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When the American Frontier was alive, and still a drawing force compelling folks to head West for fortune and glory, the lives of famous gunfighters and personalities that inhabited the fringe of civilization were often greatly exaggerated. Men like the dude we know today as Jeremiah Johnson did their thing, stories of their deeds spread by word of mouth, and layer after layer of exaggeration and interpretation were added along the way.
Eventually, some writer at a newspaper or magazine or someone who made their living cranking out dime novels about adventures in the Wild West to give Easterners big dreams would catch on, and then they would get their turn at making a real person’s already convoluted story their own.
Entire bloviated biographies would become attached to a person’s name, occasionally while they were still alive. Sometimes, they played right into it and made a decent bit of coin doing so.

It wasn’t just famous gunslingers who got this treatment — it happened with mountain men, like Jim Bridger, Kit Carson, John Colter, Hugh Glass, and Jedediah Smith, and yes, John “Liver-Eating” Johnson — all to varying degrees.
Plus, the mountain man culture, if you will, lent itself to tall tales. They were fond of spinning exaggerated, boastful stories about one’s exploits around the campfire — it was sort of like a modern-day Instagram. They entertained each other with big fish stories, tall tales of the frontier.
Skip ahead a few generations to the 1950s. Interest in the Wild West hit an all-time high, and those exaggerated stories in those dime novels — the rights to which were cheap and easy to obtain — were translated to the small and big screens — muddling things even more.
The accepted “true story” of Johnson’s life developed in this climate as published in the 1958 biography Crow Killer: The Saga of Liver-Eating Johnson by Raymond W. Thorp and Robert Bunker.
The Real Jeremiah Johnson was Either a Loveable Joker or a Vicious Cannibal
The two authors never met. Bunker never even looked at Thorp’s notes before he crafted the bits and pieces he massaged into a cohesive book. Meanwhile, Thorp was widely known for embellishing stories, including his romanticized and largely fictional account of the life of Jim Bowie.
Today, the book comes with an introduction written in 2015 by Nathan E. Bender that basically says, “Most of this book is unsubstantiated bullshit.” But that doesn’t make it any less fascinating of a read.
The mountain man known as John Johnson did, indeed, exist. His given last name was actually Johnston, though he eventually went by Johnson. The stories that have been floating around about Johnson since the mid-1800s have painted him in various lights.

Some describe him as a jolly, practical-joke-playing man of physically large stature who loved a tall tale and making a living off the land as a trapper and hunter.
Others portray him as a vicious cannibal who could twist a man’s head off with his bare hands and who waged a gruesome one-man vendetta against the Crow tribe of Native Americans, killing them outright where he found them and leaving poisoned food and blankets behind for the ones he didn’t.
Of course, those stories got all mixed together and made into the bigger-than-life yarns about Johnson we have today. And if you dig a little, it just gets muddier and muddier.
Did He Really Eat Long Pork?
Nobody knows if Johnson ever ate human flesh of any kind. The whole idea that he actually feasted on the livers of the many Crow natives he allegedly killed as an extra “F you” to their beliefs while avenging the murder of his wife and child most likely came from a skit Johnson performed while he was part of a traveling Wild West show in the 1880s, according to Bender.
The name “Crow Killer” was invented for a good book title and was almost certainly never applied to Johnson while he was alive.
“In fact, Johnson had quite a bit to do with manipulating his public image, and he may have even consciously modeled his own story after that of Tom Quick and Lewis Wetzel. Quick had declared a one-man war on the Delaware Nation in northwestern New Jersey in the 1700s, where Johnson was born and raised,” Bender writes.
“In 1884 Johnson starred in an early Wild West show with Calamity Jane and Curley, one of Custer’s Crow Indian scouts,” Bender says.
“In this traveling show Johnson reenacted and greatly dramatized his one-man Indian fights of the 1860s and 1870s and the eating of a Sioux warrior’s liver, though using Crow Indians as paid actors.
“This is apparently where Raymond Thorp got the idea of Liver-Eating Johnson fighting Crow Indians, no doubt during his work interviewing and writing the biography of Wild West showman Doc Carver.”
The Big Screen Johnson With the Sweet Beard

