An overview of the childhood and early education of Jim Jones, highlighting the experiences that shaped the journey.
Jim Jones was an American cult leader who founded the Peoples Temple. He is infamous for orchestrating a mass murder-suicide in Jonestown, Guyana, on November 18, 1978. Over 900 people, including Jones, died by cyanide poisoning, an event Jones termed "revolutionary suicide." The Jonestown Massacre significantly shaped public perception of cults and remains a stark example of the dangers of charismatic leadership and religious extremism.
On April 16, 1902, Lynetta Putnam, Jim Jones's mother, was born. She and Jones both claimed to have some Cherokee ancestry, but there is no evidence of this.
On May 13, 1931, James Warren Jones, later known as Jim Jones, was born. He would grow to become an American cult leader, preacher, and mass murderer, founding and leading the Peoples Temple.
In 1934, during the Great Depression, the Jones family was evicted from their home due to failure to make mortgage payments. Relatives purchased a shack for them in Lynn.
In 1942, Jones went to see the Kennedy family when they spent the summer in Richmond, Indiana. They took part in services four times a week at a Pentecostal church.
In 1945, Jim Jones's parents separated and eventually divorced. This family change led to Jim Jones moving to Richmond, Indiana with his mother.
In November 1948, Jim Jones moved to Bloomington, Indiana, and attended Indiana University Bloomington, initially intending to become a doctor. During his time there, he began to espouse support for communism.
In December 1948, Jim Jones graduated from Richmond High School early and with honors. After graduation, he was able to pursue further education and career opportunities.
On June 12, 1949, Jim Jones married Marceline Mae Baldwin. Arguments about religion and Jones's atheism strained their marriage throughout their relationship.
In 1951, Jim Jones and his wife relocated to Indianapolis, where Jones took night classes at Butler University. Also in 1951, Jones began attending gatherings of the Communist Party USA in Indianapolis.
Around 1953, Jim Jones visited a Pentecostal Latter Rain convention in Columbus, Indiana, where a woman prophesied that Jones was a prophet with a great ministry. This endorsement affirmed Jones's calling to preach.
In 1954, the Joneses adopted their first child, Agnes, who was part Native American.
In 1956, Jim Jones began to be influenced by Father Divine and the Peace Mission movement. This influence potentially shaped his later actions and teachings within the Peoples Temple.
In 1956, Jim Jones visited Father Divine's Peace Mission in Philadelphia. He claimed his visit was to provide an objective statement about the Mission's activities to his fellow Pentecostal ministers.
In 1958, Jones visited Father Divine a second time to learn more about his practices. He expressed a desire to be Divine's successor and began implementing Divine's disciplinary practices within Peoples Temple.
In May 1959, Stephanie Jones, one of the three Korean-American children adopted by the Joneses, died at the age of 5 in a car accident.
In June 1959, Jim Jones and his wife Marceline had their only biological child, Stephan Gandhi.
In 1960, Indianapolis Mayor Charles Boswell appointed Jim Jones director of the local human rights commission. Jones used this position to promote his views on local radio and television programs, defying Boswell's advice.
In 1960, Peoples Temple joined the Disciples of Christ denomination, located in Indianapolis. Archie Ijames assured Jones that the organization would tolerate his political beliefs.
In 1961, Jim Jones collapsed and was hospitalized. He was accidentally placed in the hospital's black ward and refused to be moved, tending to the black patients and ultimately causing the hospital to desegregate its wards.
In 1961, Jim Jones earned a degree in secondary education from Butler University. This degree provided him with formal qualifications that would support his career.
In 1961, Jones warned his congregation of an impending nuclear attack on Indianapolis, leading to increased paranoia. He may have been influenced by William Branham's prophecy about the destruction of the United States in a nuclear war.
In 1961, the Joneses became the first white couple in Indiana to adopt a black child, naming him Jim Jones Jr. (James Jones Jr.).
In January 1962, Jim Jones read an article in Esquire magazine that suggested South America was the safest place to escape a nuclear war. He then decided to scout for a location to relocate Peoples Temple.
