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Jayhawker

Jayhawker and red leg are terms that came to prominence in Kansas Territory during the Bleeding Kansas period of the 1850s; they were adopted by militant bands affiliated with the free-state cause during the American Civil War. These gangs were guerrillas who often clashed with pro-slavery groups from Missouri, known at the time in Kansas Territory as "Border Ruffians" or "Bushwhackers". After the Civil War, the word "Jayhawker" became synonymous with the people of Kansas, or anybody born in Kansas.[1] Today a modified version of the term, Jayhawk, is used as a nickname for a native-born Kansan.[2][3][4]

Broadside recruiting men for the Independent Kansas Jay-Hawkers, 1st Kansas Volunteer Cavalry.
Burned Wagons Point in Death Valley, where the Jayhawker group of 49ers killed their oxen, chopped the wagons, dried the meat, and set off westward on foot.

Origin edit

Early usage edit

The term did not appear in the first American edition of Burtlett's Dictionary of Americanisms (1848),[5] but was entered into the fourth improved and enlarged edition in 1877 as a cant name for a freebooting armed man in the western United States.[6]

It was established that the term was adopted as a nickname by a group of emigrants from Illinois traveling to California in 1849, who got stuck in the Death Valley.[7][8]

In 1858–59, the slang term "Jayhawking" became widely used as a synonym for stealing.[9][10][11][12][13] Examples include:

O'ive been over till Eph. Kepley's a-jayhawking.[14]

Men are now at Fort Scott, working by the day for a living as loyal as Gen. Blunt himself, who have had every hoof confiscated, or jayhawked, which is about the same thing, for all the benefit it is to the Government.[15]

Missouri–Kansas border lexicon edit

The term became part of the lexicon of the Missouri–Kansas border in about 1858, during the Kansas territorial period. The term came to be used to describe militant bands nominally associated with the free-state cause.[16] One early Kansas history contained this succinct characterization of the Jayhawkers:

Confederated at first for defense against pro-slavery outrages, but ultimately falling more or less completely into the vocation of robbers and assassins, they have received the name—whatever its origin may be—of jayhawkers.[17]

Farmer's Americanisms, old and new (1889) linked the term with anti-slavery advocates of late 1850s in Kansas.[18]

G. Murlin Welch, a historian of the territorial period described the Jayhawkers as bands of men that were willing to fight, kill, and rob for a variety of motives that included defense against pro-slavery "Border Ruffians", abolition, driving pro-slavery settlers from their claims of land, revenge, and/or plunder and personal profit.[19]

While the "Bleeding Kansas" era is generally regarded as beginning in 1856, the earliest documented uses of the term "jayhawker" during the Kansas troubles were in the late 1850s, after the issue of slavery in Kansas had essentially been decided in favor of the Free State cause.[20][21] The earliest dated mention of the name comes from the autobiography of August Bondi, who came to Kansas in 1855. Bondi said he observed General James Lane addressing his forces as Jayhawkers in December 1857.[22][23]

Another early reference to the term (as applied to the Kansas troubles) emerging at that time is provided in the retrospective account of Kansas newspaperman John McReynolds.[24] McReynolds reportedly picked up the term from Pat Devlin, a Free State partisan described as "nothing more nor less than a dangerous bully."[25] In mid-1858, McReynolds asked Devlin where he had acquired two fine horses that he had recently brought into the town of Osawatomie. Devlin replied that he "got them as the Jayhawk gets its birds in Ireland", which he explained as follows: "In Ireland a bird, which is called the Jayhawk, flies about after dark, seeking the roosts and nests of smaller birds, and not only robs nests of eggs, but frequently kills the birds." McReynolds understood Devlin had acquired his horses in the same manner the Jayhawk got its prey, and used the term in a Southern Kansas Herald newspaper column to describe a case of theft in the ongoing partisan violence. The term was quickly picked up by other newspapers, and "Jayhawkers" soon came to denote the militants and thieves affiliated with the Free State cause.[26][27]

Kansas Union troops edit

The meaning of the jayhawker term evolved in the opening year of the American Civil War. When Charles Jennison, one of the territorial-era jayhawkers, was authorized to raise a regiment of cavalry to serve in the Union army, he characterized the unit as the "Independent Kansas Jay-Hawkers" on a recruiting poster. The regiment was officially termed the 7th Regiment Kansas Volunteer Cavalry, but was popularly known as Jennison's Jayhawkers.[28][29] Thus, the term became associated with Union troops from Kansas. After the regiment was banished from the Missouri–Kansas border in the spring of 1862, it went on to participate in several battles including Union victories of the Battle of Iuka and the Second Battle of Corinth. Late in the war, the regiment returned to Kansas and contributed to Union victory in one of the last major battles in the Missouri–Kansas theater, the Battle of Mine Creek.[citation needed]

The Jayhawker term was applied not only to Jennison and his command, but to any Kansas troops engaged in punitive operations against the civilian population of western Missouri, in which the plundering and arson that characterized the territorial struggles were repeated, but on a much larger scale. For example, the term "Jayhawkers" also encompassed Senator Jim Lane and his Kansas Brigade, which sacked and burned Osceola, Missouri, in the opening months of the war after their defeat by Sterling Price's Missouri State Guard in the Battle of Dry Wood Creek.[30][31][32]

Jayhawking in western Missouri edit

 
Jemison's Jayhawkers, by Adalbert John Volck.