The version of John Johnson most people are familiar with is the protagonist of the 1972 movie Jeremiah Johnson directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Robert Redford in the titular role smiling through his impressive beard with the Rocky Mountains providing an unforgettable backdrop.
You’ll often hear that the film is based on the Crow Killer book, but the entire structure of the movie — and the actual character that Redford plays — is largely pulled from another book: Mountain Man: A Novel of Male and Female in the Early American West by Vardis Fisher, published in 1965, which itself is a fictionalized retelling of the Liver-Eating Johnson mythos.
Fisher greatly softens the character, called Sam Minard in the novel, making him a mild-mannered Mexican War veteran who sets out to find solitude in the mountains and learn to live on his own. This is very much how Jeremiah Johnson is portrayed in the film: a prematurely world-weary young veteran who doesn’t want much to do with people anymore. In reality, Johnson was probably more like a younger Bear Claw (Will Geer).

Some of the plot details from the novel are different in the movie, but the structure is the same. In both, Johnson comes upon a crazed woman who survived an attack by natives that left her husband and sons dead.
In the novel, Johnson puts her under his protection, something that the real Johnson is likely to have done, as it’s cited in all and the earliest accounts.
In the movie, Johnson instead adopts the crazy woman’s only surviving son, left mute from the tragedy he endured.
Soon after, due to a language barrier, the movie Johnson ends up accidentally trading some ponies and scalps he and his partner, Del Gue, took from a marauding band of Blackfoot warriors to the chief of the Flathead tribe, in exchange for the chief’s daughter, Swan (Delle Bolton), in marriage.
Johnson, Swan, and Caleb then build a cabin and a happy life together.
In Fisher’s novel, Minard simply takes a native woman from the Flathead tribe as a wife and they have a child together.
When he goes to hunt one winter, leaving his wife and child at home so they don’t have to endure sleeping outdoors in the harsh weather, Minard returns to find his family massacred by members of the Crow tribe. He then sets out to kill those responsible.
The incident is portrayed about the same way in Crow Killer, the only difference being that his child hadn’t been born yet and Johnson’s wife was pregnant at the time of her murder.
Another layer is added to this pivotal event in Johnson’s life for the movie in an attempt to make it more understandable and provide some motivation for the attack on his family.

One day, a column of U.S. Cavalry soldiers arrive at Johnson’s cabin and ask him to serve as their guide to help them find and assist a wagon train of settlers stranded in the mountains before they freeze to death.
He reluctantly agrees, even though he should be hunting buffalo at the time. When the party comes to a Crow burial ground blocking their way through a mountain pass, Johnson tells the troop leader that they have to take another route that would add about 20 miles to their trip.
The soldiers protest and pressure him to lead them through despite his reservations, which he does.
When returning on the same route, Johnson notices his wife’s distinctive blue trinkets adorning the graves in the burial ground. He rushes back to his cabin, where he finds his family murdered.
Jeremiah Johnson’s Vengeance Ride
The next part is pretty much the same in the novel and the movie. He sits in a stupor for a while, as one does, before wrapping his wife and son in blankets and setting the family’s cabin afire — again, as one does.
He then tracks the band of Crow who killed his family, finds them with all the goods they stole from his home, and fuckin’ kills them all in a solo, berserker attack — all but one, whom he allows to escape.
This revenge quest is the heart of the Johnson legend. Much like Wyatt Earp set out on a vengeance quest to kill every member of the gang who killed his brother, the real Liver-Eating Johnson is said to have done something similar, killing hundreds of Crow in the following years as retribution for the death of his family.
The stories said he made it a habit to eat some of their livers along the way, which would have been considered a severe insult to the Crow.
Depending on the source, Johnson killed anywhere between 300 and 1,299 natives. That latter number is one Johnson boasted of personally, according to Bender.
In the movie, this is also softened a bit, making the Crow out to be the aggressors.

