Zerelda Mimms
- Birth Date:
- 21.07.1845
- Death date:
- 13.11.1900
- Person's maiden name:
- Zerelda Amanda Mimms James
- Nationality:
- american
- Cemetery:
- Mount Olivet Cemetery, Kearney, Missouri
Zerelda Amanda Mimms James (July 21, 1845 – November 13, 1900) was the first cousin and wife of Jesse James.
Personal life
Zerelda Amanda Mimms was the daughter of Mary James and Pastor John Wilson Mimms. Her mother was a paternal aunt of Jesse James', the sister of his father, Robert S. James.
She and Jesse James married on April 24, 1874, while the James-Younger Gang was still in full force. Of the Jameses and Youngers, Jesse was the first to marry. Zerelda and Jesse had two surviving children:
- Jesse Edward "Tim" James (born August 31, 1875 and died March 26, 1951)
- Twins Gould and Montgomery James (born February 28, 1878 and died in infancy)
- Mary Susan James (born June 17, 1879 and died October 11, 1935)
Death
Zerelda Mimms James died November 13, 1900 in Kansas City, Missouri. She was buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Kearney, Missouri. Eighteen months after her death, her husband's body was moved from the James Family Farm to rest next to hers.
Portrayal in films
- 2007: In The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford by Mary-Louise Parker
- 2001: In American Outlaws by Ali Larter
- 1995: In Frank and Jesse by Maria Pitillo
- 1980: In The Long Riders by Savannah Smith Boucher
- 1949: In I Shot Jesse James by Barbara Woodell
- 1957: In The True Story of Jesse James by Hope Lange
- 1953: In The Great Jesse James Raid by Barbara Woodell
- 1939: In Jesse James by Nancy Kelly
- 1927: In Jesse James by Nora Lane
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Zerelda "Zee" Mimms was born on July 21, 1845 in Logan, Kentucky, to Pastor John W. Mimms and Mary James Mimms. Zerelda was one of twelve children. Her mother was the sister of Robert James, Jesse James' father, making them first cousins. Zee, as she was more familiarly called, was actually named for Jesse's mother. This; however, did not stop the pair from falling in love while Jesse was living temporarily with his aunt his aunt and uncle Missouri in 1865.
The couple was engaged for nine years while the James-Younger Gang was in full swing. Finally, they married at her sister's home in Kearney, Missouri on April 24, 1874. While honeymooning with his bride Zee on the Gulf of Mexico at Galveston, Texas, a reporter from the St. Louis Dispatch, did what the Pinkertons had failed to do, track down Jesse.
A little more than a year later, Zee bore their first child, Jesse Edward "Tim" James on August 31, 1875. On February 28, 1878, the couple had twins, Gould and Montgomery; however, both were either still born or died the same day. The next year, Zee had a daughter that the couple named Mary Susan James on June 17, 1879.
By this time, the James-Younger Gang had ceased to exist with the capture of the Younger brothers during the Northfield, Minnesota raid in 1876. However, Jesse had started a "new" James Gang that continued to rob trains, the last of which occurred on September 7, 1881 near Glendale, Missouri. Shortly after this hold-up, Jesse moved his family to St. Joseph, Missouri where they settled in under Jesse’s assumed name of Tom Howard. With a $10,000 reward over his head, Zee tried to get Jesse to take on a more normal life. And Jesse agreed, right after one last great bank robbery in Platte County, Missouri. It was during the planning of this robbery in a meeting with Charles and Robert "Bob" Ford at Jesse's home, that Jesse would be killed by Bob on April 3, 1882.
Sadly, Zee and her children were in the kitchen when the shooting occurred. At the deafening sound of the gun blast, young Jesse, Jr. ran into the living room to find his father on the floor with blood pouring from his head. Zee then began to scream as little Mary started crying. Though Zee tried desperately to stop the blood, it was too late, her husband was already dead.
Bob Ford was already out the door and Charles spent a few moments trying to tell her how the gun had gone off accidentally. Then, he too, made a quick exit, running after his brother.
In no time, the word spread of the shooting and crowds began to gather around the home talking incessantly about the killing of the notorious outlaw, Jesse James. Young Jesse, Jr., who was only six at the time, didn't even know who "Jesse James" was, believing his father's name was "John Davis Howard” and his own name to be "Tim Howard."
After his death, Jesse was packed on ice and taken by train to Kearney, Missouri where he was displayed and viewed by hundreds of friends, admirers, and curiosity seekers. Later he was buried on the family farm in a plot near the house so that Jesse's mother, Zerelda, could keep an eye out for trespassers or souvenir hunters.
When Jesse was killed, most people assumed that he had left a wealthy widow, but that was not the case at all. In fact, the only valuables that they owned were a few weapons, a bit of stolen jewelry, and assorted memorabilia. Soon, most everything in the household was put up for auction in order to pay the creditors. Zee and her children were then forced to move in with her brother in Kansas City.
The children were to suffer even more, as Zee suffered from terrible depression after Jesse's death.
Donning entirely black clothing, she never changed out of it, never remarried, and became a recluse. Young Jesse James, Jr. was forced to go to work at the age of eleven to help support his mother and little sister. Though the family suffered emotionally and financially for the rest of Zee's life, she refused all offers to publish books or other information regarding Jesse's life.
She died on November 13, 1900 in Kansas City, Missouri and was buried in the Mount Olivet Cemetery in Kearney, Missouri. About 18 months later, her husband would be moved from his resting place on the James Family Farm, and placed next to to her, where their bodies remain today.
© Kathy Weiser/Legends of America
Source: wikipedia.org
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Relation name | Relation type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jesse E. James | Son | ||
2 | Jesse James | Husband | ||
3 | Robert S. James | Father in-law | ||
4 | Zerelda James | Mother in-law | ||
5 | Frank James | Brother in-law | ||
6 | Archie Samuel | Brother in-law |
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