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Not to be confused with Fargo State Representative Jim
Kasper, an advocate for North Dakota becoming a legal safe haven for online
poker parlors, the original Poker Jim is a legendary North Dakota Badlands
cowboy who lies buried in a cemetery that bears his name in McKenzie county,
near the North Unit of Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
Poker Jim, whos real name remains a mystery (likely by his own choice),
may have loved the game, but his last act before his fellow cowboys laid
him to rest was to break up a game, sending cards, cash and cowboys flying
through the air.
No doubt the colorful cowboys story has been told around many a
badlands campfire over the years. Our source is Leonard Lund, reporting
from Squaw Gap, as published in the Minot Daily News on this day in 1973.
Poker Jim was probably an outlaw who came into the area with a cattle
drive from the south. He was employed by the Frenchman Pierre Wibaux of
the enormous W Bar Ranch. Wibaux was a contemporary of the Marquis de
Mores and Theodore Roosevelt. Unlike his contemporaries, Wibauxs
ranch was a profitable operation, and became the largest cattle operation
of the time.
Lund writes, During the winter of 1894, Poker Jim
and a companion,
Cash Lantis, were stationed at the line camp at the mouth of Hay Draw
near the Little Missouri. By February their food supply had gotten so
low that Poker Jim was delegated to ride to Glendive, Montana, at least
65 miles away, for provisions.
But he never made it back. About a week later cowboys found his
frozen body propped against a huge scoria rock along a small frozen creek
about 10 miles from the cow camp. Poker Jims horse, tied to a tree,
had eaten off the bark. Burned matches about the corpse were evidence
that Poker Jim had tried to build a fire.
Harlowe (Tough) Bentley reported that Poker Jim, whose love for
gambling was exceeded only by his fondness for whisky, had seemed a little
sick from drinking when he left the Smith Creek line camp that last morning.
After staying overnight with Bentley at the horse camp, Poker Jim
began the 16-mile ride back to his camp on Hay Draw. Those who found Poker
Jims frozen body carried it into a small shack and placed it across
the rafters, in cold storage.
Later another group of men gathered at the shack for a poker game.
They heated the building and the body gradually thawed. Finally if fell
right onto the poker table directly below. According to the tale, no poker
game ever broke up so fast.
Poker Jim was laid to rest beside his old friend, Sid Tarbell, the
first person to be buried on the hill overlooking the cow camp.
Several others have been buried there over the years, but the cemetery
bears the name of one unforgettable nineteenth century cowboy
Poker
Jim.
Sources:
Poker Jim Dropped in On
Minot Daily News 24 Feb. 1973,
p.11.
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