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Wagon Train is an American Western television series that was produced by Revue Studios. [1] The series was inspired by the 1950 John Ford film Wagon Master. [2] It ran for eight seasons, with the first episode airing in the United States on September 18, 1957 () and the final episode on May 2, 1965 (). [3]
This was one of Dan Duryea's rare "sympathetic" roles, and one that he would reprise for the final Wagon Train episode of the same season. [6] In his fourth appearance on Wagon Train, he played a mentally unstable man obsessed by demons and superstitions in "The Bleymier Story", broadcast 16 November 1960, eleven days after the death of Ward Bond.
Season 3 Episode 27: "Disappearing Trick" 1959: Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Brad Taylor: Season 4 Episode 18: "The Last Dark Step" 1960: Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Ray Marchand: Season 5 Episode 38: "Hooked" 1957–62: Wagon Train: Flint McCullough: Last onscreen episode is Season 5, Episode 36; credit only in episode 37 1965-66: A Man Called ...
Some of the location work for the 34 half-hour black and white episodes were filmed in California's Sierra Nevada and Mojave Desert. [2] The series starred Robert Horton, who had costarred on Wagon Train from 1957 to 1962.
July 27, 1879, Good Springs in the Nevada desert. A wagon train trail boss has turned up murdered. The sheriff (Jim Bannon) suspects trail pirates of changing signs on the trail, sending the wagons away from water, then robbing and murdering them when they run out of water. Bat says he will lead the next wagon train.
Season 2 Episode 18: "Doc Bell" Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre: Sheriff Galt Season 2 Episode 14: "Trial by Fear" 1959 Wagon Train: Matthew Sinclair Season 2 Episode 30: "The Duke LeMay Story" (airdate: April 29, 1959) Have Gun – Will Travel: Mayor Season 2 Episode 17: "The Traffetta Mayor" (airdate: January 10, 1959) One Step Beyond: Will ...
He played the Arapaho Medicine Man in the Wagon Train" season 1 episode "The Gabe Carswell Story" (aired 1/14/1958). His best-known television role was as "Chief Wild Eagle", chief of the Hekawi tribe, on the western comedy F Troop (1965–1967).
"The Colter Craven Story" (spelled as The Coulter Craven Story in the episode but with the first name somehow winding up more commonly spelled as "Colter" in countless publications and references) is the November 23, 1960 black-and-white episode of the American television western series, Wagon Train, which had an eight-season run from 1957 to ...