In its final 13 episodes, which aired in 1962,
Bronco trod much of the same ground it
had in previous years, with the titular character serving in a different
capacity each week and brushing up against historical figures and events to try
to infuse some interest in an otherwise derivative western. In these last
episodes he encounters
Wild Bill Hickock for the second time in "One
Evening in Abilene" (March 19, 1962) where Hickock serves as marshal. He
meets
General William Tecumseh Sherman in "The Immovable Object"
(April 16, 1962), having fought against him in the Civil War as a Rebel
captain. And he receives a letter from
President Abraham Lincoln while carrying
out a secret mission for the U.S. government in "The Last Letter"
(March 5, 1962). This is presented as the "last letter" Lincoln wrote
before his assassination on April 14, 1865, just 5 days after
Gen. Robert E.
Lee surrendered to Grant to end the Civil War. What are the chances Bronco, an
officer in the Confederate Army, would be entrusted with a top secret mission
for the government he fought against just 5 days after his General's surrender?
But this episode, like roughly half of those aired in 1962,
centers around the theme of burying the hatchet after the bloody and divisive
Civil War. This episode also ties into another historical event of the era--the
French takeover of Mexico--and Bronco's secret mission is to help fund the
deposed Mexican government of
Juarez against the French-installed monarchy of
Maximilian. Bronco's crew delivering a shipment of gold to Mexico is made up of
former Rebel soldiers, dubbed "Reconstructed Rebels." Some are more
honorable than others, but the real villain in this and other episodes are
those who try to play both sides against each other. In this case, renegade
McKee Bucklin conspires with the Comanches to attack his own wagon train so
that he can take control of the gold, which he has already agreed to deliver to
the French--for a price. The Mexican conflict is featured again in "Until
Kingdom Come" (March 26, 1962), only this time Bronco has been recruited
to protect a Duchess related to Maximilian, since deposed, whose nephew Philip
is heir to the throne. It doesn't make any sense that he would serve on
opposite sides of the conflict unless he, too, were nothing more than a
mercenary, but we are not expected to look for any consistency from week to
week, only to trust that whatever side our hero is on is the right one--for
that week, at least.
Bronco clashes with another duplicitous marauder in the last
episode of the series, "Then the Mountains" (April 30, 1962). Kent
Bohannon led a band of raiders who targeted both sides during the War but was
eventually court martialed and sentenced to prison but managed to escape and
now has an axe to grind with Bronco, who was one of many who testified against
him. He runs into Bohannon after one of Bohannon's associates sells and then
steals a group of horses from him while Bronco is leading a wagon train of
former Virginia Confederates headed for Oregon. In that wagon train is former
Confederate soldier Ben Cullen, who still bears ill will toward any Yankees and
makes him distrustful of anything they may tell him. This attitude gets him
into trouble while Bronco is away trying to escape from Bohannon and Cullen is
advised by Yankee Army deserter Frankie Banton not to take a promised shortcut
across the mountains. Banton knows there is no such shortcut and recognizes the
fake sign as a trap (by Bohannon, as it turns out), but Cullen refuses to
believe a Yankee would tell him the truth and leads the entire wagon train into
Bohannon's trap. As with several other episodes from 1962 wherein Bronco, the
ex-Confederate, has to tell his compatriots that the war is over and it is time
to move forward, the message here is that both sides of the War must learn to
live together again, a particularly timely message for 1962 as the Civil Rights
Movement was in full swing and moving toward the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
However, as with most television programs of the era, there is no mention of
slavery as being the central issue of the Civil War (which is only referred to
on
Bronco as the War Between the
States, the preferred term of Southerners who refused to acknowledge the real
reason for the War). TV networks and sponsors bent over backwards not to rile
up bitter Southerners just waiting for a provocation to get their dander up,
which is exactly the attitude we see from Cullen in this episode. appeasement
of Southerners is portrayed in this episode by Union Army commander Lt. Ames,
who stops Bronco's wagon train while searching for the deserter Banton. Cullen
seems ready to take offense at anything Ames says, but Ames is careful to offer
his respect to former Confederate officer Bronco as an equal, and when Bronco
gives his word that Banton is not in his wagon train, Ames is willing to accept
his word without a search, though it turns out that Bronco was mistaken, not
knowing that Banton was hiding in one of his own wagons.
