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Jackson Lee DAVIS
Biography
Davis got his nickname when he came out west to
Silver City, Idaho on the rumor of a diamond strike. The rumor led
to nothing but after talking so much about it he got the nickname
Diamondfield Jack.
After the failed prospecting attempt Jack was
hired by Spark-Harrell cattle company on the Idaho-Nevada border.
Davis' job was to keep sheepherders off the cattle's land and
after a confrontation that led to wounding of a sheepherder named
Bill Tolman; Davis was on the run.
He began working for the cattle company again
the next year and almost immediately as he came back to work two
sheepherders were killed in the area were he was working. Davis
became the prime suspect for the killings. A magazine was found in
the sheepwagon with a diamond drawn in blood by one of the victims.
The sheepmen were killed with .44 caliber bullets shot out of a
.45 caliber gun. Diamond field jack was known to have bought ..44
caliber cartridges when the correct ones were not available.
As he was heading towards Mexico Jack was
picked up be authorities in Arizona Territory. He was transported
back up to Idaho and sentenced to hang on June 4, 1897. The day
before his execution date he was reprieved due to the confessions
of two other men to the murders. In February 1899 Davis was
transferred to the Idaho State Penitentiary where he stayed until
December of that year. Davis was then transferred back to a cell
in the Cassia County jail.
After Davis had exhausted his appeals another
execution date was scheduled for July 3, 1901. By the time public
opinion had shifted in Jack's favor mostly due to the confessions
of James Bower and Jeff Gray and also to the easing of tension
between sheep and cattle herders. The Board of Pardons extended
the execution date to the July 17, much to the outrage of state
prosecutor and future Idaho Senator William Borah. Three hours
before Davis' scheduled execution, word arrived to the Cassia
County sheriff that his sentence had been changed to life
imprisonment. Davis was moved back to the Idaho State Penitentiary
in Boise, Idaho until he was finally pardoned on December 17, 1902
by Idaho Gov. Frank W. Hunt.
Upon his release Jack moved down to Nevada
where he finally stuck it rich and established several mining
camps in Nevada. In 1949 Diamondfield Jack was killed by a taxi
cab as he was walking in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Jackson Lee Davis AKA Diamondfield Jack, Inmate #820
Little is known about Diamondfield Jack’s
early life. He was born about 1879 somewhere in the East. By
1892, he was working in the Black Jack mine in the Silver City
district of Owyhee County. He left the Black Jack to follow
rumors of a diamond strike in the nearby hills. He failed to
find any diamonds, but talked so much of the diamond field that
he earned the nickname “Diamondfield Jack.”
In 1895, Diamondfield Jack began working for
the Sparks-Harrell cattle company of southern Idaho and northern
Nevada. He was paid $50 a month to keep sheepherders off of what
was considered cattle territory. The company instructed him to
“...keep the sheep back. Don’t kill but shoot to wound if
necessary. Use what measures you think best. If you have to kill,
the company will stand behind you – regardless what happens.”
After “shooting up” several sheep camps, and
wounding a sheepman named Bill Tolman, Diamondfield Jack headed
south into Nevada to stay out of sight. He realized he might
hang if Tolman died. While in Nevada, he bragged about his
activities and said he was paid $150 a month in Idaho to kill
sheepherders.
He came out of hiding in 1896 and continued
working for Sparks-Harrell. In February of that year, two
sheepherders, John Wilson and Daniel Cummings, were shot and
killed at a sheep camp in the Shoshone basin area of Twin Falls
county. Because he had been in the area at the time of the
killings, and because he often bragged about shooti ng up
sheepherders, Diamondfield Jack was the prime suspect in the
murder case.
He headed south again, and was eventually
captured in the Arizona territory, where he was serving time in
the Arizona Territorial Prison for a shooting incident. He was
tried in the courthouse in Albion, Idaho, found guilty, and
sentenced to hang on June 4, 1897.
Diamondfield Jack was confined to the Cassia
County jail in Albion, Idaho, where the day of his scheduled
execution date drew closer. He made hair ropes and other
trinkets for children who visited the jail. The week before his
execution date, he watched the gallows being built and tested,
declaring them “capable of doing the job.”
In the mean time, two other men, James Bower
and Jeff Gray, confessed to the murders. Although they were
tried and acquitted by a jury, their stories raised doubt, and
Diamondfield Jack was granted a reprieve the day before he was
scheduled to die.
On February 24, 1899, the Idaho Legislature
approved an act which ruled all executions must take place at
the Idaho State Penitentiary. Because he was still under
sentence of death, Diamondfield Jack was moved to the prison in
Boise.
At 1:30 a.m. on the morning of February 27,
1899, Diamondfield Jack arrived at the Boise Depot. The Warden’s
Report for that day states, “The Warden, with guards, met the
party at the depot and took charge of the prisoner, who was,
without delay, taken to the Penitentiary, where he arrived
without mishap.” He was placed in the new cellhouse and watched
by special guards. On December 24, 1899, the Idaho Supreme Court
ruled that Diamondfield Jack must go back to the Cassia County
Jail as a county prisoner. He was taken back on December 28,
1899.
By 1900, Diamondfield Jack had exhausted all
of his appeals. He was again scheduled for execution, this time
on July 3, 1901. The public was opposed to this and believed
Diamondfield Jack to be innocent. Aware of public support from
some very influential citizens, the Board of Pardons extended
the execution date to July 17. Word arrived in Cassia County
three hours before the sheriff would have carried out the
execution.
On July 16, 1901, the Board of Pardons
commuted Diamondfield Jack’s death sentence to that of life
imprisonment. He was again moved to the Idaho State Penitentiary
to serve his time. On December 17, 1902, the Board of Pardons
granted Diamondfield Jack a pardon. He moved to Nevada and made
a fortune in the Tonopah mining district. He later lost his
fortune and was killed in 1949 when he was struck by a taxi cab
in Las Vegas.