Friday, May 31, 2024

What a circus! What a show!

 

Backstage look at 'Circus Life' in the Sells Floto Circus.

"I remember in the circus learning that the clown was the prince, the high prince. I always thought that the high prince was the lion or the magician, but the clown is the most important."

___ Roberto Benigni

Dog and ponies to Greatest Show On Earth

By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com  

 When I was a youngster, it was still pretty popular to go to the circus. In fact Barnum & Baily Ringling Bros. went to great efforts to convince us that we were on our way to the "Greatest Show on Earth" right there at La Plata County Fairgrounds. Elephants, Clowns, Cotton Candy, Lions, Tigers, and dancing Bears. Not to mention ... The Globe of Death, which was a circus and carnival stunt where stunt riders ride motorcycles inside a mesh sphere ball. But I might have missed the earlier heydays of the Wild West Shows and Sells Floto Circus several decades earlier.

 "The birth of the Wild West as a successful genre was largely a product of personality, dramatic acumen, and good timing. The golden age of outdoor shows began in the 1880s, and with his theatre experience Buffalo Bill already was skilled in the use of press agentry and poster advertising. His fame and credibility as a westerner lent star appeal and an aura of authenticity. Most important, Cody gave the show a dramatic narrative structure," says the Buffalo Bill Center of the West.

In the 1890s, Wild Wests began to add sideshows and other circus elements. If the West seemed too familiar, “Far East” acts such as Arabian acrobats or dancing elephants and thrill acts such as bicyclists and high divers might inject sufficient novelty to draw new spectators.

"For several reasons, the decade just before America’s entry into World War I saw audiences decline. Motion pictures captivated public attention—the West could seem more real on the screen than in the arena. Shooting declined as a spectator sport while the popularity of baseball and football soared. Riding and roping could be better showcased in rodeos, which were considerably less expensive to produce than Wild West shows. The old western stars were fading as well—even Buffalo Bill seemed a relic—and Indian people appeared to be quietly confined to reservations. The “old West” was no longer so exotic nor, at the same time, so relevant to a world of heavy industry and mechanized warfare," says Buffalo Bill Center.

The Sells-Floto Circus was formed in the early 1900s from a combination of the Floto Dog & Pony Show and the Sells Brothers Circus. It toured the United States as an independent circus until 1921, when it was incorporated into the American Circus Corporation. In September 1929 this corporation's circuses were acquired by John Ringling, and by 1933 Sells-Floto ceased to exist. 

 "Cody’s show went bankrupt in July 1913. In a sign of the times, he immediately obtained backing to make a five-reel film, The Indian Wars. The Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Real Wild West had the bad luck to be in Great Britain in August 1914, losing the show’s horses to the war effort. The 101 continued intermittently to tour the States through the 1920s. Western film stars such as Tom Mix started short-lived Wild Wests, and in 1938 Colonel Tim McCoy produced probably the last great traditional Wild West show. It folded after less than a month on the road."

 

 

This colorful lithograph advertises the upcoming street parade of the Sells-Floto Circus, promoting ticket sales to the local residents for the twice-a-day shows. The artwork captures the grandeur of the American circus parade in the 1920s. The parade is led by a rider wearing an 18th-century costume and carrying a circus banner. Behind the rider is a group of mounted horsemen, elephants in costumes worn in big production number during the show ("spec costuming"), a band, and a number of circus wagons. Several of the elephants and wagons promote the Sells-Floto name. The circus parade was presented daily on the streets of the local hosting community before the first performance of the day and consisted of as much entertainment and grandeur as a circus could muster.


This photograph of 1924 shows a group of female circus performers climbing onto tableau wagon number 83 of the Sells-Floto Circus, possibly in preparation for a parade. A large draft horse is hitched to the wagon. A baggage wagon with the Sells-Floto name can be seen in the background. The Sells-Floto Circus was formed in the early 1900s from a combination of the Floto Dog & Pony Show and the Sells Brothers Circus. It toured the United States as an independent circus until 1921, when it was incorporated into the American Circus Corporation. In September 1929, this corporation's circuses were acquired by John Ringling, and by 1933 Sells-Floto ceased to exist. It enjoyed a brief revival in 1937-38 as part of the Al G. Barnes and Sells-Floto Combined Circus. The photograph is by Harry A. Atwell (1879--1957), an official photographer of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. 