Jayhawking was a prominent aspect of Union military operations in western Missouri during the first year of the war. In addition to Osceola, the smaller Missouri towns of Morristown, Papinsvile, Butler, Dayton, and Columbus and large numbers of rural homes were also pillaged by Kansas troops led by James Lane, Charles R. Jennison, Daniel Read Anthony, and James Montgomery, among others.[33] Scores if not hundreds of Missouri families were burned out of their homes in the middle of the winter of 1862.[34]

Union Major General Henry Halleck on January 18, 1862 in a letter to General Lorenzo Thomas described Jennison's regiment as "no better than a band of robbers; they cross the line, rob, steal, plunder, and burn whatever they can lay their hands upon. They disgrace the name and uniform of American soldiers and are driving good Union men into the ranks of the secession army."[35][36] There were no charges against Lane, Jennison, or other officers under Lane's command for their role in the jayhawking raids of 1861–1862, but Union General David H. Hunter succeeded in curtailing Lane's military role,[37] and units of Kansas troops such as the 7th Regiment Kansas Volunteer Cavalry were shuffled off to other theaters of the war.

 
Marshall Cleveland

Further compounding confusion over what the term Jayhawker meant along the Missouri–Kansas border was its use in describing outright criminals like Marshall Cleveland, a captain of Jennison's Regiment, who resigned and turned to jayhawking. Cleveland operated under cover of supposed Unionism, but was outside the Union military command.[38]

A newspaper reporter traveling through Kansas in 1863 provided definitions of jayhawker and associated terms:

Jayhawkers, Red Legs, and Bushwhackers are everyday terms in Kansas and Western Missouri. A Jayhawker is a Unionist who professes to rob, burn out and murder only rebels in arms against the government. A Red Leg is a Jayhawker originally distinguished by the uniform of red leggings. A Red Leg, however, is regarded as more purely an indiscriminate thief and murderer than the Jayhawker or Bushwhacker. A Bushwhacker is a rebel Jayhawker, or a rebel who bands with others for the purpose of preying upon the lives and property of Union citizens. They are all lawless and indiscriminate in their iniquities.[39]

Guerrilla fighting edit

The depredations of the Jayhawkers contributed to the descent of the Missouri–Kansas border region into some of the most vicious guerrilla fighting of the Civil War. In the first year of the war, much of the movable wealth in western Missouri had been transferred to Kansas, and large swaths of western Missouri had been laid waste, by an assortment of Kansas Jayhawkers ranging from outlaws and independent military bands to rogue federal troops such as Lane's Brigade and Jennison's Jayhawkers. In February 1862, the Union command instituted martial law due to "the crime of armed depredations or jay-hawking having reached a height dangerous to the peace and posterity to the whole State (Kansas) and seriously compromising the Union cause in the border counties of Missouri."[40]

One expert on the Jayhawkers stated that the Border War would have been bad enough given the fighting between secessionist and unionist Missourians, "but it was basically Kansas craving for revenge and Kansas craving for loot that set the tone of the war. Nowhere else, with the grim exception of the East Kentucky and East Tennessee mountains, did the Civil War degenerate so completely into a squalid, murderous, slugging match as it did in Kansas and Missouri."[41] The most infamous event in this war of raids and reprisals was Confederate leader William Quantrill's raid on Lawrence, Kansas, known as the Lawrence Massacre.[42] In response to Quantrill's raid, the Union command issued General Order No. 11 (1863), the forced depopulation of specified Missouri border counties.

Intended to eliminate sanctuary and sustenance for pro-Confederate guerrilla fighters, it was enforced by troops from Kansas, and provided an excuse for a final round of plundering, arson, and summary execution perpetrated against the civilian population of western Missouri.[43] In the words of one observer, "the Kansas–Missouri border was a disgrace even to barbarism."[44]

Different meanings edit

As the war continued, the "Jayhawker" term came to be used by Confederates as a derogatory term for any troops from Kansas, but the term also had different meanings in different parts of the country. In Arkansas, the term was used by Confederate Arkansans as an epithet for any marauder, robber, or thief regardless of Union or Confederate affiliation.[45] In Louisiana, the term was used to describe anti-Confederate guerrillas; in Texas, free-booting bands of draft dodgers and deserters.[46]

Over time, proud of their state's contributions to the end of slavery and the preservation of the Union, Kansans embraced the "Jayhawker" term. The term came to be applied to people or items related to Kansas.[47]

Relationship to the University of Kansas Jayhawk edit

 
The University of Kansas logo

When the University of Kansas fielded their first football team in 1890, the team was called the Jayhawkers.[48] Over time, the name was gradually supplanted by its shorter variant, and KU's sports teams are now exclusively known as the Kansas Jayhawks.

Historic descriptions of the ornithological origin of the "Jayhawker" term have varied. Writing on the troubles in Kansas Territory in 1859, one journalist stated the jayhawk was a hawk that preys on the jay.[49] One of the "Jayhawkers of '49" recalled that the name sprang from their observation of hawks gracefully sailing in the air until "the audience of jays and other small but jealous and vicious birds sail in and jab him until he gets tired of show life and slides out of trouble in the lower earth."[7] In the Pat Devlin stories, the jayhawk is described more in terms of its behavior (bullying, robbing, and killing) than the type of bird it is.[50]

The link between the term "Jayhawkers" and any specific kind of bird, if such an association ever existed, had been lost or at least obscured by the time KU's bird mascot was invented in 1912, which was meant to serve as a visual representation of the Jayhawker movement, an homage by the university to the state's history. The originator of the bird mascot, Henry Maloy, struggled for over two years to create a pictorial symbol for the team, until hitting upon the bird idea. As explained by Maloy, "the term 'jayhawk' in the school yell was a verb and the term 'Jayhawkers' was the noun."[51]

In 2011, the city of Osceola, Missouri produced a declaration condemning what city leadership viewed as a connection between the Jayhawk mascot and the historical Jayhawkers who burned the town in 1861.

