Jackson County (Mo.)
Historical Society
Historical
Perspective
by David W.
Jackson
Up and
down in Old West
What connection does the “Central,
Overland, California & Pikes Peak Express” have to do with area history?
Hint: It was more commonly known as, “The Pony Express.”
While the Pony Express did not run
through Jackson County, one of its founders lived in our area. The Alexander
Majors palatial home—according to 1850s standards—is preserved at 82nd
and State Line, a small corner that once comprised extensive acreage.
Majors amassed and lost several
fortunes in his lifetime. Among other ventures, he also had a large tract of
property north of Lone Jack.
The Russell, Majors & Waddell Pony Express venture was his most
notable, but short-lived (18-month) achievement. “Didn’t the Indians bother you a good deal in those early days of
freighting?” Majors was once asked. “They annoyed us some,” he replied, but the
outfit was never attacked when I happened to be along. I was always extremely
cautious, never took any chances of a surprise, and was careful to treat the
Indians well on all occasions, which may account for their attitude toward
me. I regret to say that they were to so considerate when I was absent, for
many a good teamster lies buried on the Santa Fe Trail and on the plains
between the Missouri and Old Fort Laramie whom the savages shot from ambush.”
Majors, a religious man, apparently
had a penchant for adventure with nomadic inclinations. Born in Kentucky in
1814, his father moved the family to Missouri four years later. They crossed
the Mississippi River at St. Louis on a flatboat propelled by three
Frenchmen. The ferryboat was only large enough to carry one wagon at a time,
without the team. Majors married Katherine Stalcup
in Jackson County on November 6, 1834.
The 45-year-old “overland
commissioner” and family were enumerated in the 1860 Census in Nebraska City,
Ne. (their real estate was valued at $22,500, and personal property a
staggering$791,150). I wonder if that
home survives…and how it compares to the one they left behind in Jackson
County during the Border- and Civil War period. Majors’ business ventures
went bust in the 1860s; his marriage crumbled; and, he left everything and
everyone behind.
Mr. and Mrs. Majors were plagued in
their later years with poverty. His wife and one daughter were even admitted
to Jackson County’s Poor Farm under assumed names to avoid ridicule from
friends and neighbors. They claimed at the time that Alexander had abandoned
them, leaving them destitute.
By 1870, Majors lived in a boarding
house in Corinne, Ut., dealing in lumber. Within
ten years in 1880, he was still alone, but operating as a “mining broker” in
Helena, Montana.
Just over a decade later, around
1892, William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody found his former boss in Denver, Co.
(You can find a portrait of Majors in the Denver State Capitol Rotunda.)
Majors--who had given Cody his first job as a boy, had taught him to read and
write, and employed him as a freighter--was without money and had hardly
enough to eat. He was trying to write the story of his life on the frontier,
but his manuscript was all over the floor of his cabin when Cody visited.
They struck a bargain. Majors was to finish his
book. In return, Cody paid all his expenses until it was ready; he paid the
cabin rent in advance and guaranteed it indefinitely; and, he instructed a
grocer to give Majors unlimited credit.
When Cody returned after a year in
Europe with his Wild West Show, Majors had written enough for several books.
In the end, it was edited by
Colonel Prentiss Ingraham, trimmed, and
published by Rand, McNally
& Company in Chicago, Il. Although, “Seventy Years on the
Frontier,” never made Majors a fortune, it continues to be re-printed over
and again after more than 100 years.
Cody sent Majors to take charge of
his Scout’s Rest Ranch in North Platte, Nebraska. That didn’t last too long,
because in January 1900, Majors died at age 86 in Chicago. He was laid to
rest in Union Cemetery with little ceremony at the funeral.
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