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James Copeland (outlaw)

James Copeland
James Copeland hanging.jpg
The execution of James Copeland.
Born (1823-01-18)January 18, 1823
Jackson County, Mississippi
Died October 30, 1857(1857-10-30) (aged 34)
Augusta, Perry County, Mississippi
Occupation outlaw, hog thief, horse thief, slave-stealer, smuggler, pirate, counterfeiter, burgler, looter, arsonist, murderer, criminal gang leader
Parent(s)

Father: Isham Copeland

Mother: Rebecca Wells Copeland
Wages and Copeland Clan
Founded by Gale H. Wages, Charles "Preacher" McGrath, and James Copeland
Founding location Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama
Years active 1830s-1857
Territory Southern Mississippi and southern Alabama (around Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama)
Ethnicity European-American
Membership (est.) 60
Criminal activities hog thievery, horse thievery, slave-stealing, smuggling, piracy, counterfeiting, burglary, looting, arson, murder

Father: Isham Copeland

James Copeland (January 18, 1823 – October 30, 1857) was an American outlaw during the early to mid nineteenth century, whose crimes took place mostly, in southern Mississippi and southern Alabama. He was born in Jackson County, Mississippi. He was the co-leader of a gang known as the Wages and Copeland Clan. On October 30, 1857, Copeland was executed by hanging in Perry County, Mississippi.

Born on January 18, 1823, in Jackson County, Mississippi, to Isham Copeland and Rebecca Wells, James Copeland began school at approximately age ten or eleven. Although his father was willing to put him through school for as long as James desired, he began associating with people who taught him fraud and how to cheat and steal. It was reported that he would often trick his schoolmates out of their money and pocket knives.

James Copeland himself once said, his first great theft was a valuable pocket knife of a neighbor, whom he tricked out of it. He did this when he was twelve, although he stated he stole from his schoolmates long before this. His next great theft was when he was fourteen. He and his brother, Isham, nicknamed Whinn, went out for a night claiming they were going hunting. Instead, they stole fifteen hogs from a person nearby and went to Mobile to sell them for the sum of $30. He later went back to that person's house and tried to steal more hogs, but he was caught and arrested by the Jackson County Sheriff and charged with larceny. Realizing that the lawyer Copeland’s father had hired would not prevent incarceration, Copeland's mother contacted Gale H. Wages, a notorious thief from Mobile, Alabama. Wages first considered waylaying and killing the witness to the hog theft but settled on destroying the evidence instead. Wages and James Copeland burned the Jackson County Courthouse to the ground one night, destroying evidence and everything else housed in the building.

Still a teenager, Copeland joined with the Mobile bandits led by Wages and Charles "Preacher" McGrath. Wages took Copeland to a gathering in Mobile, where he was initiated as a member of a large clan that engaged in theft and other crimes for profit. He took the clan's oath: "You solemnly swear upon the Holy Evangelist of Almighty God, that you will never divulge, and always conceal and never reveal any of the signs or passwords of our order; that you will not invent any sign, token or device by which the secret mysteries of our order may be known; that you will not in any way betray or cause to be betrayed any member of this order — the whole under pain of having your head severed from your body — so help you God."


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