In 2017, the Kansas football team unveiled uniforms with an American flag on the helmet, blue jerseys, and red pants which featured the words "Kansas Jay-Hawkers" above a seal featuring a sword and a rifle. Kansas Athletics stated that the red pants was an homage to the term "Redlegs," another name for Jayhawkers.

Cultural influence edit

  • Plunderers and militant abolitionists were referred to as "Jayhawkers" or "Red Legs" and both were used as terms of derision towards those from Kansas after the Civil War. The term "Jayhawk" has evolved over the years to a term of pride used by some Kansans. The term "Red Leg" as applied to Kansans has disappeared from common lexicon.
  • Items stolen in raids into Missouri were frequently referred to as having been "Jayhawked."
  • The Jayhawkers are featured prominently in Lloyd Alexander's historical novel, "Border Hawk: August Bondi."
  • In the Gunsmoke radio show episode "Texas Cowboys" (1954 Radio), Jayhawkers follow a cattle drive and continue to stampede the herd. Marshal Matt Dillon allows the cowboys to "hurrah" Dodge. Jayhawkers were also the subject of the October 16, 1955 episode "Trouble in Kansas."
  • A cattle drive being held up by Jayhawkers is depicted in The Tall Men (1955).
  • In a 1959 Gunsmoke episode called "The Jayhawkers," men of that name try to extort money from cattle-drivers by threatening to scatter their herds unless paid off.
  • The movie The Jayhawkers! (1959) depicts a charismatic leader (Jeff Chandler) of a new independent Republic of Kansas in a showdown with an ex-renegade raider (Fess Parker), sent by the military governor to capture him and bring him to justice.
  • In a 1961 Rawhide episode called "Incident of the Phantom Bugler" a group referred to as Jayhawkers attempt to extort money from Gil Favor and crew to cross river.
  • Clint Eastwood's Missourian character in the film The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976) took up the Confederate cause after Redleg Jayhawkers from Kansas killed his son and raped and murdered his wife.
  • Jayhawker Colonel James Montgomery was portrayed as a racist, vengeful, and larcenous commander of a black regiment in the 1989 film Glory, where he is referred to as "a real Jayhawker from Kansas."
  • The 1999 movie Ride With the Devil, directed by Ang Lee, and starring Tobey Maguire, Skeet Ulrich, and Jewel depicts Jayhawkers raiding Missouri homesteads.
  • The 2014 movie Jayhawkers, directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Kevin Willmott, follows the college career of Wilt Chamberlain and the 1956 Kansas Jayhawks basketball team.
  • An alternative country/alternative rock band originating in the 1980s from Minneapolis, Minnesota is named The Jayhawks.
  • An unincorporated community in El Dorado County, California is named Jayhawk, California.
  • The Wichita, Kansas wing of the Commemorative Air Force is known as the Jayhawk Wing.
  • The VII Corps of the United States Army official nickname was The Jayhawk Corps.
  • The United States Army Company A of the 9th aviation battalion of the 9th Infantry Division official nickname was The Jayhawks.
  • The United States Coast Guard operates the medium range twin engine helicopter HH-60 Jayhawk in the roles of maritime patrol, interdiction, and search and rescue.
  • The United States Navy operates the AQM-37 Jayhawk high speed target drone.
  • The United States Air Force and the Japan Air Self-Defense Force operate the advanced pilot trainer T-1 Jayhawk for students selected to fly strategic/tactical airlift or tanker aircraft.*The 184th Intel Wing call sign is the Fighting Jayhawks, and previously the Flying Jayhawks for many years before losing assigned aircraft.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mechem, Kirke (1944). "The Mythical Jayhawk". Kansas Historical Quarterly. 13 (1). Kansas Historical Society: 1–15. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
  2. ^ Jayhawker - Dictionary.com
  3. ^ Jayhwaker - Merriamwebster.com
  4. ^ Jayhawker - Thefreedictionary.com
  5. ^ Dictionary of Americanisms (1848)
  6. ^ Bartlett, John Russell. Dictionary of Americanisms. A glossary of words and phrases, usually regarded as peculiar to the United States; Fourth edition, greatly improved and enlarged. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1977, p. 321
  7. ^ a b Fox, Simeon M. "The Story of the Seventh Kansas," Transactions of the Kansas State Historical Society 8(1904): 13–49.
  8. ^ William A. Lyman. Origin of the Name "Jayhawker," and How It Came to Be Applied to the People of Kansas, Kansas State Historical Society Collections, vol. 14, 1918, pp. 203-207.
  9. ^ Robley, History of Bourbon County Kansas, p. 95;
  10. ^ Cutler, History of the State of Kansas, 1:878.
  11. ^ William Anselm Mitchell, Linn County, Kansas: A History (Kansas City, Kans.: Campbell-Gates, 1928), p. 22
  12. ^ Daniel W. Wilder, Annals of Kansas: 1541–1885 (Topeka: Kansas Publishing House, 1875), pp. 615–16; Starr, Jennison's Jayhawkers, p. 29
  13. ^ Kansas Magazine 3 (1873), p. 553.
  14. ^ Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains 34 (Summer 2011):, 117
  15. ^ Pearl T. Ponce, Kansas's War: The Civil War in Documents (Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio, 2011), p. 174
