• POSTCARD HANGING BLACK JACK OUTLAW. Old postcard The hanging of Black Jack Outlaw. $475: CIVIL WAR ERA EAGLE BELL. Rare civil war eagle bell measures 4 inches tall. $295: ANTIQUE FIRE DEPARTMENT HAT. Circa 1920’s fire department hat. $225: ANTIQUE SHIP BUCKLE. 1800’S two piece buckle set depicting ship sailing the ocean.
  • The hanging of western outlaw Black Jack Ketchum on April 25, 1901, one of the most gruesome executions on record. (image from the Jay Robert Nash Collection) The rejection of his love so unhinged Ketchum that he immediately launched into a vindictive criminal career. He went out of his way to punish anyone who even mildly disagreed with him.

Jul 14, 2013  Black Jack was an outlaw of the Old West that was seized for train robbery and sentenced to death by hanging. Find out why people were shocked at the hanging when the trap door was opened.

Jack Slade

The Hanging Of Black Jack The Outlaw Trailer

Joseph Alfred 'Jack' Slade,[1] (January 22, 1831 – March 10, 1864), was a stagecoach and Pony Express superintendent, instrumental in the opening of the American West and the archetype of the Western gunslinger.

Born in Carlyle, Illinois, he was the son of Illinois politician Charles Slade and Mary Dark (Kain) Slade.[2] During the Mexican War he served in the U.S. Army that occupied Santa Fe, 1847-48.[3] After his father's death, Slade's mother married Civil War general Elias Dennis.

He married Maria Virginia (maiden name unknown) around 1857.[4] In the 1850s he was a freighting teamster and wagonmaster along the Overland Trail, and then became a stagecoach driver in Texas, c. 1857-58. He subsequently became a stagecoach division superintendent along the Central Overland route for Hockaday & Co. (1858–59)[5] and its successors Jones, Russell & Co. (1859)[6] and Central Overland, California & Pike's Peak Express Co. (1859–62).[7] With the latter concern, he also helped launch and operate the Pony Express in 1860-61.[8] All were critical to the communication between the East and California. As superintendent, he enforced order and assured reliable cross-continental mail service, maintaining contact between Washington, D.C., and California on the eve of Civil War.

While division superintendent, he shot and killed Andrew Ferrin, one of his subordinates who was hindering the progress of a freight train, in May 1859. At the time, shooting deaths of this kind in the West were rare and Jack Slade's reputation as a 'gunfighter' spread rapidly across the country.[9]

In March 1860, Slade was ambushed and left for dead by Jules Beni, the corrupt station keeper at Julesburg, Colorado, whom Slade had removed.[10] Slade remarkably survived, and in August 1861 Beni was killed by Slade's men after ignoring Slade's warning to stay out of his territory.[11]

Slade's exploits spawned numerous legends, many of them false. His image (especially via Mark Twain in Roughing It) as the vicious killer of up to 26 victims was greatly exaggerated: Only one killing by Slade (that of Andrew Ferrin, above ) is undisputed. But his ferocious reputation, combined with a drinking problem, caused his downfall: He was fired by the Central Overland for drunkenness in November 1862.[12] During a drunken spree in Virginia City, Montana, he was lynched by local vigilantes on March 10, 1864, for disturbing the peace.[13] He was buried in Salt Lake City, Utah, on July 20, 1864.[14]

In 1953, Mark Stevens starred in the movie Jack Slade. Dorothy Malone co-starred as Virginia Maria Dale and Barton MacLane was Jules Beni. Tag line for the movie was 'Everyone knew the terror of his blazing iron...only she knew the fire in his heart!'

Gregg Palmer played Slade in a 1955 episode of the syndicatedtelevision seriesStories of the Century, starring and narrated by Jim Davis. Paul Newlan portrayed Jules Beni and Elaine Riley played Virginia Slade in this episode.[15]

John Dehner played an evil version of Slade, who is shot and finally shows some decency before dying, in the Laramie episode 'Company Man', aired in February, 1960. The same episode featured Dabbs Greer as Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), who, when asked about his profession, says that he is a writer, working on a new book, which he is going to title 'Roughing It'.

In 1963, Don Collier played Jack Slade in the season 12 episode of the television series 'Death Valley Days' titled 'The Man Who Died Twice'.

Outlaw

John Dennis Johnston played Slade in the 1999 made-for-cable fantasy western movie Purgatory.

See also[edit]

  • Julesburg, Colorado named after Jules Beni, whom Slade's men killed in 1861 after Beni ambushed and shot Slade multiple times in 1860.

Sources[edit]

  • Dan Rottenberg, 2008, Death of a Gunfighter: The Quest for Jack Slade, the West's Most Elusive Legend, Westholme Publishing, Yardley, PA. ISBN978-1-59416-070-7 / (ISBN1-59416-070-8).
  • L.L. Callaway, Two True Tales of the Wild West
  • Dan Rottenberg, 'The Forgotten Gunfighter', Civilization magazine, Mar.-Apr. 1996.
  • Roy O'Dell and Kenneth Jessen, An Ear in His Pocket.

Notes[edit]

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  1. ^Also known as 'Alf', 'Joe', 'Jim', 'Cap'
  2. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 26.
  3. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 36-48.
  4. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 80-84.
  5. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 112
  6. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 7
  7. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 160.
  8. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 173-178
  9. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 145-150.
  10. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 180-185,
  11. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 225-232.
  12. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 270-275.
  13. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 327-350.
  14. ^Rottenberg, Death of a Gunfighter, p. 359.
  15. ^'Stories of the Century: 'Jack Slade', March 4, 1955'. Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved September 16, 2012.

The Hanging Of Black Jack The Outlaw Song

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