Elephants were not only an important part of the performance of a circus but were also very useful for providing heavy labor on the back lot. This image of 1922 shows an elephant of the Sells-Floto Circus pulling the canvas-covered cage wagon number 24 into position. Octagon cage wagon number 34 can be seen at right. The Sells-Floto Circus was formed in the early 1900s from a combination of the Floto Dog & Pony Show and the Sells Brothers Circus. It toured the United States as an independent circus until 1921, when it was incorporated into the American Circus Corporation. In September 1929 this corporation's circuses were acquired by John Ringling, and by 1933 Sells-Floto ceased to exist. It enjoyed a brief revival in 1937-38 as part of the Al G. Barnes and Sells-Floto Combined Circus. The photograph is by Harry A. Atwell (1879--1957), an official photographer of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus.

 


On April 17, 1908, the Sells-Floto circus appeared in Riverside CA. When the animals were ushered off the train, a vapor flashback explosion occurred at the adjacent oil storage tank. This frightened the animals, and led to an elephant stampede into downtown Riverside, leaving one person dead and six others injured.


The Sells Floto Circus was a combination of the Floto Dog & Pony Show and the Sells Brothers Circus that toured with sideshow acts in the United States and Canada during the early 1900s.

“In the early 1900s Floto was The Denver Post’s sports editor, and a drunk, barely literate, loud-mouthed columnist who didn’t believe in punctuation marks, wrote about fights he secretly promoted on the side, got into shooting matches with the legendary Wild West gunman (turned Denver sportswriter) Bat Masterson and penned such headlines as ‘Local Team Like a Sweater, Worsted,’” wrote the modern Post’s columnist Woody Paige in 2007.
 
“He actually had operated a dog-and-pony show and provided rides home in his carriage for The Post’s co-owner Harry Tammen, who loved the name ‘Otto Floto’ and gave him a job – and later called the circus the newspaper bought ‘Sells-Floto.’ Floto died at 65, in 1929,” Paige wrote.

Frederick Gilmer Bonfils and Harry Heye Tammen owned the first outfit as well as the Denver Post, and the "Floto" name came from the Post's one-time sportswriter, Otto Floto. Floto's name also comes up as one of the prime suspects involved in possibly starting the 1896 Cripple Creek fire. In late April 1896, Cripple Creek, Colorado, endured two catastrophic fires over a period of 96 hours. The first, on April 25, 1896, began around 1 p.m. when a gasoline stove overturned on the second floor of the Central Dance Hall on Myers Avenue. A brisk wind spread the fire to adjoining buildings. The fire left nearly 6,000 homeless in Cripple Creek.




The Sells Floto circus absorbed Buffalo Bill's Wild West shows, and the Sells Brothers Circus, it was also a "combined" show. It later became the concessions department of Ringling Brothers Circus, along with Haggenback Wallace, who made the floats and other equipment.

Zora & Trilby #4


The circus had four elephant births, three born to "Alice" and one to "Mama Mary." The sire of all four was "Snyder." None survived longer than five months.

By 1929, the Sells Floto Circus was part of the American Circus Corporation which consisted of Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus, the John Robinson Circus, the Sparks Circus, and the Al G. Barnes Circus. John Nicholas Ringling then bought American Circus Corporation for $1.7-million creating a monopoly of traveling circus in America.

Feld Entertainment later used the Sells-Floto name for their supply division, located in Laurel, MD, that provided logistical support for all of the Feld shows for supplies and merchandise, including not only the three units of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, but the numerous On Ice shows (Disney on Ice, Ice Follies, etc.). This unit has since been renamed Feld Consumer Products.

From Los Angeles Herald, Volume 35, Number 198, 17 April 1908

CRAZED ELEPHANTS SPREAD PANIC IN RIVERSIDE

ONE DEAD; 6 INJURED

DEACONESS GORED AND TRAMPLED TO DEATH ACTOR WILTON LACKAYE AMONG THOSE HURT „.   Leviathan Becomes Unmanageable During Fire— Leader Kills Woman in Yard of Famous Hotel Glenwood