  16. ^ Missourians were called "Bushwackers" and Kansans—"Jayhawkers".
  17. ^ Spring, Leverett Wilson. Kansas: The Prelude to the War for the Union. New York: Boston Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1896
  18. ^ Farmer, John Stephen. Americanisms – Old & New: a Dictionary of Words, Phrases And Colloquialisms Peculiar to the United States, British America, the West Indies, Etc. Etc., Their Derivation, Meaning And Application, Together With Numerous Anecdotal, Historical, Explanatory, And Folk-lore Notes. London: T. Poulter, 1889, p. 323.
  19. ^ Welch, G. Murlin. Border Warfare in Southeast Kansas: 1856–1859. Pleasanton, Kan.: Published for the Linn County Historical Society by Linn County Publishers, 1977.
  20. ^ Welch, G. Murlin. Border Warfare in Southeast Kansas: 1856–1859. Pleasanton, Kan.: Published for the Linn County Historical Society by Linn County Publishers, 1977. Chapter XV, End note No. 20.
  21. ^ Kansas: a cyclopedia of state history, embracing events, institutions, industries, counties, cities, towns, prominent persons, etc. Standard Pub. Co. Chicago : 1912. Vols. I–II edited by Frank W. Blackmar. "Jayhawkers" entry 2009-03-22 at the Wayback Machine. Transcribed July 2002 by Carolyn Ward. Accessed January 21, 2011.
  22. ^ August Bondi. Autobiography of August Bondi (1833-1907): Published by His Sons and Daughters for Its Preservation 2015-04-23 at the Wayback Machine. Galesberg, Ill.: Wagoner Printing Co., 1911, pp. 6, 33–34.
  23. ^ Baron, Frank. James H. Lane and the Origins of the Kansas Jayhawk. Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains 34 (Summer 2011): 114–27
  24. ^ Henry King, and William Elsey Connelley. History of Kansas Newspapers: A History of the Newspapers And Magazines Published In Kansas From the Organization of Kansas Territory, 1854, to January 1, 1916; Together With Brief Statistical Information of the Counties, Cities And Towns of the State. Topeka: Kansas state printing plant, 1916, p. 239.
  25. ^ "The Kansas War, The Disturbances in Southern Kansas – Brown and Montgomery". The New York Times, January 28, 1859.
  26. ^ "Origin of the Word Jayhawking In Application to the People of Kansas. Incidents in the early History of the Territory". The Allen County Courant (Iola, Kansas), May 23, 1868; Vol. 2, No. 19.
  27. ^ "Origin of the Word 'Jayhawking'". The (Junction City) Smoky Hill and Republican Union. June 18, 1864.
  28. ^ . The regimental history of the Second Kansas Volunteer Infantry as published in the Adjutant General's Report, Vol. 2, pp. 93-97, Kansas Historical Society.
  29. ^ Starr, p. 57.
  30. ^ Goodrich, Thomas. Black Flag: Guerrilla Warfare on the Western Border, 1861–1865. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1995.
  31. ^ Benedict, Bryce. Jayhawkers: The Civil War Brigade of James Henry Lane. University of Oklahoma Press, 2009.
  32. ^ Castel, Albert E. Kansas Jayhawking Raids into Western Missouri in 1861 2014-03-14 at the Wayback Machine, Missouri Historical Review 54, no. 1 (October 1959).
  33. ^ O’Bryan, Tony. Jayhawkers, Civil War on the Western Border: The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1854-1865.
  34. ^ Erwin, James W. Guerrillas in Civil War Missouri. Charleston, SC: History Press, 2012.
  35. ^ Starr, p. 96.
  36. ^ . In The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the War of the Union and Confederate Armies. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1880-1901, series 1, volume 8, pp. 448-449
  37. ^ Castel, Civil War Kansas, pp. 77–80.
  38. ^ Marshall Cleveland, Kansas Historical Society
  39. ^ Connelly, William E. Quantrill and the Border Wars. Cedar Rapids, Iowa: The Torch Press. 1910, p. 412.
  40. ^ . In The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the War of the Union and Confederate Armies. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1880-1901, series 1, volume 8, pp. 547-548
  41. ^ Starr, p. 50.
  42. ^ Castel, Albert. "Kansas Jayhawking Raids Into Western Missouri in 1861" 2014-03-14 at the Wayback Machine. Missouri Historical Review 54/1. October 1959.
  43. ^ Bingham, George Caleb. "Address to the public, vindicating a work of art illustrative of the federal military policy in Missouri during the late civil war". Kansas City, MO. 1871.
  44. ^ Robinson, Charles. The Kansas Conflict. 1892. Reprint. Lawrence, Kans.: Journal Publishing Co., 1898. p. 455.
  45. ^ Daniel E. Sutherland. "Jayhawkers and Bushwackers". The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture.
  46. ^ Block, William T. Some Notes on the Civil War Jayhawkers of Confederate Louisiana.
  47. ^ Kirke Mechem. The Mythical Jayhawk, Kansas Historical Quarterly, Vol. 13, No. 1, February 1944, pp. 1-15
  48. ^ The University of Kansas, "Traditions, The Jayhawk" 2012-11-15 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed January 28, 2011.
  49. ^ The Daily Tribune (Manitowoc, WI), February 4, 1859, page 1, column A. From the N.Y. Tribune.
  50. ^ T. F. Robley, History of Bourbon County. Fort Scott: Press of the Monitor Book & Print. Co., 1894, p.96.
  51. ^ Kirke Mechem. The Mythical Jayhawk. Kansas Historical Quarterly, February 1944 (Vol. 13, No. 1), pages 1 to 15.

