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Lock Down: Outlaws, Lawmen & Frontier Justice in Jackson County, Missouri Paul Kirkman
Lock Down: Outlaws, Lawmen & Frontier Justice in Jackson County, Missouri
Paul Kirkman
This commemorative souvenir documents the origin and evolution of the oldest structure on the historic Independence Courthouse Square-the 1859 Jackson County Jail and Marshal's Home (and its 19th Century predecessors). "Captured" here is an in-depth study offering "skeleton keys" to "unlocking" history of the early lock downs, of those who defied frontier justice, and the systems and strongmen (and their overlooked wives) who tried to keep law and order in Jackson County, Missouri. A roster of ALL Jackson County Sheriffs AND Jackson County Marshals, and separate "rap sheet" of ALL legal hangings in Jackson County "caps" this first-ever comprehensive study spanning from 1826--when Jackson County was formed--to 1933 when the 1859 Jackson County Jail was decommissioned. David W. Jackson and Paul Kirkman have also explored how the site was adaptively re-used during the Great Depression of the 1930s; through World War II in the 1940s; and, how it was saved by the Jackson County Historical Society in 1958, and continues as a unique, cultural history museum, located at 217 North Main Street, Independence, Missouri.
| Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
| Released | March 12, 2012 |
| ISBN13 | 9780974136561 |
| Publishers | Jackson County Historical Society |
| Pages | 194 |
| Dimensions | 200 × 250 × 10 mm · 399 g |
| Language | English |
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