Everything about John Newman Edwards totally explained
Major
John Newman Edwards, CSA, (
January 4,
1839–
May 4,
1889) was General
Joseph O. Shelby’s adjutant, an author, a journalist and the founder of the
Kansas City Times. He is perhaps best known for contributing to the folk hero status of outlaw
Jesse James.
Childhood
John N. Edwards was born in
Warren County, Virginia. As a child, he learned type-setting in
Front Royal, Virginia. He moved to
Missouri about 1855. Settling in
Lexington, Missouri, Edwards became a printer for "The Expositor".
War years
In 1862, Confederate General
Joseph O. Shelby, raised cavalry regiment near
Waverly, Missouri, in
Lafayette County. Edwards joined it. In September 1863, Edwards was appointed brigade adjutant, with the rank of major. When Shelby was promoted to command a division, Edwards became the division's adjutant. He held the position until the war ended in May 1865, when Shelby's command disbanded.
In Mexico
Edwards followed Shelby to
Mexico. He spent the next two years in
Maximilian's ill-fated Empire. Edwards obtained a land grant from Maximilian, which enabled Shelby to found the Colony of Carlotta. Edwards and ex-Governor Allen of Louisiana printed the colony's newspaper, "The Mexican Times". Edwards wrote his first book while in Mexico, "An Unwritten Leaf of the War".
Returning to Missouri in
1867, Edwards joined "The Republican" as a reporter. The following year, he began the
Kansas City Times, a staunch Democratic paper in a state now ruled by the Radical Republicans. He was sympathetic in reporting the James gang's robberies, claiming they were a response to the excesses of Republican rule in Missouri. On March 28, 1871, Edwards married Mary Virginia Plattenburg. They were the parents of two sons and a daughter.
Edwards remained at the Times until
1873. He then moved to St. Louis to edit "The Dispatch". On September 4,
1875 he fought a pistol duel with Col.
Emory S. Foster, editor of the "St. Louis Journal", who had accused him in print of lying. Neither man was injured.
Edwards left the Dispatch, planning to move to
Santa Fe and raise sheep. However, he was persuaded by friends and family to remain in Missouri.
In
1877, Edwards published "Noted Guerrillas," a fictional account of the Civil War on the Kansas-Missouri border. He later moved to
Sedalia to become editor of "The Democrat". He next became editor of the "St. Joseph Gazette".
In 1887, Edwards returned to Kansas City as editor of the paper he'd founded. Two years later, he died unexpectedly of natural causes at the age of 50. He was buried in Dover, Missouri.
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