Further reading edit

  • Castel, Albert (1997). Civil War in Kansas: Reaping the Whirlwind. (ISBN 0-7006-0872-9)
  • Kerrihard, Bo. TheHistoryNet.
  • Starr, Steven Z. (1974). Jennison's Jayhawkers: A Civil War Cavalry Regiment and its Commander. (ISBN 0-8071-0218-0)
  • Wellman, Paul. (1962) A Dynasty of Western Outlaws (details the origins of the James-Younger and other outlaw gangs in the Kansas-Missouri border war).

External links edit

  •   Media related to Jayhawkers at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Jayhawker" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • "Jayhawker" . Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.
  • Pogo Comic Strip: The legendary comic strip "Pogo" considered the Kansas Jayhawk in this original art drawn by creator Walt Kelly, Kansas Historical Society

jayhawker, other, uses, jayhawk, disambiguation, terms, that, came, prominence, kansas, territory, during, bleeding, kansas, period, 1850s, they, were, adopted, militant, bands, affiliated, with, free, state, cause, during, american, civil, these, gangs, were,. For other uses see Jayhawk disambiguation Jayhawker and red leg are terms that came to prominence in Kansas Territory during the Bleeding Kansas period of the 1850s they were adopted by militant bands affiliated with the free state cause during the American Civil War These gangs were guerrillas who often clashed with pro slavery groups from Missouri known at the time in Kansas Territory as Border Ruffians or Bushwhackers After the Civil War the word Jayhawker became synonymous with the people of Kansas or anybody born in Kansas 1 Today a modified version of the term Jayhawk is used as a nickname for a native born Kansan 2 3 4 Broadside recruiting men for the Independent Kansas Jay Hawkers 1st Kansas Volunteer Cavalry Burned Wagons Point in Death Valley where the Jayhawker group of 49ers killed their oxen chopped the wagons dried the meat and set off westward on foot Contents 1 Origin 1 1 Early usage 1 2 Missouri Kansas border lexicon 1 3 Kansas Union troops 1 4 Jayhawking in western Missouri 1 5 Guerrilla fighting 1 6 Different meanings 2 Relationship to the University of Kansas Jayhawk 3 Cultural influence 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksOrigin editEarly usage edit The term did not appear in the first American edition of Burtlett s Dictionary of Americanisms 1848 5 but was entered into the fourth improved and enlarged edition in 1877 as a cant name for a freebooting armed man in the western United States 6 It was established that the term was adopted as a nickname by a group of emigrants from Illinois traveling to California in 1849 who got stuck in the Death Valley 7 8 In 1858 59 the slang term Jayhawking became widely used as a synonym for stealing 9 10 11 12 13 Examples include O ive been over till Eph Kepley s a jayhawking 14 Men are now at Fort Scott working by the day for a living as loyal as Gen Blunt himself who have had every hoof confiscated or jayhawked which is about the same thing for all the benefit it is to the Government 15 Missouri Kansas border lexicon editThe term became part of the lexicon of the Missouri Kansas border in about 1858 during the Kansas territorial period The term came to be used to describe militant bands nominally associated with the free state cause 16 One early Kansas history contained this succinct characterization of the Jayhawkers Confederated at first for defense against pro slavery outrages but ultimately falling more or less completely into the vocation of robbers and assassins they have received the name whatever its origin may be of jayhawkers 17 Farmer s Americanisms old and new 1889 linked the term with anti slavery advocates of late 1850s in Kansas 18 G Murlin Welch a historian of the territorial period described the Jayhawkers as bands of men that were willing to fight kill and rob for a variety of motives that included defense against pro slavery Border Ruffians abolition driving pro slavery settlers from their claims of land revenge and or plunder and personal profit 19 While the Bleeding Kansas era is generally regarded as beginning in 1856 the earliest documented uses of the term jayhawker during the Kansas troubles were in the late 1850s after the issue of slavery in Kansas had essentially been decided in favor of the Free State cause 20 21 The earliest dated mention of the name comes from the autobiography of August Bondi who came to Kansas in 1855 Bondi said he observed General James Lane addressing his forces as Jayhawkers in December 1857 22 23 Another early reference to the term as applied to the Kansas troubles emerging at that time is provided in the retrospective account of Kansas newspaperman John McReynolds 24 McReynolds reportedly picked up the term from Pat Devlin a Free State partisan described as nothing more nor less than a dangerous bully 25 In mid 1858 McReynolds asked Devlin where he had acquired two fine horses that he had recently brought into the town of Osawatomie Devlin replied that he got them as the Jayhawk gets its birds in Ireland which he explained as follows In Ireland a bird which is called the Jayhawk flies about after dark seeking the roosts and nests of smaller birds and not only robs nests of eggs but frequently kills the birds McReynolds understood Devlin had acquired his horses in the same manner the Jayhawk got its prey and used the term in a Southern Kansas Herald newspaper column to describe a case of theft in the ongoing partisan violence The term was quickly picked up by other newspapers and Jayhawkers soon came to denote the militants and thieves affiliated with the Free State cause 26 27 Kansas Union troops edit The meaning of the jayhawker term evolved in the opening year of the American Civil War When Charles Jennison one of the territorial era jayhawkers was authorized to raise a regiment of cavalry to serve in the Union army he characterized the unit as the Independent Kansas Jay Hawkers on a recruiting poster The regiment was officially termed the 7th Regiment Kansas Volunteer Cavalry but was popularly known as Jennison s