Bronco also adheres to the "don't-stir-the-pot"
strategy in "One Evening in Abilene" when he advises former
Confederate soldier Clay Farraday not to go to Abilene, one of the worst cities
for former Yankee-Rebel clashes since the state of Kansas was split down the
middle during the Civil War and its citizens still fight against themselves.
Like the stubborn Ben Cullen above, Farraday refuses to take Bronco's
suggestion and even seems to welcome conflict by proudly wearing his CSA gun belt
as a sign of his loyalties, even challenging Abilene Marshal Wild Bill Hickock,
knowing that Hickock has a well-documented dislike for Southerners. Farraday
allows his infatuation with Abilene belle Donna Coe to cloud his judgment and
finally comes to realize that she was only using him to avenge the death of her
fiance at the hands of Hickock. He then decides his future lies elsewhere, away
from the cauldron of bitterness still brewing in Abilene.
The program also suggests that not all Confederates were
guilty of the crimes committed by their colleagues in "A Town That Lived
and Died" (April 9, 1962). Bronco is lured under false pretenses to a
ghost town where he is taken prisoner and subjected to a mock trial, to be
followed by a hanging, for his involvement in the town being burnt to the
ground by Confederate soldiers. But as the story is told in flashback, while
Bronco admits that he was sent as an undercover Confederate agent to lead the
citizens on a wagon train to their new destination of Lost Hope Hill so that he
could discover how they were transporting a secret shipment of gold to finance
the Union Army, he says he knew nothing about the torching of the town later,
after he had completed his assignment, by a Confederate officer who was angry
that the gold shipment was stolen out from under him by a savvy band of bank
robbers. Bronco makes the argument that he was just following orders, which
could be made by any Confederate, even those actually guilty of atrocities. A
similar argument is made on behalf of the character Johnny Davis in "Ride
the Whirlwind" (January 15, 1962). Davis was a member of the notorious
Confederate gang called Quantrill's Raiders and as such is still a trained
killer, even though he now serves as a reputable deputy to Yankee Sheriff Ben
Lockwood. Davis is fond of and loyal to Lockwood, but his past as a Confederate
killer is able to be exploited by revenge-minded hypnotist Dr. Miles Gillis,
just released from a 7-year prison sentence for aiding the enemy when he
treated Confederate soldiers so that they could return to battle. Gillis shared
a prison cell with Davis for 5 years and knows his past well, exploiting it to
secretly assign him under hypnotic suggestion to kill Lockwood and others who
were responsible for sending Gillis to jail. Davis is presented as an innocent
foil for Gillis' evil plan, even though he presumably took part in atrocities
during the War. Still,
Bronco tries
to argue that even those who committed such atrocities could be rehabilitated
and should be given a chance to prove so.
Though the subject of slavery is never broached on the
program, the first Black character finally shows up in the episode "Moment
of Doubt" (April 2, 1962). Bronco is again assigned a secret mission on
behalf of the U.S. Government--this time to infiltrate an insurrectionist anti-Democratic
group of former Confederates based in New Orleans. He is given a fake court
martial to make his record reflect that he would have a motivation for joining
the subversives, and his contact in New Orleans is a Black man named Dorso,
working as a boot black at a New Orleans hotel. Most notably, Dorso's Blackness
is never referred to nor dramatized. Bronco treats him just as he would anyone
else, and Dorso has none of the Black stereotypes seen in earlier movies or TV
programs. In fact, his role could have been played by a white actor with no
changes to the script or blocking. The only reason to cast a Black actor in the
role is to demonstrate a Black man being treated just as a white man would be
in the same position. This fits in with the approach taken elsewhere in the
series--wanting to move past the animosities of the Civil War and the century
of prejudice that followed it (and still continues to this day 60 years later)
without acknowledging the wrongs done or holding anyone accountable for them.