In December 1963, Jim Jones arrived to find Peoples Temple in Indiana bitterly divided due to financial issues and low attendance. He was forced to sell the church building and relocate to a smaller building nearby.
In 1963, Jones traveled to Guyana, and this contributed to the group selecting Guyana as a favorable location to relocate Peoples Temple.
In late 1963, Jones reluctantly returned to Indiana after Archie Ijames warned him that Peoples Temple was on the verge of collapse due to financial issues and low attendance.
In mid-1963, Jones's family moved to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where they worked with the poor in the favelas.
In 1964, Jim Jones made multiple trips to California to find a suitable location for Peoples Temple to relocate.
In 1964, Jim Jones was ordained by the Disciples of Christ denomination after Archie Ijames assured him that the organization would tolerate his political beliefs.
In July 1965, Jim Jones and his followers began moving to Redwood Valley, California. Assistant Pastor Russell Winberg resisted the move and warned members Jones was abandoning Christianity, eventually taking over leadership of the Indianapolis church.
In 1965, Jim Jones moved the Peoples Temple to California, establishing its headquarters in San Francisco. This move expanded the Temple's reach and influence.
Between 1966 and 1977, Peoples Temple contributed $1.1 million (equivalent to $4,697,803 in 2020) to the Disciples of Christ denomination.
To distract Peoples Temple members, Jones told his Indiana congregation that the world would be engulfed by nuclear war on July 15, 1967, leading to a new socialist Eden on Earth, and that the Temple must move to Northern California for safety.
In 1967, Jim Jones's followers coaxed another 75 members of the Indianapolis congregation to move to California. Also, in California, Jones used his position as a history and government teacher at an adult education school in Ukiah to recruit for Peoples Temple, teaching his students the benefits of Marxism and lecturing on religion. Jones planted loyal members of Peoples Temple in the classes to help him with recruitment. Jones recruited 50 new members to Peoples Temple in the first few months.
In 1968, the Peoples Temple's California location was admitted to the Disciples of Christ.
By 1969, Jim Jones increased the membership in Peoples Temple in California to 300.
By the end of 1969, Peoples Temple was growing rapidly due to Jones's message of economic socialism and racial equality.
By 1970, Peoples Temple opened branches in San Fernando, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Jones began shifting his focus to major cities across California due to limited expansion opportunities in Ukiah.
In 1970, Jim Jones and 150 of his followers held a faith healing revival meeting at San Francisco's Missionary Baptist Church, impressing the crowd with a staged 'healing'. He then attacked Baptist teachings and encouraged members to join him, recruiting about 200 new members.
In 1971, Jim Jones visited the tomb and shrine of Father Divine, claiming to be Divine's reincarnation and successor. He confronted Divine's wife, who accused him of being the devil in disguise and demanded he leave. Only twelve followers were recruited through the event.
By 1973, Peoples Temple reached 2,570 members, with 36,000 subscribers to its fundraising newsletter.
In the fall of 1973, Jones and the Planning Commission devised a plan to escape the United States in the event of a government raid and began developing a plan to relocate Peoples Temple. Guyana was selected as a favorable location and in October, the group voted unanimously to set up an agricultural commune there.
In December 1974, the first group of people arrived in Guyana to start operating the commune that would become known as Jonestown.
In 1974, following negative publicity, Jim Jones ordered the construction of the Jonestown commune in Guyana. He aimed to create a socialist paradise for his followers, away from the perceived oppression of the United States government.
In 1975, Jim Jones and Peoples Temple played a crucial role in George Moscone's election as mayor of San Francisco. Subsequently, Moscone appointed Jones as the chairman of the San Francisco Housing Authority Commission.
In 1976, Grace Stoen left Peoples Temple, leaving her child John behind.
In 1976, Jim Jones obtained a jeweler's license to buy cyanide, purportedly to clean gold. The Temple started receiving monthly half-pound shipments of cyanide.
In a 1976 interview, Jim Jones claimed to be an agnostic and/or an atheist.