Jayhawkers 28 29 Thus the term became associated with Union troops from Kansas After the regiment was banished from the Missouri Kansas border in the spring of 1862 it went on to participate in several battles including Union victories of the Battle of Iuka and the Second Battle of Corinth Late in the war the regiment returned to Kansas and contributed to Union victory in one of the last major battles in the Missouri Kansas theater the Battle of Mine Creek citation needed The Jayhawker term was applied not only to Jennison and his command but to any Kansas troops engaged in punitive operations against the civilian population of western Missouri in which the plundering and arson that characterized the territorial struggles were repeated but on a much larger scale For example the term Jayhawkers also encompassed Senator Jim Lane and his Kansas Brigade which sacked and burned Osceola Missouri in the opening months of the war after their defeat by Sterling Price s Missouri State Guard in the Battle of Dry Wood Creek 30 31 32 Jayhawking in western Missouri edit nbsp Jemison s Jayhawkers by Adalbert John Volck Jayhawking was a prominent aspect of Union military operations in western Missouri during the first year of the war In addition to Osceola the smaller Missouri towns of Morristown Papinsvile Butler Dayton and Columbus and large numbers of rural homes were also pillaged by Kansas troops led by James Lane Charles R Jennison Daniel Read Anthony and James Montgomery among others 33 Scores if not hundreds of Missouri families were burned out of their homes in the middle of the winter of 1862 34 Union Major General Henry Halleck on January 18 1862 in a letter to General Lorenzo Thomas described Jennison s regiment as no better than a band of robbers they cross the line rob steal plunder and burn whatever they can lay their hands upon They disgrace the name and uniform of American soldiers and are driving good Union men into the ranks of the secession army 35 36 There were no charges against Lane Jennison or other officers under Lane s command for their role in the jayhawking raids of 1861 1862 but Union General David H Hunter succeeded in curtailing Lane s military role 37 and units of Kansas troops such as the 7th Regiment Kansas Volunteer Cavalry were shuffled off to other theaters of the war nbsp Marshall Cleveland Further compounding confusion over what the term Jayhawker meant along the Missouri Kansas border was its use in describing outright criminals like Marshall Cleveland a captain of Jennison s Regiment who resigned and turned to jayhawking Cleveland operated under cover of supposed Unionism but was outside the Union military command 38 A newspaper reporter traveling through Kansas in 1863 provided definitions of jayhawker and associated terms Jayhawkers Red Legs and Bushwhackers are everyday terms in Kansas and Western Missouri A Jayhawker is a Unionist who professes to rob burn out and murder only rebels in arms against the government A Red Leg is a Jayhawker originally distinguished by the uniform of red leggings A Red Leg however is regarded as more purely an indiscriminate thief and murderer than the Jayhawker or Bushwhacker A Bushwhacker is a rebel Jayhawker or a rebel who bands with others for the purpose of preying upon the lives and property of Union citizens They are all lawless and indiscriminate in their iniquities 39 Guerrilla fighting edit The depredations of the Jayhawkers contributed to the descent of the Missouri Kansas border region into some of the most vicious guerrilla fighting of the Civil War In the first year of the war much of the movable wealth in western Missouri had been transferred to Kansas and large swaths of western Missouri had been laid waste by an assortment of Kansas Jayhawkers ranging from outlaws and independent military bands to rogue federal troops such as Lane s Brigade and Jennison s Jayhawkers In February 1862 the Union command instituted martial law due to the crime of armed depredations or jay hawking having reached a height dangerous to the peace and posterity to the whole State Kansas and seriously compromising the Union cause in the border counties of Missouri 40 One expert on the Jayhawkers stated that the Border War would have been bad enough given the fighting between secessionist and unionist Missourians but it was basically Kansas craving for revenge and Kansas craving for loot that set the tone of the war Nowhere else with the grim exception of the East Kentucky and East Tennessee mountains did the Civil War degenerate so completely into a squalid murderous slugging match as it did in Kansas and Missouri 41 The most infamous event in this war of raids and reprisals was Confederate leader William Quantrill s raid on Lawrence Kansas known as the Lawrence Massacre 42 In response to Quantrill s raid the Union command issued General Order No 11 1863 the forced depopulation of specified Missouri border counties Intended to eliminate sanctuary and sustenance for pro Confederate guerrilla fighters it was enforced by troops from Kansas and provided an excuse for a final round of plundering arson and summary execution perpetrated against the civilian population of western Missouri 43 In the words of one observer the Kansas Missouri border was a disgrace even to barbarism 44 Different meanings edit As the war continued the Jayhawker term came to be used by Confederates as a derogatory term for any troops from Kansas but the term also had different meanings in different parts of the country In Arkansas the term was used by Confederate Arkansans as an epithet for any marauder robber or thief regardless of Union or Confederate affiliation 45 In Louisiana the term was used to describe anti Confederate guerrillas in Texas free booting bands of draft dodgers and deserters 46 Over time proud of their state s contributions to the end of slavery and the preservation of the Union Kansans embraced the Jayhawker term The term came to be applied to people or items related to Kansas 47 Relationship to the University of Kansas Jayhawk edit nbsp The University of Kansas logo When the University