Special to The Herald. RIVERSIDE, April 16.—Miss Ella Gibbs, a deaconess, is dead here tonight from injuries inflicted by a maddened elephant, one of a herd from the Sells-Floto circus, which, driven frantic by the explosion of oil tanks nearby, stampeded through the city, streets, carrying death and destruction in their path. Miss Gibbs was gored and trampled and left mutilated and unconscious on the ground. She died at 9:45 tonight. Other persons Injured by the crazed leviathan are: Wilton Lackaye, actor, cut by flying glass; Frank A. Bird, broken leg; James Cuthbertson, badly bruised;-D. P. Chapman, bruised, and two animal trainers whose names were not learned. One of these was gored on the left leg and the other was painfully bruised. L. J. Worsey, a driver for the Standard Oil company, was fatally burned in the conflagration and Is not expected to survive the night. Elephants Break Loose The circus grounds are situated Just across the street from the plant of the Standard Oil company, where a fire broke out shortly before the time set for the afternoon performance. One after another, with great cannon-like booms, the oil tanks blew up. The reports threw the whole menagerie Into a panic, but all the animals were kept under control except five elephants, which broke from their keepers and dashed from the big tent Into the open. Bellowing thunderously and swinging their trunks, the huge beasts started on a run toward the Box Springs grade. They were headed back into town by a crowd of keepers and, while the population scuttled to cover, four of the animals were captured and led bellowing back to the tent. The fifth elephant, one of the largest, dashed past its keepers and made for the business section. Rounding the corner at Fourth and Mulberry Streets, it came upon Miss Gibbs. In vain the unfortunate woman tried to reach the shelter of a house. Rushing upon her, the animal struck her down, trampled her and gored her murderously with his tusks. Career of Crazed Brute His rage unsatiated, the elephant left the deaconess and smashed his great body through the door of a barn belonging to Rev. Robert Fisher. Gaining the Inside, he attacked a horse, nearly killing it. From the barn the fire-crazed demon took himself to the public library grounds, smashing buildings, fences and trees and tearing to pieces every object in his path. Through the Glenwood barber shop he splintered his way, and it was there that Wilton Lackayd was injured. Into Main street and through plate glass windows Into the store of the Riverside Music company the beast went. A police officer took several shots at htm with his pistol, but to these the elephant paid as little attention as he would to the bites of a fly. One of the animal trainers, whose name Is not known, was the means of saving at least two lives before the big brute was gotten under control. Heroic Acts of Trainer At Orange and Seventh streets the elephant threw Frank A. Bird, and was about to crush him with his full weight, when the keeper came up close behind and fired three shots from a revolver into the elephant's neck. This caused the elephant to swerve around, his attention being detracted from his intended victim. In the meantime, however. Bird had sustained a broken leg and other Injuries. In the courtyard of the Glenwood hotel D. P. Chapman was thrown by the elephant and might have sustained fatal injuries had not the same keeper arrlved on the scene in the nick of time. He fired the remaining four shots from his revolver into the elephant, and the brute at once turned his attention from the man on the ground to his assailant. The left trouser leg of the keeper was ripped, wide open by the infuriated beast, and the limb was painfully lacerated. The flesh from the keeper's right hand also was skinned away. At the Glenwood hotel, Eva Howe, a guest, was sitting in a swing when the infuriated beast made full at her. She was about to flee, when the elephant's keeper, who was close behind the animal, advised her to sit still. As a result the elephant rushed by without molesting her.

Caught in Club Stables

The runaway finally dashed into the Club stables on Market street, and when the pursuing keepers shut the big doors, he failed to break his way out. When two of the circus men went Inside with their hooks and attempted to calm the animal, however, he turned upon and nearly killed them. The elephant was subdued only when a herd of his fellows were driven into his company, at which time the keepers succeeded in chaining him securely between two of the members of the herd. Miss Ella Gibbs was a deaconess in the First Congregational church of this city. Before coming here about three years ago, she had been a prominent worker in the slums In Chicago. Since her arrival in Riverside, she has been doing mission work among the Chinese and Japanese population, and has also made a life work of assisting consumptives who. arrived here penniless. L. J. Worsley, the oil wagon driver, is still unconscious and is not expected to live. The Are started with the'explosion* of the tank on the Worsley wagon, but what caused this explosion is not known.


Sells Floto Circus Band in 1915.

 


Advertising publication for the circus performance in Denver. At head of caption title: "Denver. Tents at 'Union Park' on Broadway Loop. 2 days, Tuesday and Wednesday, June 16 and 17."

Thursday, May 30, 2024

McCloud and Gunsmoke actor's eco-connections

The earth is a tremendous gift. There is nothing else like it in the known universe. I want to leave it the way I found it. Share this Quote Dennis Weaver
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/dennis-weaver-quotes

 "The earth is a tremendous gift. There is nothing else like it in the known universe. I want to leave it the way I found it."

__ Dennis Weaver

 
For sale at the time of this image in 2015 and described as "eco-friendly" by the realty agency, Sunridge was designed for Weaver, the limping deputy sheriff in the TV series "Gunsmoke," by Taos, New Mexico, architect Michael Reynolds as an "earthship" of adobe and recycled waste in 1989. It is one of about 100 solar-friendly buildings designed by Reynolds throughout Colorado. Gates Frontiers Fund Colorado Collection within the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.
The earth is a tremendous gift. There is nothing else like it in the known universe. I want to leave it the way I found it. Share this Quote Dennis Weaver
Read more at https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/dennis-weaver-quotes

 None of it seemed more local than McCloud

By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com

I watched a lot of TV as kid growing up in Dolores, but none of it seemed more local than Dennis Weaver as McCloud. We had only three stations, originating in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and the Taos, New Mexico lawman character was on loan to the New York City Police Department. Weaver had a Missouri/Oklahoma accent (which was amazingly familiar in Old School Dolores,) and later, ended up living up the road in Ridgway, Colorado.