After the initial attack on the group that killed his family, Johnson is plagued by regular assaults from individual Crow warriors attempting to confront and defeat the man who became their tribe’s biggest adversary.
He faces one after the other and kills them all — with no eating of livers. (For some reason, Warner Bros. must not have wanted Redford chowing down on human patè.) This is shown through a montage of Johnson defending himself from various attacks that fade into one another.
When he meets up with his old partner, Del Gue, after a significant amount of time has passed, Johnson kills a lone attacker at their campsite like it’s a chore that’s simply part of his life now.
Did any of this really happen? The answer seems to be: Nobody knows, but probably not.
According to some, Johnson simply liked taking scalps from the Crow and other Native Americans, which he sold.
Others say he took no more scalps than any other mountain man of the day, but that he played up his reputation as an “Indian killer” when he got into the self-promotion business and Wild West shows at the end of his life. This is Bender’s conclusion.
The Tallest Jeremiah Johnson Tale of All
For context, there’s an absurd tale attributed to Johnson, which some say actually happened to Boone Helm and others say is merely an embellished version of the incredible real survival story of Hugh Glass, and was more recently chopped up and reworked in much the same way for the film The Revenant.
Johnson was supposedly ambushed and captured by Blackfoot warriors who planned to sell him to the Crow. As the tale goes, Johnson escaped his bonds and killed the man guarding him, quickly scalping the Blackfoot and cutting off one of his legs.

He then set out into the freezing wilderness, shirtless, and made a 200-mile journey on foot to Del Gue’s cabin — in some versions he returned to his own cabin. He survived the trip by eating the man’s severed leg along the way.
If anything, this story shows how grisly the public appetite was for these kinds of tales.
Even the headstone on Johnson’s grave is partly bullshit.
In 1974, they dug the man’s bones up from his eternal resting place in California and reinterred him in Cody, Wyoming.
His new tombstone, somewhat appropriately, reads: “John ‘Jeremiah Liver-Eating’ Johnston,” seemingly mashing the various versions of the man into one inscription, the name “Jeremiah” having been invented for the movie two years prior.

We Can All Agree on Jeremiah Johnson’s Guns
One thing people do seem to agree on is that during the bulk of his mountain man years, the real Johnson was known to carry a Colt Walker revolver with rosewood grips that matched the handle on his bowie knife, along with his famous Hawken rifle.
In the movie, Jeremiah has a bowie knife and carries both a .30- and a .50-caliber Hawken, but the only handgun he carries is a single-shot caplock pistol given to him by the crazy woman.

