During his years as a bandit, James was involved in at least four robberies between 1868 and 1876 that resulted in the deaths of bank employees or citizens. The most famous incident was the disastrous
Northfield, Minnesota raid on September 7, 1876, that ended with the death or capture of most of the gang. Five months after the killing of his brother Jesse in 1882, Frank James boarded a train to
Jefferson City, Missouri, where he had an appointment with the governor in the state capital. Placing his holster in
Governor Crittenden's hands, he explained, Accounts say that James surrendered with the understanding that he would not be extradited to
Northfield, Minnesota. He was tried for only two of the robberies/murders: one in
Gallatin, Missouri, for the July 15, 1881, robbery of the
Rock Island Line train at
Winston, Missouri, in which the train engineer and a passenger were killed, and the other in
Huntsville, Alabama, for the March 11, 1881, robbery of a
United States Army Corps of Engineers payroll at
Muscle Shoals, Alabama. Among others, former Confederate General
Joseph Orville Shelby testified on James's behalf in the Missouri trial. He was acquitted in both Missouri and Alabama. Missouri accepted legal jurisdiction over him for other charges, but they never came to trial. He was never extradited to Minnesota for his connection with the Northfield Raid. His
New York Times obituary summarized his arrest and acquittal: In the last thirty years of his life, James worked a variety of jobs, including shoe salesman in Nevada, Missouri and then
burlesque theater ticket taker in
St. Louis. One of the theater's spins to attract patrons was their use of the phrase "Come get your ticket punched by the legendary Frank James." He also served as an
AT&T telegraph operator in
St. Joseph, Missouri. James took up the lecture circuit, while residing in
Sherman, Texas. In 1902, former Missourian
Sam Hildreth, a leading
thoroughbred horse trainer and owner, hired James as the betting commissioner at the Fair Grounds Race Track, in
New Orleans. He returned to the North Texas area where he was a shoe salesman at Sanger Brothers in
Dallas. The
Tacoma Times reported in July, 1914, that he was picking berries at a local ranch in Washington state, and planned to buy a farm nearby. He was also part of a Chicago investment group which purchased the Fletcher Terrell's Buckskin Bill's Wild West Show, third in size after the
Buffalo Bill and
Pawnee Bill shows. In his final years, James returned to the James Farm, giving tours for the sum of 25 cents. He died there at age 72 on February 18, 1915. He left behind his wife Annie Ralston James and one son. ==Portrayals==