In the first season, in 1970, “Horse Stealing on Fifth Avenue,”
shows McCloud riding a horse through the streets of New York. 

"The scene was a last-minute addition to a script that originally just had the marshal borrowing a policeman’s horse and chasing a suspect through Central Park. That’s why the production didn’t have a permit from the city to shoot the scene, which was achieved by mounting a camera in the back of a station wagon and filming Weaver as he rode through midtown Manhattan. Of course, jaded New Yorkers ignored him completely," noted in the July 12, 2022 edition.

Weaver's home in Ridgway, Colorado, exemplified his commitment to preserving the environment. In the late 1980s, he commissioned architect Michael Reynolds to design and build his new residence, which incorporated into its construction various recycled materials, such as old automobile tires and discarded cans, and featured passive solar power and other ecotechnologies. Weaver called his home Earthship, the same name given to the design concept pioneered by Reynolds and advanced by him as part of what was then a growing interest in "sustainable architecture" by environmentalists. Weaver and his family lived at Earthship for over 14 years, until 2004, says local San Juan-area writer Justin Criado,  of The Watch. 

In July 2003, Weaver lost a daughter-in-law, Lynne Ann Weaver, wife of son Robby Weaver, in Santa Monica, California, when a car driven at high speed plowed through shoppers at the Santa Monica Farmers Market. She was one of 10 people killed in the incident.

Weaver, as an environmentalist, promoted the use of alternative fuels, such as hydrogen and wind power, through the Institute of Ecolonomics, a nonprofit environmental organization he established in 1993 in Berthoud, Colorado. "Ecolonomics" is a term formed by combining the words ecology and economics. He was also involved with John Denver's WindStar Foundation, and he founded an organization called L.I.F.E. (Love is Feeding Everyone), which provided food for 150,000 needy people a week in Los Angeles.

The actor, environmental activist preached sustainable practices in Ridgway says Justin Criado, Senior Staff Writer, The Watch. 

"A person driving a Toyota Prius through Ridgway wouldn’t garner a second glance nowadays — but when a Hollywood cowboy famous for riding his horse through the streets of New York City brought one of these full-hybrid electric vehicles to town shortly after they were released stateside in 2000, people took notice," says local San Juan-area writer Justin Criado,  of The Watch.


Weaver first purchased property in the town of Ridgway in 1988, wanting to escape the hustle-bustle of L.A. and find a place to grow his own food. He made the move permanent in 1990, and two years later, Weaver was living in the most luxurious Earthship house that New Mexico architect Michael Reynolds could construct, "an ode to Weaver’s values of environmental sustainability."

"Though the actor passed away in 2006, his Ridgway legacy remains. Dennis Weaver Memorial Park preserves his unique place in history here, along the Uncompahgre River corridor, for generations to come, proving that the actor best known for his roles in television series such as “Gunsmoke” and “McCloud” was much more than a Western film star."

Dennis Weaver was born June 4, 1924 in Joplin, Missouri to parents Walter Weaver and Lenna Prather.

His longtime personal assistant, Ridgway resident Alice Billings, shared stories of how the Weaver clan struggled during the Great Depression in 1929, as most Americans did, becoming sharecroppers who would often travel west to find food to ration with other farmers.

“That’s where he got his love of the land from,” Billings said. “That’s how he grew up.”

A young thespian in the making, Weaver decided he wanted to be an actor around the age of 7, according to Billings; from then on, he focused on his silver screen dreams.

As a track star at the University of Oklahoma, where he studied drama, breaking into show business was Weaver’s main focus. Weaver held several school track records as a Sooner, and after a stint as a pilot for the United States Navy during World War II, he decided to try out for the 1948 U.S. Olympic Decathlon Team. The trials were held in New York City.

Weaver came in sixth in the Olympic trials — but only the top three finishers made the team. Billings, who admired Weaver’s athleticism, shared an anecdote that might have helped to explain his less-than-spectacular finish.

“He’d spend all day in New York City reading scripts for different roles,” she said. “He had been sleeping on a friend’s floor — so when the trials came, he had rubbery legs.”

Failed Olympic dreams aside, Weaver’s dedication to the craft carried on through a period of lean years, when he held odd jobs such as selling vacuums and women’s hosiery to support his family as a struggling actor.

He was employed as a flower deliveryman in 1955 when he got the news he landed the role of Chester Goode in the new American television series “Gunsmoke.”

Although Weaver had made his movie debut in 1952 in “The Redhead from Wyoming,” his big break came in “Gunsmoke,” in which he played Marshal Matt Dillon’s assistant, Chester Goode.

