When Claims are Political Fiction: The Case of Devon Reese's “5th‑Generation Nevadan” Claim

Why it matters when a candidate for Reno mayor makes a claim that cannot be reconciled with the historical record and uses it to further his political ambitions.

Michael Leonard

Mar 23, 2026

In Reno politics, biography is currency. Candidates reach for stories that signal belonging, continuity, and legitimacy, especially when they are trying to appeal to long‑time residents who remember a smaller, more tightly knit city.

One of the most coveted badges is the phrase “5th‑generation Nevadan.” It’s a shorthand for deep roots, pioneer grit, and a family presence that predates the boom‑and‑bust cycles that shaped this region.

That’s why it matters when a candidate makes a claim that cannot be reconciled with Nevada’s historical record and uses it to further his political ambitions.

Over the past year, mayoral candidate Devon Reese has repeatedly described himself as a “5th‑generation Nevadan.” He has said it on Nextdoor, repeated it at public events, and used it as a credential when speaking to long‑time Reno families.

But the claim collapses under even modest scrutiny. There is no evidence that he descends from Nevada pioneers, and substantial evidence that he does not.

In a long thread on Nextdoor, Devon Reese argues with neighbors and invokes the 5th-generation claim to lend credibility to his statements.

Link to post on Nextdoor: https://nextdoor.com/p/CkdcbfCfTQgy/c/1544573300

Nevada’s Settlement Timeline Makes the Claim Improbable

To understand why, start with the basic chronology:

  • Reno did not exist until 1868. To be 5th-Generation, your ancestors would have to be here near the time of the founding.

  • Before that, the Truckee Meadows was a way station, not a settled community.

  • In the 1850s, Northern Nevada had fewer than two dozen Euro‑American ranching families, all well‑documented.

  • The Comstock mining camps were populated mostly by single men, not families who produced multi-generational lineages.

The number of families who can legitimately claim 5th‑generation Nevada status is extremely small — and their names are known. “Reese” is not among them.

Devon Reese stands up at a fundraiser and states that he is a 5th-generation Nevadan and that he is raising 6th-generation Nevadans.

Link to TikTok video: https://www.tiktok.com/@devonreese2026/video/7573848427012951326

The Real Reese Pioneers and the Attempted Association

Reese has indicated that he descends from the Reese brothers, John and Enoch, who established Mormon Station in Genoa in 1851. These men are Nevada pioneers. Their story is well‑documented, and it does not intersect with his.

  • John and Enoch Reese were Mormon merchants from Salt Lake City, not Nevada settlers.

  • They operated the J. & E. Reese Mercantile in Salt Lake City, Utah.

  • They traveled to Genoa with freight wagons, ran a trading post, and returned to Salt Lake City, Utah.

  • Their descendants are traceable through LDS church records; they are not in Nevada, they are in Utah.

Reese has publicly stated that John Reese “sent for his family in New York,” implying that he settled in Genoa and raised a family that eventually included Devon Reese, a claim contradicted by historical sources.

Link to the Mormon Station Park’s page: https://parks.nv.gov/parks/mormon-station

Screenshot from Reese’s Nextdoor post about his link to John Reese. He has made similar claims elsewhere at other times. He distorts the history to make his claim more believable.

What the Public Records Actually Show About Devon Reese

The genealogical facts available through public sources are straightforward:

  • His father, Thomas Reese, was born in Ontario, California, in 1934.

  • None of his grandparents was born in Nevada. He has no roots.

This makes a 5th‑generation claim impossible. Reese is a first‑generation Nevadan, born to parents who moved here.

Claiming pioneer lineage without evidence is like what the military calls stolen valor.

Link to the obituary of Thomas Reese, Devon’s father: https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/rgj/name/thomas-reese-obituary?id=20484554

What Real Pioneer Lineage Looks Like: A Case Study

am a 5th‑generation descendant of Utah/Nevada Territory pioneers, and I know what documentation looks like. It requires names, dates, records, graves, and institutional archives, and some family photos.

My great‑great‑great‑grandfather: Bradford Leonard

Bradford Leonard entered the Salt Lake Valley in 1849 with a Mormon wagon train, bringing freight from Iowa and opening a mercantile store. His story is recorded in the archives of the Mormon Pioneer Museum, where his arrival and commercial activities are documented, and I have seen the documents there.

He is buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery, which is reserved for pioneers. I have stood at his grave.

Link to the history of the Ezra T. Benson Company that Bradford, his wife Ann, and his son George traveled with to the Salt Lake Valley: https://history.churchofjesuschrist.org/chd/organization/pioneer-company/ezra-t-benson-company-1849?lang=eng

I’m standing at the grave of my great-great-great-grandfather, Bradford Leonard, in the Salt Lake City Cemetery, which is reserved for pioneers and early settlers.

Link to Bradford Leonard on Find a Grave: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/41429755/bradford-leonard

My great‑great‑grandfather: John Ammon Powell

On my father’s maternal line, John Ammon Powell ran freight wagons from Salt Lake City to Southern Utah. He operated in the same commercial world as the Reese brothers of Mormon Station, the freight‑running network that connected Utah to the Great Basin. He most likely knew the Reese brothers.

He is buried in the Salem Cemetery, where his records appear on Find‑a‑Grave and he is written of in BYU collections.

Link to John Ammon Powell on Find a Grave: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/11257597/john_ammon-powell

Link to John Ammon Powell in BYU Library - Special Collections: https://archives.lib.byu.edu/agents/people/16754

A continuous, documented generational chain

My family’s presence in the Great Basin is traceable through:

  • Territorial records

  • Pioneer museum archives

  • Cemetery records

  • Photographs

  • Land and probate documents

  • Church and community histories

This is what a real 5th‑generation lineage looks like: verifiable, continuous, and historically anchored.

It is not something one claims casually. It is something one can prove.

I can provide dozens of links to my 5th-Generation family history, but Devon Reese cannot provide even one piece of evidence to support his claims.

Here, John Taylor Leonard and friends stand outside their mercantile store in Kamas, Utah.

Link to the history of Bradford and George Leonard in the Kamas Valley History: https://kamasvalleyhistory.org/2020/07/20/320/comment-page-1/

This story notes that George Bradford Leonard, Sr.’s brother, John Taylor Leonard, joined the Union Army during the Civil War and was assigned to an Infantry Unit in Fort Ruby, Nevada, whose purpose was to continue to keep what had been a Pony Express route open for travelers and supplies to be moved to and from California.

My family has many of these stories that recollect our history. These stories include the wagon train expedition from the east, early settlements, ranching, mining, hunting, and descriptions of early life in the region. These stories were told to me as a child. That’s the legacy that real 5th-generation have.

Why This Matters in a Mayoral Race

In a city where pioneer families are few and where their history is part of the civic fabric, claiming a lineage you don’t have is not a harmless embellishment. It is an attempt to borrow prestige from families who actually built this region when it was still a frontier. It’s what the military calls stolen valor.

It is also a question of credibility. If a candidate is willing to revise their own family history for political advantage, what else are they willing to revise?

Authenticity is not about where your great‑great‑grandparents lived. It is about whether you tell the truth about where you come from.

The Bottom Line - It’s not True

Devon Reese’s claim to be a 5th‑generation Nevadan is:

  • unsupported by evidence,

  • contradicted by public records, and

  • inconsistent with Nevada’s settlement history.

In a mayoral race where trust, transparency, and civic integrity are on the ballot, Reno deserves facts — not folklore.

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