil relocated to Las Vegas, New Mexico where they opened a saloon. By early 1885, Bob Ford had become a Las Vegas city policeman. Unpopular with his constituents, Bob was eventually goaded into a shooting contest with Jose Chavez y Chavez, a comrade-in-arms of Billy the Kid during the Lincoln County War. Ford shot and missed at a coin on a signpost while Chavez hit his target. Bob claimed the match had been unfair, and Chavez promptly challenged him to a duel. Ford declined and immediately left town.

Within a few years, Robert Ford had settled in Colorado, where he opened a saloon-gambling house in Walsenberg. When silver was found in Creede, Ford closed his saloon and opened one there.[1]

On the eve of Easter 1892, Ford and gunman Joe Palmer, a member of the Soapy Smith gang, were drinking in the local saloons and proceeded to shoot out windows and street lamps along Creede's Main Street. With the help of friends and business partners of Smith, they were soon allowed to return. Ford purchased a lot and on May 29, 1892, opened Ford's Exchange, said to have been a dance hall.[2] Six days later, the entire business district, including Ford's Exchange, burned to the ground in a major fire. Ford opened a tent saloon until he could rebuild.

Ford's death

Three days after the fire, on June 8, 1892, Edward O'Kelley entered Ford's tent saloon with a sawed-off shotgun. According to witnesses, Ford's back was turned. O'Kelley said, "Hello, Bob." As Ford turned to see who it was, O'Kelley fired both barrels, killing Ford instantly. O'Kelley became "the man who killed the man who killed Jesse James." There is speculation that Soapy Smith may have encouraged the shooting.[citation needed]

Ford was buried in Creede, but later was exhumed and reburied in Richmond, Ray County, Missouri, at Sunny Slope cemetery.[citation needed] Ford's grave marker says "The man that shot Jesse James."

Dorothy Evans

Dorothy Evans was a prostitute during her early adulthood, until she met Robert Ford during his final months in Creede in early 1892.[citation needed] She possessed many talents, including singing and playing the piano, so Ford hired her, and she worked as a burlesque performer and waitress for his saloon.[citation needed] They shared an apartment together, and she was even engaged to Ford at one point.[citation needed] After his untimely death, she would later be married to a James Feeney of Durango, Colorado in 1900.[citation needed] They would adopt two daughters, and according to rumors, she would mistreat them.[citation needed] Unsatisfied with her marriage, Dorothy Evans got into her green wedding dress on the Sunday morning of June 15, 1902, and told her daughters that she was going to take a nap. She then pressed a cloth against her nose—drenched in chloroform—and inhaled until she expired.[citation needed]

Cultural references

Actor Casey Affleck, left, in his Oscar-nominated role as Robert Ford and Brad Pitt, right, as Jesse James in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.

See also

External links

Further Reading

  • Ries, Judith. Ed O'Kelley: The Man Who Murdered Jesse James' Murderer. St. Louis, Mo.: Patches Publication. 1994
  • Yeatman, Ted. Frank and Jesse James Nashville: Cumberland House, 2001.

Notes

  1. ^ Rocky Mountain News, 3/7/1892, p.2.
  2. ^ Ries, Judith. Ed O'Kelley: The Man Who Murdered Jesse James' Murderer. St. Louis, Mo.: Patches Publication. 1994 ISBN 0-934426-61-9. p.104

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