The longest-running live action TV series in U.S. history, “Gunsmoke” was set in Dodge City, Kansas during the settlement of the American West. It was on-air from 1955-75.


Weaver won an Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actor in 1959 for his portrayal of Chester, and remained in the role until 1964. He went on to star in the short-lived TV series “Gentle Ben,” (1967-69), about a man and his camaraderie with a black bear, a “spaghetti Western” produced by Dino De Laurenitis titled “A Man Called Sledge” (1970), in which he co-starred with James Garner, and “Duel” (1971), Steven Spielberg’s full-length directing debut about an anonymous, murderous driver behind the wheel of a menacing tanker truck (Weaver had the lead role as the terrified-but-plucky motorist pursued by the tanker).

The role that most personified Weaver, though, was that of Deputy Marshal Sam McCloud — a Taos, New Mexico lawman on loan to the New York City Police Department as a special investigator — in the television series “McCloud” (1970-77), Billings said.

Riding a horse along New York City’s Fifth Avenue may have seemed odd for some, but Billings told Justin Criado,  of The Watch, it was the role that most suited Weaver.

“I would say that was his favorite role,” she said, though not one without its risks when you consider Weaver’s costar was an innately skittish equine — and that the series took place on slick pavement in noisy, distraction-filled Manhattan. “While Dennis loved animals and loved horses, he only rode when they paid him to ride. He used to say that,” Billings recalled drily. “He was a good horseman.” (According to Billings, Weaver owned a few racehorses in the 1960s, and even helped a business partner raise llamas, but never had horses of his own.)

Billings first met Weaver on the set of “McCloud” in the early 1970s, when she was working as a photographer. She became his full-time personal assistant in 1974.

“People may just see a celebrity and an actor, but Dennis was always an activist. He was at times a political activist also. He always saw the plight of the little guy,” she said as quoted by Justin Criado,  of The Watch.

She explained how as the president of the Screen Actors Guild from 1973-75, Weaver negotiated a contract that gave actors 100 percent of the residual revenue after the second run of their show.


“That was all because of Dennis’s negotiations,” she said. “He did a lot of good behind the scenes.”

A Hollywood mainstay already, Ridgway came calling in the 1980s after Weaver learned of the area from his three sons, Rick, Rusty and Robby, who would travel to Telluride to ski.

In an effort to find enough land on which he could grow his own food, Weaver, along with his wife, Gerry, settled on Ridgway.

Ridgway Mayor John Clark recalls when the Weavers first arrived in the late 1980s.

“He was definitely doing some cool things, like the Institute of Ecolonomics (a term coined by Weaver combining “Economics” and “Ecology”). When he came to Ridgway that was his big thing,” Clark said. “He drove a Prius long before most people knew what they were. He was really ahead of his time.”

The Weavers founded the Institute of Ecolonomics in 1993 in an effort “to illustrate the marriage between our ecology and economy,” according to the organization’s official website, ecolonomics.org.

“If we are to leave a planet that will sustain life for future generations, we have to have two things: a sustainable economy and a sustainable environment, and if we fail in achieving either we will suffer greatly” Weaver said, according to the website.

Clark said the Weavers were always out and about around town and that he even worked on their computer (Clark’s business is called The Mac Doctor).


“Dennis was great. He was gracious. He was friendly. He was very nice,” Clark said.

The Weavers were actively involved in the community, Billings added, even building the so-called Big Barn, located just east of U.S. Highway 550, where community dances were held.

“He built it because he and Gerry were great dancers. He loved to two-step,” she said. “We had dance lessons there. We had shows and fun. It was great for the community. We had people coming from all over to dance.”

The barn was eventually sold; it is now the Ridgway Christian Center.

In addition to dancing, Weaver enjoyed writing and recording music — he wrote and recorded nearly 100 songs and played guitar, Billings said — performing Shakespeare, and meditating.

In addition to performing as a thespian, Weaver performed acts of charity. His nonprofit organization, Love Is Feeding Everyone, helped feed nearly 160,000 families in need every week around Los Angeles during the 1980s.

“He definitely walked his talk,” Billings said.

Another Weaver-led initiative, based in Ridgway, was plans for an environmentally friendly housing development along the Uncompahgre River corridor, in the modern-day RiverSage subdivision area.

Unfortunately, the plans were never fully executed while Weaver was alive (he died on Feb. 24, 2006 of complications from cancer), and the family ended up donating 60 acres of land to the town. Shortly thereafter, the RiverSage development and the Dennis Weaver Memorial Park were created.

“We gained an incredible asset in riverfront property that will now be protected forever in return for allowing some large-lot, family homes,” Clark said. “That’s just amazing. A lot of communities would die for that.”