Like much of the peace idealism that came later in the decade, it's admirable
that a show like
Bronco would
advocate for national unity and a more equal future, but perhaps a bit naive to
think that deep-seated resentment could be washed away just by not mentioning
it.
The Actors
For the biography of Ty Hardin, see the 1960 post on Bronco.
Notable Guest Stars
Season 4, Episode 6, "Beginner's
Luck":
Buzz Martin (appeared in
Pork
Chop Hill,
The FBI Story,
PT 109, and
Shotgun Wedding) plays rancher's son Lew Gant.
Pamela Austin
(starred in
Hootenanny Hoot,
Kissin' Cousins, and
The Perils of Pauline) plays his sister
Marion.
Virginia Christine (see the biography section for the 1961 post on
Tales of Wells Fargo) plays their mother
Martha.
Hank Patterson (see the biography section for the 1962 post on
Gunsmoke) plays ranch hand Railroad
Costigan.
Hayden Rorke (shown on the left, starred in
Father's
Little Dividend,
When Worlds Collide,
and
Pillow Talk and played Steve on
Mr. Adams and Eve, Col. Farnsworth on
No Time for Sergeants, Dr. Alfred
Bellows on
I Dream of Jeannie, and
Bishop on
Dr. Kildare) plays rival rancher
Matt Wigram.
Walter Coy (Zoravac on
Rocky
Jones, Space Ranger, Jason Farrell on
A
Flame in the Wind, and was the narrator on
Frontier) plays lawman Sheriff Springer.
Gregg Palmer (see the
biography section for the 1961 post on
The
Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays gun for hire Wes Taylor.
Jean Willes (appeared
in
Invasion of the Body Snatchers,
Ocean's 11, and
Gypsy) plays saloon hostess Dolly.
Season 4, Episode 7, "Ride
the Whirlwind":
Edward Platt (appeared in
Rebel Without a Cause,
Written
on the Wind,
Designing Woman, and
North by Northwest and played the
Chief on
Get Smart) plays Willow
Springs Sheriff Ben Lockwood.
Chad Everett (shown on the right, starred in
Get Yourself a College Girl,
Made
in Paris,
The Singing Nun, and
Airplane II and played Deputy Del Stark
on
The Dakotas, Dr. Joe Gannon on
Medical Center, Paul Hagen on
Hagen, Wyatt Earp III on
The Rousters, Jack McKenna on
McKenna, Jack Manhattan on
Manhattan, AZ, and Vic on
Chemistry) plays his deputy Johnny Davis.
Vaughn Taylor (starred in
Jailhouse Rock,
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,
Psycho, and
In Cold Blood and played Ernest P. Duckweather on
Johnny Jupiter) plays ex-con hypnotist
Dr. Miles Gillis.
Willis Bouchey (Mayor Terwilliger on
The Great Gildersleeve, Springer on
Pete and Gladys, and the judge 23 times on
Perry Mason) plays Gillis' sentencer Judge Fowler.
Pamela Austin
(see "Beginner's Luck" above) plays his daughter Mary.
Robert
Anderson (Park Street, Jr. on
The Court
of Last Resort and Aeneas MacLinahan on
Wichita
Town) plays livery owner Len Peters.
George Petrie (Nathan Wade on
Search for Tomorrow, Freddie Muller on
The Honeymooners, Don Rudy Aiuppo on
Wiseguy, Harv Smithfield on
Dallas, and Sid on
Mad About You) plays attorney Tom Egan.
Fred Sherman (Tommy the
tailor on
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp and Burt Purdy on
Cimarron City)
plays Willow Springs Postmaster Freyes.
Season 4, Episode 8, "A Sure
Thing":
Alan Hale, Jr. (shown on the left, played Biff Baker on
Biff
Baker U.S.A., Casey Jones on
Casey
Jones, and The Skipper on
Gilligan's
Island) plays cattle drover Squire.
Mickey Simpson (Boley on
Captain David Grief) plays his Buddy
Jonah.
Trevor Bardette (see the biography section for the 1960 post on
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays
rancher Dutch Vandervort.