(He obtains the .50-caliber rifle when he liberates it from the frozen limbs of Hatchet Jack after discovering his body early in the film.)
After the Civil War, Johnson is said to have changed his weapons of choice to a stone tomahawk given to him as a tribal antique and a .45 Army Colt revolver. We think. In truth, the only possible way to get an accurate picture of Liver-Eating Johnson is to read both books, watch the movie, and decide for yourself.
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FAQs
The True Story Behind ‘Jeremiah Johnson’: What We Know (and Don’t)? ›
Based upon a real-life trapper named John Johnston, nicknamed "
The screenplay is based partly on the life of a legendary man called Liver-Eating Jonston, inspired by Raymond Thorp and Robert Bunker's book 'Crow Killer' and Vardis Fisher's 'Mountain Man.
What happened to Jeremiah Johnson's wife and son? ›Mountain man and trapper, Jeremiah Johnson marries Swan, a Flathead Indian woman. When Crow Indians murder her and the child they adopted, Jeremiah devotes his life to avenging their deaths by killing as many Crow Indians as he can, just as they vow to kill him.
How big was liver eating Johnson? ›Liver Eating Johnson was a violent, drunk, mountain of a man who didn't have a very high reputation but was by no doubt the most fearless fighter and he became a legend. Johnston was built like a brick wall with a towering height over six feet tall and weighing 280 pounds none of which was fat.
What gun did Jeremiah Johnson find? ›50 caliber Hawken rifle for the first time. Jeremiah loading his Hawken rifle. Jeremiah hunting with Bear Claw and using his advice to aim his rifle over his horses saddle.
How accurate is the movie Jeremiah? ›Although a good part of the movie's story is speculation, it remains true to the heart of the story and gives some interesting insight into the struggles Jeremiah might have confronted. It beautifully shows his doubt and faith as well as his resistance and submission. The acting is believable and compelling.
What did Jeremiah Johnson do to the Indians? ›The stories said he made it a habit to eat some of their livers along the way, which would have been considered a severe insult to the Crow. Depending on the source, Johnson killed anywhere between 300 and 1,299 natives.
Who saved Jeremiah from death? ›Ebed-Melech is notable for rescuing the prophet Jeremiah from the cistern into which he had been cast to his death. Later Jeremiah relayed God's message to him saying that he, Ebed-Melech, would "not fall by the sword" during the Fall of Jerusalem to the Babylonians because he had put his trust in Him (God).
Why did Jeremiah Johnson burn his cabin? ›He rushes back to his cabin to find his wife and stepson dead, murdered by the Crows. Johnson is wracked with guilt and grief. After some time, he tenderly places the boy and his wife in the bed, covers them, and sets fire to the cabin.
Why did Jeremiah not get married? ›He was denied participation in the ordinary joys and sorrows of his fellowmen and did not marry.
How does Liver King eat liver every day? ›
The Liver King says he eats about a pound of raw liver each day, a quantity that he says is “way too much” for most organ novices, who should start with three ounces, two times a week. He says can manage the massive dose of folate, iron, and vitamins A and B because he understands the science behind it.
How was Liver King so rich? ›How did Liver King make his money? After marrying Liver Queen Barbara Johnson, Liver King founded a vertically integrated dentistry practice with his wife—a business they eventually sold. After exiting from their successful dentist practice, the Johnsons began selling nutritional supplements and influencing full-time.
How is Liver King so ripped? ›An important aspect of this diet is to abstain from consuming processed foods. The hunter-gatherer mentality is paramount to the ancestral way of living and Johnson credits this unique lifestyle for his incredible physique. Johnson claims that he has built his physique naturally by consuming raw organ meat.
How did the mountain men clean their rifles? ›Plain old water and soap was the handiest and cheapest cleanser. Hot water was preferable, as it would dry quickly before rust could set in, whereas cold water could start the rusting process if the gun wasn't oiled right away.
What was John Wayne's gun? ›Wayne used the Winchester Model 1892 in a dozen films. The Saddle Ring Carbine version appeared about half of the time. As with the Colt Single Action Army, Winchester's rifle appeared in some of the Duke's most remembered and beloved films.
Was Josh Randall's gun real? ›Was Josh Randall's Wanted: Dead or Alive ”Mare's Leg” Winchester based on a real Old West gun? “Mare's Leg” was conceived by the show's writers and by Producer John Robinson, but the firearm as portrayed didn't exist—it had to be created for CBS's Wanted: Dead or Alive.
Is Delle Bolton still alive? › When did Jeremiah Johnson come out? › Where is Jeremiah Johnson's grave at? ›His body was buried in a Los Angeles veterans' cemetery. However, in 1974, after a six-month campaign led by 25 seventh-grade students and their teacher, Johnson's remains were relocated to Cody, Wyoming. His epitaph reads "No More Trails".
What was the name of the mountain man who befriended Jeremiah Johnson? ›As the story goes, his first stop was a cabin on the Little Snake River in northern Colorado. He honed his trapping, hunting, and survival skills with a more seasoned mountain man that he had befriended, Old John Hatcher. After developing the necessary skills to survive in the wilderness, Johnson headed out on his own.