Mugshot March 2025 Ends with the Innovative Solution of J.A.P. Davis

In late December 1901, J.A.P. Davis received some bad news in his cell at the county jail in Redding, California.  The state supreme court had refused to grant his request for a new hearing, and upheld his sentence of ten years in San Quentin.

Davis was 76 years old.  He was born and brought up in the South, and had acquired an impressive education. He moved west to become a pioneer newspaper man.

Davis had a claim near Whiskeytown, California and on that claim was a barn. J.A.P. sold the barn to one man, got drunk, and sold it again to someone else. You must admit, this is quite a pickle for a man to find himself in.

Forced to solve the problem he created, Davis could think of no better solution than burning down the barn. Problem solved! Just how Davis imagined this might work, it’s hard to know, but he had plenty of time to reflect in San Quentin. He served six-and-a-half years, and was released at the age of 82.

6 thoughts on “Mugshot March 2025 Ends with the Innovative Solution of J.A.P. Davis

    • I love the idea of “barn money”
      I’ve heard ladies in the South talk about “pin money” to buy little things. Now you could get something really cool for Barn Money!

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  1. Believe you may have misread Mr. Davis’ initials. The appear to me to be either “J.P.W. Davis’ or “J.F.W. Davis.” It is not at all relevant to the fact that he was age 76 when he was sentenced to 10 years and survived San Quentin for slightly over 6 years. He surely was a “crusty old geezer.” Other inmates must have either feared him or were sympathetic toward him.

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    • It does look like you’re right about the initials in the mugshot. The papers used J.A.P. but they were notoriously unreliable! I read in one article that his first name was Jason, but that doesn’t help us much!

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