of Kansas fielded their first football team in 1890 the team was called the Jayhawkers 48 Over time the name was gradually supplanted by its shorter variant and KU s sports teams are now exclusively known as the Kansas Jayhawks Historic descriptions of the ornithological origin of the Jayhawker term have varied Writing on the troubles in Kansas Territory in 1859 one journalist stated the jayhawk was a hawk that preys on the jay 49 One of the Jayhawkers of 49 recalled that the name sprang from their observation of hawks gracefully sailing in the air until the audience of jays and other small but jealous and vicious birds sail in and jab him until he gets tired of show life and slides out of trouble in the lower earth 7 In the Pat Devlin stories the jayhawk is described more in terms of its behavior bullying robbing and killing than the type of bird it is 50 The link between the term Jayhawkers and any specific kind of bird if such an association ever existed had been lost or at least obscured by the time KU s bird mascot was invented in 1912 which was meant to serve as a visual representation of the Jayhawker movement an homage by the university to the state s history The originator of the bird mascot Henry Maloy struggled for over two years to create a pictorial symbol for the team until hitting upon the bird idea As explained by Maloy the term jayhawk in the school yell was a verb and the term Jayhawkers was the noun 51 In 2011 the city of Osceola Missouri produced a declaration condemning what city leadership viewed as a connection between the Jayhawk mascot and the historical Jayhawkers who burned the town in 1861 In 2017 the Kansas football team unveiled uniforms with an American flag on the helmet blue jerseys and red pants which featured the words Kansas Jay Hawkers above a seal featuring a sword and a rifle Kansas Athletics stated that the red pants was an homage to the term Redlegs another name for Jayhawkers Cultural influence editPlunderers and militant abolitionists were referred to as Jayhawkers or Red Legs and both were used as terms of derision towards those from Kansas after the Civil War The term Jayhawk has evolved over the years to a term of pride used by some Kansans The term Red Leg as applied to Kansans has disappeared from common lexicon Items stolen in raids into Missouri were frequently referred to as having been Jayhawked The Jayhawkers are featured prominently in Lloyd Alexander s historical novel Border Hawk August Bondi In the Gunsmoke radio show episode Texas Cowboys 1954 Radio Jayhawkers follow a cattle drive and continue to stampede the herd Marshal Matt Dillon allows the cowboys to hurrah Dodge Jayhawkers were also the subject of the October 16 1955 episode Trouble in Kansas A cattle drive being held up by Jayhawkers is depicted in The Tall Men 1955 In a 1959 Gunsmoke episode called The Jayhawkers men of that name try to extort money from cattle drivers by threatening to scatter their herds unless paid off The movie The Jayhawkers 1959 depicts a charismatic leader Jeff Chandler of a new independent Republic of Kansas in a showdown with an ex renegade raider Fess Parker sent by the military governor to capture him and bring him to justice In a 1961 Rawhide episode called Incident of the Phantom Bugler a group referred to as Jayhawkers attempt to extort money from Gil Favor and crew to cross river Clint Eastwood s Missourian character in the film The Outlaw Josey Wales 1976 took up the Confederate cause after Redleg Jayhawkers from Kansas killed his son and raped and murdered his wife Jayhawker Colonel James Montgomery was portrayed as a racist vengeful and larcenous commander of a black regiment in the 1989 film Glory where he is referred to as a real Jayhawker from Kansas The 1999 movie Ride With the Devil directed by Ang Lee and starring Tobey Maguire Skeet Ulrich and Jewel depicts Jayhawkers raiding Missouri homesteads The 2014 movie Jayhawkers directed by Oscar winning filmmaker Kevin Willmott follows the college career of Wilt Chamberlain and the 1956 Kansas Jayhawks basketball team An alternative country alternative rock band originating in the 1980s from Minneapolis Minnesota is named The Jayhawks An unincorporated community in El Dorado County California is named Jayhawk California The Wichita Kansas wing of the Commemorative Air Force is known as the Jayhawk Wing The VII Corps of the United States Army official nickname was The Jayhawk Corps The United States Army Company A of the 9th aviation battalion of the 9th Infantry Division official nickname was The Jayhawks The United States Coast Guard operates the medium range twin engine helicopter HH 60 Jayhawk in the roles of maritime patrol interdiction and search and rescue The United States Navy operates the AQM 37 Jayhawk high speed target drone The United States Air Force and the Japan Air Self Defense Force operate the advanced pilot trainer T 1 Jayhawk for students selected to fly strategic tactical airlift or tanker aircraft The 184th Intel Wing call sign is the Fighting Jayhawks and previously the Flying Jayhawks for many years before losing assigned aircraft See also editBushwhacker Border Ruffian Quantrill s Raiders German Americans in the Civil War Jayhawk Jaywalking William Sloan ToughReferences edit Mechem Kirke 1944 The Mythical Jayhawk Kansas Historical Quarterly 13 1 Kansas Historical Society 1 15 Retrieved April 14 2014 Jayhawker Dictionary com Jayhwaker Merriamwebster com Jayhawker Thefreedictionary com Dictionary of Americanisms 1848 Bartlett John Russell Dictionary of Americanisms A glossary of words and phrases usually regarded as peculiar to the United States Fourth edition greatly improved and enlarged Boston Little Brown and Company 1977 p 321 a b Fox Simeon M The Story of the Seventh Kansas Transactions of the Kansas State Historical Society 8 1904 13 49 William A Lyman Origin of the Name Jayhawker and How It Came to Be Applied to the People of Kansas Kansas State Historical Society Collections vol 14 1918 pp 203 207 Robley History of Bourbon County Kansas p 95 Cutler History of the State of Kansas 1 878 William