In February 1977, Jim Jones ordered John Stoen to be taken to Guyana to avoid a custody dispute with Grace.
In May 1977, Jim Jones and approximately 600 of his followers arrived in Jonestown, with about 400 more following in the subsequent months. Jones began moving the Temple's financial assets overseas and started to sell off property in the United States.
In June 1977, after Timothy Stoen also left Peoples Temple, Jones kept his child John at his own home in Jonestown.
In September 1977, one drill conducted by Jim Jones lasted for six days and was known as the 'Six Day Siege'. During the drill, community members would remain at the pavilion, and Jones told them that their community had been surrounded by agents who were about to destroy them. Jones led them in prayers, chanting, and singing to ward off the impending attack.
In a 1977 New York Times interview, Marceline Jones stated that Jones was trying to promote Marxism in the U.S. by mobilizing people through religion and that Jones called the Bible a "paper idol" that he wanted to destroy.
In the autumn of 1977, Timothy Stoen and other Temple defectors formed a "Concerned Relatives" group because they had family members in Jonestown who were not being permitted to return to the United States.
In January 1978, Timothy Stoen traveled to Washington, D.C., to visit with State Department officials and members of Congress, and wrote a white paper detailing his grievances against Jones and the Temple in an attempt to recover his son.
In May 1978, a Temple doctor requested permission to test cyanide on Jonestown's pigs, stating their metabolism was close to that of human beings. This occurred after Jim Jones obtained a jeweler's license to buy cyanide, purportedly to clean gold, and had been receiving monthly shipments since 1976.
In late October 1978, Jim Jones's orders became increasingly erratic in Jonestown. He experienced symptoms related to prostatitis around this time and found it difficult to walk without assistance. However, these symptoms cleared up by the time Congressman Ryan visited.
In November 1978, Congressman Ryan led a fact-finding mission to Jonestown, Guyana, to investigate human-rights abuses. The delegation included relatives of Temple members, an NBC camera crew, and reporters, and arrived in Georgetown on November 15.
In November 1978, Jim Jones falsely claimed to have lung cancer to gain sympathy, while abusing valium, quaaludes, stimulants, and barbiturates. Audio recordings from Jonestown meetings in 1978 revealed Jones complaining of high blood pressure, small strokes, weight loss, temporary blindness, convulsions, and grotesque swelling of the extremities.
In 1978, Jonestown faced deteriorating conditions, with the community overworked, sleep-deprived, and subjected to constant sermons via loudspeakers. Jones promoted his concept of "Translation," promising a blissful afterlife through death. Punishments, such as confinement in an underground box, were used to control members.
In 1978, Temple members in Jonestown worked six days a week from 6:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. The work week was shortened to eight hours a day for five days a week in the middle of 1978. Temple members would attend several hours of activities including classes in socialism. Jones compared this schedule to the North Korean system.
In 1978, following the Jonestown massacre, rumors arose about surviving Peoples Temple members organizing hit squads. Law enforcement protected potential targets. The Temple's San Francisco headquarters was besieged. James, who had returned from Jonestown, initially denied Jones's connection to the deaths but later acknowledged the truth.
In 1978, the FBI and the United States Congress conducted investigations into the Jonestown massacre, primarily focusing on why authorities were unaware of the abuses in Jonestown. Peoples Temple collapsed shortly after the events of 1978, but some individuals continued to follow Jones's teachings during the 1980s.
Throughout 1978, Jim Jones utilized White Night drills in Jonestown, during which he simulated mass suicide by distributing fruit punch, claiming it was poisoned. This was a method of control, conditioning followers to accept suicide as an escape from the perceived threats of the CIA and the outside world.
In 2007, survivor Tim Carter was interviewed by forensic psychiatrist Dr. Michael H. Stone for the program Most Evil. During the interview, Carter suggested that the lunch of grilled cheese sandwiches that day may have been tainted with sedatives to subdue members of the cult, and that Jones had his guards pose the dead bodies to make it appear that more people had willingly committed suicide.
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