Barry Kelley (starred in
The Asphalt Jungle,
The
Manchurian Candidate, and
The Love
Bug and played Charlie Anderson on
Big
Town, Jim Rafferty on
The Tom Ewell
Show, Mr. Slocum on
Pete and Gladys,
and Carol's father on
Mister Ed)
plays crooked rancher Poole.
Joan Taylor (see the biography section for the
1961 post on
The Rifleman) plays widow
rancher Lorain Mitchell.
Russell Thorson (Det. Lt. Otto Lindstrom on
The Detectives and William Kennerly on
Peyton Place) plays fellow rancher Jack
Armitage.
William Phipps (see the biography section for the 1960 post on
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays
disgruntled rancher Madden.
Herb Vigran (Muley Evans on
The Life of Riley, Ernest Hinshaw on
The Ed Wynn Show, and Judge Brooker on
Gunsmoke and voiced Glum on
The
Adventures of Gulliver and Mr. Dinkle on
Shirt Tales) plays general store owner White.
Harry Harvey (Sheriff
Tom Blodgett on
The Roy Rogers Show,
Mayor George Dixon on
Man Without a Gun,
and Houghton Stott on
It's a Man's World)
plays hotel clerk Benjamin Carstairs.
Marshall Reed (Inspector Fred Asher on
The Lineup) plays trail boss Harrison.
Season 4, Episode 9, "Trail
of Hatred":
Robert Carson (Mr. Maddis on
The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show) plays U.S. Army fort
commander Col. Cummings.
Rian Garrick (Det. Bruce Hanna on
Manhunt) plays secret assignment commander Lt. Steve Powell.
Kent
Smith (shown on the right, starred in
Cat People,
This Land Is Mine,
Hitler's Children,
Curse of
the Cat People,
Nora Prentiss,
The Spiral Staircase, and
The Fountainhead and played Dr. Robert
Morton on
Peyton Place and Edgar
Scoville on
The Invaders) plays his father
Dana Powell.
James Griffith (Aaron Adams on
Trackdown
and Deputy Tom Ferguson on
U.S. Marshal)
plays greedy Army soldier Cpl. Fonda.
Joseph Gallison (appeared in
All the Young Men, The Wackiest Ship in the Army, and
PT 109 and played Bill Matthews on
Another World and Dr. Neil Curtis on
Days of Our Lives) plays naive soldier Pvt. Foster.
Ken Mayer (Maj.
Robbie Robertson on
Space Patrol)
plays Sgt. Prouty.
Season 4, Episode 10, "Rendezvous
With a Miracle":
Mike Road (Marshal Tom Sellers on
Buckskin, Lt. Joe Switolski on
The
Roaring 20's, and provided the voice for Race Bannon on
Johnny Quest and Ugh on
Space Ghost) plays reformed bank robber
Mike Bestor.
Gloria Talbott (shown on the left, starred in
The
Cyclops,
Daughter of Dr. Jekyll,
and
I
Married a Monster From Outer Space and played Moneta on
Zorro) plays his girlfriend Valerie Ames.
Mabel Albertson (Mrs. Whiting on
Those
Whiting Girls, Irene Brady on
The Tom
Ewell Show, Mrs. Sprague on
The Andy Griffith Show, Mildred Hollinger on
That
Girl, and Phyllis Stephens on
Bewitched)
plays mission leader Mother Maria Theodore.
Rico Alaniz (Mr. Cousin on
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays
Mexican bandit Rick Cardido.
Marshall Reed (see "A Sure Thing" above)
plays Bestor's pursuer Marshal Hank Barton.
Ollie O'Toole (Mr. Meeker on
Circus Boy) plays stagecoach worker Clem.
Harry Strang (played the sheriff on
The
Adventures of Rin Tin Tin) plays a stagecoach driver.
Season 4, Episode 11, "Destinies
West":
Kathleen Crowley (shown on the right, played Terry Van Buren on
Waterfront and Sophia Starr on
Batman)
plays wanted Confederate spy Belle Siddons.
Ed Prentiss (the narrator on
Trackdown and played Carl Jensen on
The Virginian) plays Kansas U.S. Army
fort commander Col. Welch.