Anselm Mitchell Linn County Kansas A History Kansas City Kans Campbell Gates 1928 p 22 Daniel W Wilder Annals of Kansas 1541 1885 Topeka Kansas Publishing House 1875 pp 615 16 Starr Jennison s Jayhawkers p 29 Kansas Magazine 3 1873 p 553 Kansas History A Journal of the Central Plains 34 Summer 2011 117 Pearl T Ponce Kansas s War The Civil War in Documents Ohio University Press Athens Ohio 2011 p 174 Missourians were called Bushwackers and Kansans Jayhawkers Spring Leverett Wilson Kansas The Prelude to the War for the Union New York Boston Houghton Mifflin and Company 1896 Farmer John Stephen Americanisms Old amp New a Dictionary of Words Phrases And Colloquialisms Peculiar to the United States British America the West Indies Etc Etc Their Derivation Meaning And Application Together With Numerous Anecdotal Historical Explanatory And Folk lore Notes London T Poulter 1889 p 323 Welch G Murlin Border Warfare in Southeast Kansas 1856 1859 Pleasanton Kan Published for the Linn County Historical Society by Linn County Publishers 1977 Welch G Murlin Border Warfare in Southeast Kansas 1856 1859 Pleasanton Kan Published for the Linn County Historical Society by Linn County Publishers 1977 Chapter XV End note No 20 Kansas a cyclopedia of state history embracing events institutions industries counties cities towns prominent persons etc Standard Pub Co Chicago 1912 Vols I II edited by Frank W Blackmar Jayhawkers entry Archived 2009 03 22 at the Wayback Machine Transcribed July 2002 by Carolyn Ward Accessed January 21 2011 August Bondi Autobiography of August Bondi 1833 1907 Published by His Sons and Daughters for Its PreservationArchived 2015 04 23 at the Wayback Machine Galesberg Ill Wagoner Printing Co 1911 pp 6 33 34 Baron Frank James H Lane and the Origins of the Kansas Jayhawk Kansas History A Journal of the Central Plains 34 Summer 2011 114 27 Henry King and William Elsey Connelley History of Kansas Newspapers A History of the Newspapers And Magazines Published In Kansas From the Organization of Kansas Territory 1854 to January 1 1916 Together With Brief Statistical Information of the Counties Cities And Towns of the State Topeka Kansas state printing plant 1916 p 239 The Kansas War The Disturbances in Southern Kansas Brown and Montgomery The New York Times January 28 1859 Origin of the Word Jayhawking In Application to the People of Kansas Incidents in the early History of the Territory The Allen County Courant Iola Kansas May 23 1868 Vol 2 No 19 Origin of the Word Jayhawking The Junction City Smoky Hill and Republican Union June 18 1864 Seventh Regiment Jennison s Jayhawkers Kansas Volunteer Cavalry The regimental history of the Second Kansas Volunteer Infantry as published in the Adjutant General s Report Vol 2 pp 93 97 Kansas Historical Society Starr p 57 Goodrich Thomas Black Flag Guerrilla Warfare on the Western Border 1861 1865 Bloomington IN Indiana University Press 1995 Benedict Bryce Jayhawkers The Civil War Brigade of James Henry Lane University of Oklahoma Press 2009 Castel Albert E Kansas Jayhawking Raids into Western Missouri in 1861 Archived 2014 03 14 at the Wayback Machine Missouri Historical Review 54 no 1 October 1959 O Bryan Tony Jayhawkers Civil War on the Western Border The Missouri Kansas Conflict 1854 1865 Erwin James W Guerrillas in Civil War Missouri Charleston SC History Press 2012 Starr p 96 Major General Henry Halleck to Brigadier General Lorenzo Thomas January 18 1862 In The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the War of the Union and Confederate Armies Washington DC Government Printing Office 1880 1901 series 1 volume 8 pp 448 449 Castel Civil War Kansas pp 77 80 Marshall Cleveland Kansas Historical Society Connelly William E Quantrill and the Border Wars Cedar Rapids Iowa The Torch Press 1910 p 412 General Order No 17 Headquarters Department of Kansas Fort Leavenworth Kansas February 8 1862 In The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the War of the Union and Confederate Armies Washington DC Government Printing Office 1880 1901 series 1 volume 8 pp 547 548 Starr p 50 Castel Albert Kansas Jayhawking Raids Into Western Missouri in 1861 Archived 2014 03 14 at the Wayback Machine Missouri Historical Review 54 1 October 1959 Bingham George Caleb Address to the public vindicating a work of art illustrative of the federal military policy in Missouri during the late civil war Kansas City MO 1871 Robinson Charles The Kansas Conflict 1892 Reprint Lawrence Kans Journal Publishing Co 1898 p 455 Daniel E Sutherland Jayhawkers and Bushwackers The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture Block William T Some Notes on the Civil War Jayhawkers of Confederate Louisiana Kirke Mechem The Mythical Jayhawk Kansas Historical Quarterly Vol 13 No 1 February 1944 pp 1 15 The University of Kansas Traditions The Jayhawk Archived 2012 11 15 at the Wayback Machine Accessed January 28 2011 The Daily Tribune Manitowoc WI February 4 1859 page 1 column A From the N Y Tribune T F Robley History of Bourbon County Fort Scott Press of the Monitor Book amp Print Co 1894 p 96 Kirke Mechem The Mythical Jayhawk Kansas Historical Quarterly February 1944 Vol 13 No 1 pages 1 to 15 Further reading editCastel Albert 1997 Civil War in Kansas Reaping the Whirlwind ISBN 0 7006 0872 9 Kerrihard Bo America s Civil War Missouri and Kansas TheHistoryNet Starr Steven Z 1974 Jennison s Jayhawkers A Civil War Cavalry Regiment and its Commander ISBN 0 8071 0218 0 Wellman Paul 1962 A Dynasty of Western Outlaws details the origins of the James Younger and other outlaw gangs in the Kansas Missouri border war External links edit nbsp Media related to Jayhawkers at Wikimedia Commons Jayhawker New International Encyclopedia 1905 Jayhawker Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Pogo Comic Strip The legendary comic strip Pogo considered the Kansas Jayhawk in this original art drawn by creator Walt Kelly Kansas Historical Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jayhawker amp oldid 1199307696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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