The Weavers are still actively involved in the community, Clark said. Sons Rick and Rusty still live in town (Gerry Weaver remained in Ridgway up until her death last year). Rick was a council member for several years and Rusty helps maintain Dennis Weaver Memorial Park. Over the years, the Weavers have provided several scholarships to graduating Ridgway High School seniors.

“They have given and donated to the town on a regular basis. They bought trail signs for the trail out there (in the park). They’ve been very generous. They are very kind people,” Ridgway Town Manager Jennifer Coates said.

Coates explained that an annual Plein Air event, presented by Public Art Ridgway Colorado (PARC) and the Weaver Family Foundation, invites artists to take in the inspirational views, including the bald eagle sculpture, at the park, to create artistic works. The event features a contest in which the town displays the winning painting in town hall.

The Plein Air event has proved very popular: “They get a really good showing,” Coates said.

Billings remains involved with the Weaver’s estate (over the past year, both of Weaver’s Ridgway properties, the Earthship and most recently, another family home, have been sold). She explained how she spent the last couple of weeks finishing up the proper paperwork to complete the sale of the house Gerry lived in. Now, she’s sorting through memorabilia.

“It’s kind of like the end of an era,” she said of the recent sales.

As a ranch owner in town, Billings is quick to reminisce about those early years when people would ride horses along main street and hitch them outside their favorite watering hole. She remembers a photo of herself and Dennis riding next to each other, taken along Sherman Street during a Labor Day parade.

“That’s the only time we rode together,” she said.

While Ridgway has changed in the 30 years since Weaver first came to town, the sculpture of an eagle in the park that bears his name still soars, forever suspended in flight.

It is a beacon for those to learn about a man who, in real life, was more engaged in preserving the Earth than pursuing criminals on horseback in New York City — a man more compelled by actual environmental sustainability in his new Western home than in fictional gunfights in the Old West.

 • “Horse Stealing on Fifth Avenue” (1970)
This first-season installment contains the series’ signature shot: McCloud riding a horse through the streets of New York. The scene was a last-minute addition to a script that originally just had the marshal borrowing a policeman’s horse and chasing a suspect through Central Park. That’s why the production didn’t have a permit from the city to shoot the scene, which was achieved by mounting a camera in the back of a station wagon and filming Weaver as he rode through midtown Manhattan. Of course, jaded New Yorkers ignored him completely.

• “Encounter With Aries” (1971)
The title alludes to a tattoo of a ram’s head on the arm of a kidnapper in this episode about a famed astrologer’s wealthy wife (Louise Latham) being abducted. She’s locked in a room with a time bomb that will detonate unless the ransom is paid in time, and McCloud is trying to beat the clock. A standard kidnapping story takes a mid-episode twist that surprises McCloud as much as the audience.

• “The New Mexican Connection” (1972)
During a stakeout, McCloud recognizes a man wanted for bank robbery back in his old jurisdiction of Taos. He transports him back to New Mexico, but that’s far from the end of the story. The script by series executive producer Glen A. Larson won an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America, perhaps just for the audacity of a climactic chase in which McCloud, back in New York, fights one of the villains on top of a moving stagecoach.

• “The Colorado Cattle Caper’ (1974)
One of the delights of the series is McCloud’s clash with assorted city dwellers, but this episode offers a welcome break from that formula. After a tainted beef shipment causes fatalities in New York restaurants, the marshal traces the shipment back to a gang of cattle rustlers in Colorado. The story features two 1970s icons: singer John Denver as a deputy sheriff and Farrah Fawcett as a woman hired by the rustlers to distract the lawmen from their mission.


Weaver was reported to have been a vegetarian from 1958 for ethical reasons; however, he did occasionally eat fish.

Weaver married Gerry Stowell after World War II, and they had three sons: Richard, Robert, and Rustin Weaver. Gerry died April 26, 2016, at 90.

 

Saturday, May 25, 2024

Gus's Restaurant, Littleton Town Hall, Titan 1, Weaver House, and more


Thing of the past ...
Gus's Restaurant, Pueblo, Colorado
Frank, Russell, 1954- (Research team member)
Light, Ken (Photographer)
Created / Published: Pueblo, Colorado, July 7, 1990
Headings
- Italian Americans
- Photographs
- Ethnography
- Documentary photographs
- United States -- Colorado -- Pueblo
Genre:
Photographs
Ethnography
Documentary photographs
Notes:
- Index data: All of these images document customers and bar staff at Gus' Restaurant, 1201 Elm Street, Pueblo, co. The older woman behind the bar is Vera "Little Vera" Gurvich and the waitress is her daughter, Sandy Holman. Names of the bar customers are not available; 1-36, customers and staff at Gus' Restaurant
Medium: 35 mm black-and-white film negatives
Source Collection: Italian Americans in the West Project collection (AFC 1989/022)
Repository: American Folklife Center


Thing of the past ...
Business section of Trinidad, Colorado
Trinidad, Colorado, with mountains in the background.
Created / Published: c1907.
Headings
- Buttes--Colorado--Trinidad--1900-1910
- Business districts--Colorado--Trinidad--1900-1910
- Trinidad (Colo.)--1900-1910
Genre:
Cityscape photographs--1900-1910
Photographic prints--1900-1910
Notes:
- H94477 U.S. Copyright Office.
- Copyright by A.R. Allen.
Medium: 1 photographic print.