Robert McQueeney (Conley Wright on
The Gallant Men) plays Bronco's
spy-catching partner Major Creighton.
Leo Gordon (appeared in
Gun Fury,
Hondo,
Quantrill's Raiders,
and
Big Top Pee-wee and played Big
Mike McComb on
Maverick) plays rancher
Nero Hollister.
Jon Lormer (Harry Tate on
Lawman,
Sam Watkins on
The Real McCoys, the
autopsy surgeon on
Perry Mason, Simon
Benjamin on
The Young Marrieds, and
Judge Irwin A. Chester on
Peyton Place)
plays Bonnetville physician Doc Emmery.
Bing Russell (father of Kurt Russell,
played Deputy Clem Foster on
Bonanza)
plays disgraced Union soldier Rance Crosby.
Donald "Red" Barry (played
Red Ryder in the movie serial
The
Adventures of Red Ryder, and played Lt. Snedigar on
Surfside 6, The Grand Vizier and Tarantula on
Batman, Capt. Red Barnes on
Police
Woman, and Jud Larabee on
Little
House on the Prairie) plays stable worker Stumpy.
Gregg Palmer (see
"Beginner's Luck" above) plays Missouri Raider member Colton.
Season 4, Episode 12, "The
Last Letter":
Robert Colbert (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1961 post
on
Maverick) plays "Reconstructed
Rebel" Quill.
Richard Garland (starred in
Attack of the Crab Monsters,
Panic
in Year Zero, and
Mutiny in Outer
Space and played Clay Horton on
Lassie)
plays Bronco's commander Capt. Grey.
Robert J. Wilke (appeared in
Best of the Badmen,
High Noon,
The Far Country,
Night Passage, and
Stripes and played Capt. Mendoza on
Zorro) plays renegade McKee Bucklin.
Joseph Gallison (see
"Trail of Hatred" above) plays his son Rob.
Mickey Simpson (see
"A Sure Thing" above) plays Reconstructed Rebel Dud Miller.
Jackie
Searl (began as a child actor, appearing in
Tom
Sawyer (1930),
Huckleberry Finn
(1931),
Alice in Wonderland (1933),
Great Expectations(1934), and
Little Lord Fauntleroy) plays Reconstructed
Rebel Snowball.
Harry Harvey, Jr. (son of actor Harry Harvey, Sr., appeared in
Reefer Madness,
Moonlight in Vermont,
Dangerous
Years, and
Forbidden Planet,
script supervisor on
Mannix) plays Reconstructed
Rebel Midge.
Doye O'Dell (member of music group Sons of the Pioneers, host of
Cowboy Thrills) plays Reconstructed
Rebel Marsten.
Season 4, Episode 13, "One Evening
in Abilene":
Jack Cassidy (shown on the right, Tony Award-winning father of David and Shaun
Cassidy and husband of Shirley Jones, played Oscar North on
He & She) plays Abilene Sheriff Wild
Bill Hickock.
Lisa Gaye (Collette DuBois on
The
Bob Cummings Show and Gwen Kirby on
How
to Marry a Millionaire) plays woman looking for someone to kill him, Donna
Coe.
George Petrie (see "Ride the Whirlwind" above) plays her father
Jack.
Tony Young (son of actor Carleton G. Young, played Cord on
Gunslinger) plays drifter Tod Chapman.
Lee
Van Cleef (starred in
High Noon,
The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms,
For a Few Dollars More,
and
The
Good, The Bad and the Ugly) plays Bronco's foreman Charley Clune.
Bud
Osborne (played stagecoach drivers in dozens of westerns and in episodes of
The Cisco Kid,
Annie Oakley,
The Range Rider,
Hopalong Cassidy,
The Lone Ranger,
The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok,
The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin,
Rescue
8,
Zorro,
Law of the Plainsman,
Johnny
Ringo,
Cheyenne,
The Texan,
Maverick, and
Rawhide)
plays trail hand Piney.
