- Frank Jackson (outlaw)
Frank Jackson (c.
June 18 ,1856 –1930?) was a 19th century cowboy and later outlaw who became a close associate of bank robberSam Bass while a member of his gang during its final years. He was the sole surviving member of the gang after being ambushed atRound Rock, Texas in July 1878.Biography
Born
Llano County, Texas , Jackson was orphaned at a young age and, by 1874, he was working as atinner for Jim Murphy inDenton, Texas when he became acquainted withSam Bass . Two years later, Jackson killed horse thiefHenry Goodall . The following year, Jackson reluctantly joined Bass and his gang in a number of bank robberies holding up a stage nearFort Worth on December 22 and again on January 28, 1878. Within several weeks, Jackson and the others began robbing trains stopping a Houston & Texas Central express nearAllen, Texas on February 22 and nearHutchins, Texas on March 18. He became a close associate of Bass over the course of the next year and, at one point, he was able to intervene on behalf Jim Murphy when he was suspected of being an informant saving his life when Bass and the others had wanted Murphy killed.Leaving Denton, Texas in July, Jackson and the others were camped outside
Round Rock, Texas several days later preparing to rob the local bank the following morning. One of the gang members, Jim Murphy, informed the authorities of the robbery and the area was by then under heavy surveillance by local police. On July 19, Jackson and the others rode into town to take a look at the bank one last time. Murphy slipped away making an excuse of buying corn for the horses while he continued withSeaborn Barnes and Bass to buy some tobacco to the Koppel general store.While in the store, the three were approached by deputy sheriff
Ellis Grimes andMorris Moore . When Grimes put his hand on Barnes and asked if he were armed, the outlaws panicked turning around and gunning both men down. Forced to fight their way through Texas Rangers and local residents, they managed to get to their horses but not before Seaborn Barnes was killed by Texas RangerDick Ware and Bass being shot several times by Texas RangerGeorge Harrell . Bass managed to ride only a hundred yards before falling off and Jackson went back to rescue him. Although escaping their pursuers as night approached, Bass was unable to ride and Jackson bandaged Bass's wounds and left him under a tree outside of town. Bass was picked up by a posse the next morning but refused to reveal any information about Jackson and died the next day.According to Murphy in a letter to Texas Ranger
John B. Jones , he was contacted by Jackson soon after the incident at Round Rock. He asked, if he were to surrender himself, for a reprieve in exchange for hunting down former gang member and wanted outlaw Henry Underwood. However, Murphy apparently lost contact with Jackson and the deal never went any further. Although Jackson was reportedly seen inDenton County for a brief time, claims of his whereabouts placed him in various places including Texas,New Mexico ,California and, according to SheriffCharlie Siringo , as far away asMontana .An extensive search for Jackson was made and, according to a Canadian newspaper in
Winnipeg, Manitoba , two Texas officers were searching the area "for the renouned bandits, Jackson and Underwood" during the summer of 1879. Other reports placed him in other parts of Canada andBrazil .Subsequently, his whereabouts and activities after this time are unrecorded and, as writer
Jack Davis wrote, Jackson seemed to "vanish from the face of the Earth". As late as the 1960s, New York-based "Wild West" magazines claimed that the Texas Rangers "continue to maintain an open file on the Sam Bass gang - Jackson has never been caught". During the 1980s, it was also incorrectly claimed by these same magazines that Jackson's file was still open in theTexas Department of Public Safety however this file was officially closed by Texas Ranger CaptainFrank Hamer .Around 1920, the Texas Rangers began receiving tentitive contacts including writer
Eugene Manlove Rhodes on behalf of "an old bandit" who "wanted to get square with the law" during his last years. Interviewed by Hamer, the man was reportedly a highly successful rancher and businessman living inNew Mexico . By this time, he was considered a folk hero by Texans for his rescue of Sam Bass and, while urged by Texas law enforcement officials to clear his name, he refused to return to Texas. As late as 1927 however, attempts had been made to convince authorities inWilliamson County to drop the criminal charges against him for the murders of the two deputy sheriffs in Round Rock.Further reading
*Walters, Lorenzo D. "Tombstone's Yesterday". Glorieta, New Mexico: Rio Grande Press, 1968.
References
*Eckhardt, C.F. "Tales of Badmen, Bad Women, and Bad Places: Four Centuries of Texas Outlawry". Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-89672-420-4
*Neal, Bill. "Encyclopedia of Western Gunfighters". Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1991. ISBN 0-8061-2335-4
*Thrapp, Dan L. "Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography: In Three Volumes, Volume III (P-Z)". Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1988. ISBN 0-8032-9418-2
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