Counterfeiting in Ohio During the
War of 1812, two unnamed Sturdivants were mentioned as counterfeiters operating in Kingston Township,
Delaware County, Ohio in 1812. Both of these men claimed to have been digging in the woods for salt and had escaped an attack by Indians. It turned out that the counterfeiters had used this situation as a ruse to avoid being arrested so they could easily leave Ohio afterwards. The Sturdivant brothers were Illinois-based counterfeiters conducting their criminal operations in western and southeast Illinois. Even before the Sturdivant family counterfeiters arrived in Illinois, counterfeiting was already a public menace in the future state. As the Governor of Illinois
Thomas Ford described in his book,
A History of Illinois from Its Commencement as a State from 1818 to 1847, "In 1816 and '17, in the towns of the territory [
Illinois Territory ], the country was overrun with
horse-thieves and counterfeiters. They were so numerous, and so well combined together in many counties, as to set the laws at defiance." Roswell Sturdivant, the most prominent member and leader of the third generation of the Sturdivant family gang in Illinois was referred to as "Sturdivant the Counterfeiter" by Judge
James Hall in his 1835 book,
Sketches of History, Life, and Manners, in the West described him as follows: "At a later period, the celebrated counterfeiter, Sturdivant, fixed his residence on the shore of the Ohio, in Illinois, and for several years set the laws at defiance. He was a man of talent and address. He was possessed of much mechanical genius, was an expert artist and was skilled in some of the sciences. As an engraver he was said to have few superiors; and he excelled in some other branches of art. For several years he resided at a secluded spot in Illinois, where all his immediate neighbors were his confederates or persons whose friendship he had conciliated. He could, at any time, by the blowing of a horn, summon some fifty to a hundred armed men to his defense; while the few quiet farmers around, who lived near enough to get their feelings enlisted and who were really not at all implicated in his crimes, rejoiced in the impunity with which he practiced his schemes. He was a grave, quiet, inoffensive man in his manners, who commanded the obedience of his comrades and the respect of his neighbors. He had a very excellent farm; his house was one of the best in the country; his domestic arrangements were liberal and well ordered."
Counterfeiting at Manville Ferry East of
St. Louis, Missouri and the
Mississippi River, Manville Ferry now present-day
New Athens, Illinois was a settlement in St. Clair County, Illinois on the
Kaskaskia River founded by early settler and ferryman, Ira Manville who ran the ferry until his death in 1821. These notorious counterfeiters were also the criminal contemporaries of
James Ford and the Ford's Ferry Gang and his partner,
Isaiah L. Potts, alias "Billy Potts" and the Potts Hill Gang. Merrick Sturdivant led the gang's counterfeiting operation at what came known as "Sturdivant's Fort" in
Pope County, Illinois, now
Rosiclare,
Hardin County, Illinois. Although the Sturdivant Gang did not base their counterfeiting operations directly at
Cave-in-Rock, on the Ohio River, in Pope County, Illinois, now Hardin County, Illinois, they were considered part of the second wave of criminal activity, associated within sphere of influence of the region of the
landmark Cave. The Sturdivant brothers counterfeit money-making factory inside Sturdivant's Fort, was a heavily fortified, two-story, log
blockhouse with a defensive
stockade around it. Sturdivant's Fort had an interior stairway inside the blockhouse that was protected and defended by a
cannon, trained at the exterior door of the blockhouse. The blockhouse
fortress was strategically located downriver, from
Cave-In-Rock, at the top of a cliff, overlooking the Ohio River, and clearly visible from the Cave-in-Rock
bluff. The counterfeiters' blockhouse was raided by local law enforcement and
regulator/vigilantes, in 1822 and by citizen mob action, twice, in 1823, which finally drove out the Sturdivant Gang from the lower Ohio River valley. In his book,
A History of Illinois from Its Commencement as a State from 1818 to 1847, Illinois governor Thomas Ford incorrectly claimed that the Sturdivant Gang was driven out from Sturdivant's Fort in 1831. newspaper in
Shawneetown, Illinois.
Roswell "Bloody Jack" Sturdivant in Natchez After the breakup and demise of the Sturdivant Gang in Illinois, Roswell Sturdivant went his separate way and relocated sometime in the 1820s to
Natchez, Mississippi. In Natchez, Sturdivant became known as
John,
Jack, and "
Bloody Jack"
Sturdivant by switching to the profession of a professional
gambler in a Mississippi River, waterfront
gambling den, in the criminal-infested section of Natchez called "
Natchez-under-the-Hill". In 1829, Bloody Jack Sturdivant was a dealer in a
faro card game and cheated a friend of
James Bowie named Dr. William Lattimore, out his money. Bowie, who sat for the next hand, won back all the money lost by his friend, which caused "Bloody Jack" Sturdivant to feel slighted and he foolishly challenged Bowie to a knife duel. Jim Bowie, with his left wrist tied to Sturdivant's, won the knife fight, by severely cutting the wrist of Sturdivant with his infamous
Bowie knife but spared his life. In return, Bowie received a horrible leg wound from Sturdivant. ==Notable gang members==