Season 4, Episode 14, "Until
Kingdom Come":
Jacqueline Beer (appeared in
Pillow Talk,
The Prize,
and
Made in Paris and played Suzanne
Fabry on
77 Sunset Strip) plays exiled
Mexican Duchess Eugenia.
Rodolfo Acosta (appeared in
Wings of the Hawk,
Flaming
Star, and
The Sons of Katie Elder
and played Vaquero on
The High Chaparral)
plays her pursuer Juan Rodriguez.
Philip Carey (shown on the left, starred in
I Was a Communist for the FBI, Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison,
Calamity Jane,
Mister Roberts,
Dead Ringer,
and
Three For Texas and played Lt.
Michael Rhodes on
Tales of the 77th
Bengal Lancers, Philip Marlowe on
Philip
Marlowe, Capt. Edward Parmalee on
Laredo,
and Asa Buchanan on
One Life to Live)
plays former journalist Josh Glendon.
Ken Lynch (see the biography section for
the 1961 post on
Checkmate) plays crooked
ex-con Sheriff Lacey.
Kathleen Freeman (Katie on
Topper, Marilly on
Mayor of
the Town, Bertha Krause on
The Bob
Cummings Show, Flo Shafer on
The
Beverly Hillbillies, Kate Harwell on
Funny
Face, Iris Belmont on
Lotsa Luc,
and Sister Mary Dorothy on
General
Hospital) plays widow rancher Mrs. Kelly.
Season 4, Episode 15, "Moment
of Doubt":
Frank Wilcox (see the biography section for the 1961 post on
The Untouchables) plays an Army colonel
who gives Bronco his assignment.
Walter Brooke (shown on the right, appeared in
The Graduate,
Tora! Tora! Tora!, and
The Nude Bomb and played Bill Morgan on
Three Steps to Heaven, Henry Forsythe on
The Young Marrieds, D.A. Frank
Scanlon on
The Green Hornet, Mr.
Gibson on
Bright Promise, D.A. Wayne
Charles on
Days of Our Lives, and
Clarence Johnson on
The Waltons)
plays Undersecretary for the Department of War Hammond Craig.
Bill Walker (appeared
in
The Harlem Globetrotters,
The Outcast, and
Porgy and Bess and played Obadiah on
Yancy Derringer) plays boot black Dorso.
Tol Avery (Speaker Bert
Metcalf on
Slattery's People) plays insurrectionist
group leader Turlowe.
Earl Hammond (Hal Soames on
Valiant Lady, Captain Sovine on
The
Clear Horizon, and voiced Mon-star on
Silverhawks
and Mumm-ra, Jaga, and Vultureman on
Thundercats)
plays one of his recruits Oswald Mercer.
Doodles Weaver (narrated Spike Jones'
horse-racing songs and hosted
A Day With
Doodles) plays hotel barber Grimes.
Season 4, Episode 16, "A Town
That Lived and Died":
Robert Rockwell (shown on the left, played Phillip Boynton on
Our Miss Brooks, Sam Logan on
The Man From Blackhawk, Dean Chalmers
and Will Thorne on
Lassie, Tom Bishop
on
Diff'rent Strokes, Dr. Simon
Hopkins on
Days of Our Lives, and
Wally Overmier on
Growing Pains)
plays former Union Army officer Van Dix.
Jolene Brand (Anna Maria Verdugo on
Zorro and Pink Cloud on
Westward Ho!) plays his wife Emily.
Ahna
Capri (Mary Rose on
Room for One More)
plays Emily at age 15.
Russell Thorson (see "A Sure Thing" above)
plays ghost town former sheriff Frank Sutton.
John Alderson (Sgt. Bullock on
Boots and Saddles and Wyatt Earp on
Doctor Who) plays gold miner Francis
Randolph.
E.J. Andre (Eugene Bullock on
Dallas)
plays bank robber Murdo.
Lane Chandler (Tom Pike on
Lawman) plays gold transfer plotter Tom Finch.
Season 4, Episode 17, "The
Immovable Object":
William Fawcett (Clayton on
Duffy's Tavern, Marshal George Higgins on
The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin, and Pete Wilkey on
Fury) plays cantankerous farmer Tom
Christopher.
