Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Repost: September 7, 1876, the defeat of Jesse James

With a couple of edits in regards to the dates of the festival, below you will find a repost from September 7, 2008.

On my way home from the Republican National Convention in St. Paul two year ago, I made a diversion to Northfield, Minnesota. In 2008 it's best known at the home of St. Olaf and Carleton colleges, but on this day in 1876, it was where the James-Younger gang, which of course included notorious outlaw Jesse James, attempted to rob the First National Bank of Northfield.

The gang's base was in Missouri, but it's believed they chose Northfield not only to escape scrutiny in their home state, but also to rob a "Yankee bank." Union general Adelbert Ames owned stock in the First National Bank.

A lot went wrong that day for the criminals. A stubborn bank employee, Joseph Lee Heywood, told the robbers, falsely, that the safe had a time-delay lock. The stalling maneuver kept the gang in town longer than they had anticipated, and eventually civilians ascertained what was going on. "Get your guns, boys! They're robbing the bank!" someone yelled. The impromptu posse drove the robbers out of town; of the eight gang members, only Jesse and his brother Frank escaped without getting killed or wounded. Two gang members were shot in the street in front of the bank, and two Northfield men were shot dead, Heywood and Nicolaus Gustavson.

The surviving members of the James-Younger gang, denied access to the bank's safe, left Northfield with only a pittance for the efforts.

A carnival, part of Northfield's Defeat of Jesse James Days, was taking place downtown when I visited two years ago.

And if you're anywhere near Northfield from Wednesday through Sunday, then "Get your keys, boys and girls" and head over there.

While in the Northfield Historical Society Museum, which is housed in the old bank building, I overheard an elderly man talking about the protests--scroll down two posts--in St. Paul. I explained who I was, gave him my card, and told him that I covered the previous night's civil disturbance. He identified himself as the retired president of Northfield's Community Resource Bank, and he explained to me that he revived the festival after others in town ended it--because they believed that Northfield was honoring a criminal. He changed the event's name to The Defeat of Jesse James, and turned the focus away from James and onto the heroes who fought back. That's the old bank on the left, a slightly newer one is on the right.

In his own small way, that man is a hero too.

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