Even if you're not familiar with the tales and stories about one of the most famous bandits in Wild West lore, everybody in Southwest Oklahoma knows the name Jesse James. There's even a museum of sorts in Cement dedicated to the Old West Robbin Hood. With ties and wild stories stretching from Anadarko to Marlow, the Wichita Mountains over to Altus, I think the stories are learned by most people at a pretty young age.

If you're not familiar, the story goes... After the Confederate States of America decisively lost the Civil War, there were so many people either in the South or Southern Sympathizers thinking they were dealt a shifty hand, many of them kept fighting for their beliefs by targeting their political rivals, targeting businesses owned and interested in by those who identified as Unionists and Republicans. At least, that's what Wikipedia says about the early days of the infamous Jesse James.

The tales of his hooliganism are the things that make the Wild West some people look upon with a romancing type allure. Robbing banks across the Midwest, wild shoot-outs, buried treasure and secret hideouts across the mostly unorganized Oklahoma Territory. It all supposedly came to an end when he was shot in his home by the newest recruits to his legendary gang in 1882... or did he? History seems to stick to this story, but there have been shenanigans.

In 1948, a Lawton man named J. Frank Dalton stepped forward and suggested that he was the real, now over-100 year old Jesse James. Given his surprisingly accurate facial features, steely blue eyes, and a story that actually fit the narrative of the legend, he stated that he had set up an imposter to be killed in his place as a way of resettling his life since he had grown tired of always looking over his shoulder. The story went viral, and it's no wonder since ever the local paper took the story and drove it as hard as they could to sell papers. Some 30,000 people even showed up in town just to get a look at what they believed was the real deal Jesse James. It was a short little footnote in the history of Lawton, but one I hadn't known before now, and it's honestly a neat little topic to casually toss out around the dinner table.

Since I already know you're wondering and about to search the history, it was conclusively proven that Lawton's J. Frank Dalton was not Jesse James. It took DNA to prove it, but it was laid to rest as merely an old man looking for some attention long after the real James had been laid to rest... and now you know too.

How Many in America: From Guns to Ghost Towns

Can you take a guess as to how many public schools are in the U.S.? Do you have any clue as to how many billionaires might be residing there? Read on to find out—and learn a thing or two about each of these selection’s cultural significance and legacy along the way.

What Are the Signature Drinks From Every State?

 

25 True Crime Locations: What Do They Look Like Today?

Below, find out where 25 of the most infamous crimes in history took place — and what the locations are used for today. (If they've been left standing.)

LOOK: Here are the pets banned in each state

Because the regulation of exotic animals is left to states, some organizations, including The Humane Society of the United States, advocate for federal, standardized legislation that would ban owning large cats, bears, primates, and large poisonous snakes as pets.

Read on to see which pets are banned in your home state, as well as across the nation.

 

More From KZCD-FM