Maggie Pierce (shown on the right, played Barbara Crabtree on
My Mother the Car) plays his "granddaughter" Melvina.
Mike Road (see "Rendezvous With a Miracle" above) plays newspaper
reporter Emmett Dawson.
George N. Neise (Capitan Felipe Arrellanos on
Zorro, Dr. Nat Wyndham on
Wichita Town, and Colonel Thornton on
McKeever & the Colonel) plays Army
Corps of Engineers commander Major Elijah Moore.
Robert Hogan (Gilly Gillespie
on
The Young Marrieds, Rev. Tom
Winter on
Peyton Place, Asst. DA
Stephens on
Bright Promise, Scott
Banning on
Days of Our Lives, Sheriff
Paul Tate on
The Manhunter, Sgt. Ted
Coppersmith on
Richie Brockelman, Private
Eye, Lt. Cmdr. Haller on
Operation
Petticoat, Nathan Welsh on
Secrets of
Midland Heights, Greg Stemple on
Alice,
Vince McKinnon on
Another World, and
L.J. McDermott on
As the World Turns)
plays his adjutant Capt. Meadows.
J. Edward McKinley (appeared in
The Angry Red Planet,
Advise & Consent,
The Interns,
The Party, and
Where Does It
Hurt?) plays the New Mexico governor.
Frank Ferguson (Gus Broeberg on
My Friend Flicka, Eli Carson on
Peyton Place, and Dr. Barton Stuart on
Petticoat Junction) plays legendary
Union Army commander Gen. William T. Sherman.
Season 4, Episode 18, "Then
the Mountains":
John Dehner (shown on the left, played Duke Williams on
The Roaring '20's, Commodore Cecil Wyntoon on
The Baileys of Balboa, Morgan Starr on
The Virginian, Cyril Bennett on
The
Doris Day Show, Dr. Charles Cleveland Claver on
The New Temperatures Rising Show, Barrett Fears on
Big Hawaii, Marshal Edge Troy on
Young Maverick, Lt. Joseph Broggi on
Enos, Hadden Marshall on
Bare Essence, and Billy Joe Erskine on
The Colbys) plays former Confederate
soldier Ben Cullen.
Med Flory (played clarinet in the Ray Anthony orchestra and
founded and played alto sax in the group Super Sax, appeared in
Gun Street,
The Nutty Professor (1963), and
The
Gumball Rally, and played Sheriff Mike McBride on
High Mountain Rangers) plays fellow former Confederate soldier
Vance Pelham.
Jim Boles (appeared in
The
Ghost and Mr. Chicken,
The Trouble
With Angels,
Angel in My Pocket,
The Love God?, and
The Apple Dumpling Gang and
played Joe on
One Man's Family)
plays Virginia emigrant Jonathan Hawley.
Susan Seaforth Hayes (Carol West on
The
Young Marrieds, Julie Olson Williams on
Days of Our Lives, JoAnna
Manning on
The Young and the Restless, Patricia Steele on
Sunset
Beach, and Ms. Preston on Venice
the Series) plays his daughter Julie Mae.
James Best (Sheriff Roscoe
P. Coltrane on
The Dukes of Hazzard
and
The Dukes) plays Army deserter
Frankie Banton.
Gerald Mohr (narrator on 19 episodes of
The Lone Ranger, Christopher Storm on
Foreign Intrigue, and voice of Mr. Fantastic and Reed Richards on
Fantastic 4) plays renegade leader Frank
Bohannon.
Ken Mayer (see "Trail of Hatred" above) plays his horse
trader.
Myron Healey (Doc Holliday on
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays Virginia emigrant Obie Dilks.
Robert
Nash (Dr. Jenkins on
Days of Our Lives)
plays Virginia emigrant Pete Calvert.
Billy M. Greene (appeared in
The Shrike,
Never Steal Anything Small, and
The
Cape Canaveral Monsters and played Skrag on
Captain Video and His Video Rangers) plays the Fort Bridger sutler.
Gregg Palmer (see "Beginner's Luck" above) plays Union Army cavalry
commander Lt. Ames.
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