Thing of the past ...
Luft family, farm near Sterling. Mother, 9 yr. old Amelia, and 12 yr. old Mary working while father hauls the beets to factory. "Amelia she not work all time, she wash dishes and tend baby." 7 children. Location: Sterling [vicinity], Colorado / Photo by Hine, Oct. 23/15.
Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940, photographer
Created / Published: 1915 October 23.
Headings:
- Girls
- Agricultural laborers
- Sugar industry
- Beets
- Croplands
- United States--Colorado--Sterling
Genre: Photographic prints
Notes:
- Title from NCLC caption card.
- Attribution to Hine based on provenance.
- In album: Agriculture.
- Hine no. 4032.
- Credit line: National Child Labor Committee collection, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.
- General information about the National Child Labor Committee collection is available at: https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.nclc
- Forms part of: National Child Labor Committee collection.
Medium: 1 photographic print.
Source Collection: National Child Labor Committee collection
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
 

Thing of the past ...
Facade of the Town Hall, Littleton, Colorado which was designed by the architect Jacques Benois Benedict
Johnston, Frances Benjamin, 1864-1952, photographer
Benedict, J.B. (Jacques Benois), 1879-1948, architect
Created / Published: [between 1920 and 1923]
Headings
- City & town halls--Colorado--Littleton--1920-1930
- Facades--Colorado--Littleton--1920-1930
Genre: Photographic prints--1920-1930
Notes
- Frances Benjamin Johnston Collection (Library of Congress).
- Title devised by Library staff.
- The building is now the Town Hall Arts Center, located at 2450 West Main Street.
- On item: "J.B. Benedict, Arch. Littleton".
Medium: 1 photographic print.
Repository :Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.

 

Thing of the past ...
The horsecar "Cherrelyn" with a horse aboard - Denver, Colorado, 1903
Johnston, Frances Benjamin, 1864-1952, photographer
Created / Published: 1903.
Notes:
- Photoprint from a negative by Frances Benjamin Johnston.
- This record contains unverified, old data from caption card.
- Caption card tracings: Ph. Ind.; Horses; Street RR; Geogr.
Medium: 1 photographic print.
Physical Location: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA


Thing of the past ...
Titan I base: Denver, Colorado
O'Halloran, Thomas J., photographer
Created / Published: [Washington, D.C.], 4/17/1962.
Genre: Film negatives--1960-1970
Notes:
- Title and date from contact sheet folder caption.
- Contact sheet available for reference purposes: USN&WR COLL - Job no. 7698, frame 27.
- Forms part of: U.S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection.
Medium: 1 photograph : negative; film width 35mm (roll format)
Source Collection: U.S. News & World Report magazine photograph collection (Library of Congress)
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA


Thing of the past ...
One facade of "Sunridge," the last home of Hollywood actor Dennis Weaver and his wife, Gerry, in Ridgway, a town in rural Ouray County, Colorado
Highsmith, Carol M., 1946-, photographer
Created / Published: 2015-06-03.
Headings
- United States--Colorado--Ouray County--Ridgway
- America
- Gateway to the San Juans
- Sunridge
- Dennis Weaver
- Gerry Weaver
- Michael Reynolds
Genre
Digital photographs--Color--2010-2020
Notes:
- Title, date and keywords based on information provided by the photographer.
- For sale at the time of this image in 2015 and described as "eco-friendly" by the realty agency, Sunridge was designed for Weaver, the limping deputy sheriff in the TV series "Gunsmoke," by Taos, New Mexico, architect Michael Reynolds as an "earthship" of adobe and recycled waste in 1989. It is one of about 100 solar-friendly buildings designed by Reynolds throughout Colorado.
- Credit line: Gates Frontiers Fund Colorado Collection within the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.
- Gift; Gates Frontiers Fund; 2015; (DLC/PP-2015:068).
- Forms part of: Gates Frontiers Fund Colorado Collection within the Carol M. Highsmith Archive.
Medium
1 photograph : digital, tiff file, color.
Source Collection: Highsmith, Carol M., 1946- Carol M. Highsmith Archive.
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.


Thing of the past ...
Battle Mountain mines, Cripple Creek
Detroit Photographic Co.
Created / Published: c1900.
Headings:
Mining - Mining camps - United States--Colorado-Cripple Creek
Genre: Photochrom prints--Color
Notes:
- Copyright 1900 by Detroit Photographic Co - Title from item.
- Detroit Publishing Co. no. "51076".
- Forms part of: Photochrom Print Collection.
- More information about the Photochrom Print Collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.pgz
Medium: 1 photomechanical print : photochrom, color.
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA


Thing of the past ...
Locomotives in roundhouse. Durango. Colorado
Lee, Russell, 1903-1986, photographer
Created / Published: 1940 Sept.
Headings: - United States--Colorado--La Plata County--Durango
Genre: Safety film negatives
Notes:
- Title and other information from caption card.
- Transfer; United States. Office of War Information. Overseas Picture Division. Washington Division; 1944.
- More information about the FSA/OWI Collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsaowi
- Temp. note: usf34batch4
- Film copy on SIS roll 24, frame 2631.
Medium: 1 negative : safety ; 3 1/4 x 4 1/4 inches or smaller.
Source Collection: Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph Collection (Library of Congress)
Repository: Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.


Thing of the past ...
Theodore Roosevelt returning to Glenwood Springs, Colorado
Photograph showing Theodore Roosevelt on horseback; mountains in background.
Underwood & Underwood, copyright claimant
Created / Published : [1905]
Headings:
- Roosevelt, Theodore,--1858-1919--Travel--Colorado--Glenwood Springs
- Horseback riding--Colorado--Glenwood Springs--1900-1910
Genre: Portrait photographs--1900-1910
Photographic prints--1900-1910
Notes:
- Copyright by Underwood & Underwood.
- Reg. no. 34661.
- Date stamped on verso: Jul 6, 1964.
- Title devised by Library staff.
- Forms part of: New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection (Library of Congress).
Medium: 1 photographic print.
Source Collection: New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection (Library of Congress)
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
 

Thing of the past ...
Civil War veterans of Co. K, 15th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment at reunion, Glen Eyrie, Colorado Springs, Colorado] / Photo by Routh & Havis.
Photograph shows portrait of Union veterans, two women, and a dog identified as Edward W. Woods, Edward E. Hewitt, J.M. Wiley, J.F. Guynn, T. Grimm, Capt. J.R. Hewitt, S.S.B. Bayard, Clark Denny, A.J. Minor, Jacob Ross, J.P. McNay, David D. Ross, J.K. Parshall, J.B. McGlumphy, B.B. Evans, John Murdock, Wm. McKee, D.C. White, Henry C. Sayers, Miss Marjorie Palmer, Miss Palmer, M.M. Shirk, Robert Jordan, A.D. Frankenburg, Joseph Bell, and Clement Ritchey.
Routh & Havis, photographer
Created / Published: August 21, 1907.
Headings: - United States.--Army.--Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment, 15th (1862-1865)--People--1900-1910
- Veterans--Union--1900-1910
- United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Veterans--Union
Genre: Portrait photographs--1900-1910
Group portraits--1900-1910
Photographic prints--1900-1910
Notes:
- Title devised by Library staff.
- Printed on recto: "Re-union 15th Pa. Cavalry, with the compliments of General Palmer."
- Gift; Tom Liljenquist; 2016; (DLC/PP-2017:171, formerly deposit D072)
- Purchased from: The Veteran's Attic, December 2016
- Forms part of: Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs (Library of Congress).
- pp/liljvet
Medium: 1 photograph : gelatin silver print ; sheet 27 x 35 cm, mount 34 x 41 cm.
Source Collection: Liljenquist Family collection (Library of Congress)
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA


Thing of the past ...
Cavalry remnant of "Meeker" massacre 1. Buckskin - 2. Pe-Ve-Ge - 3. Nanice - 4. Severo / / F. Gonner, photo.
Photograph shows Ute men in traditional dress on horseback in front of teepees.
Gonner, F. (Frank), photographer
Created / Published: [Colorado], [1904]
Headings:
- White River Massacre, Colo., 1879
- Indians of North America--Clothing & dress--Colorado--1900-1910
- Ute Indians--Colorado--1900-1910
- Warriors--Colorado--1900-1910
- Horseback riding--Colorado--1900-1910
- Tipis--Colorado--1900-1910
Genre:
Photographic prints--1900-1910
Notes:
- H43325 U.S. Copyright Office.
- Title from item.
- Publication date based on copyright statement : "Feb. 27, 1904."
Medium: 1 photograph : gelatin silver print on cardboard mount ; sheet 38 x 45 cm, mount
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print