Buckaroo Sheriff of Texas
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Philip Ford
Michael Chapin
Eilene Janssen
James Bell
Hugh O'brian
Steve Pendleton
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
When Sam White returns to his Panhandle Ranch after the Civil War, he is run off his own property by Jim Tulane, the man he entrusted to keep it running. Tulane has hired a gang headed by Mark Brannigan to help him take over the area, and they have managed to subdue the lawmen in the area, including Sam's father, Sheriff Tom "Gramps" White. Sam asks for help from the Texas governor, but is told that the state's resources have been depleted by the war and the many outlaw gangs taking advantage of the chaotic times. Sam plans to assist with the recovery of the area by mining bauxite found on his property and has negotiated a deal with an aluminum company. He intends to share his resources with the other ranchers, but must first wrestle control from the outlaw gang. Sam buys guns and ammunition from St. Louis to fight the gang, but needing assistance to smuggle the supplies into the area, sends his father a hidden message in a birthday gift basket, which his young son Red delivers by stagecoach. During the stagecoach ride, Red sits in front with the driver and talks about all the things his father taught him, including the Morse code, until he is interrupted by Tulane's men, who hold up and search the stage. The outlaws discover the hidden message, but say nothing and allow the stage to continue. When Red arrives at the ranch, his friend, Judy Dawson, is waiting for him. Gramps opens his present and is bewildered to find a bottle of champagne, as he does not drink, but appreciates the box of cigars and the message, which reveals when Sam will be secretly arriving and the route he is taking. Several ranchers come to the ranch to tell Gramps they are being forced out, but Ted Gately, a writer from Parker Weekly who has just shown up to do a series of articles about the region, convinces them to stay. Ted's presence pleases Judy's sister Betty, who helps Gramps around the house, and Ted also tries to help by going with Gramps to meet Sam at the appointed time. However, the outlaws reach Sam first and take him to Tulane's office, where they torture him to learn his plans to boost the area's economy, so that they can profit from it. Instead of talking, Sam becomes amnesiac from the trauma, but Gramps and Ted rescue him from the outlaws after a gunfight. Soon after, Sam focuses on a miniature wagon, which is a present for Red, and though confused, believes the wagon contains an important message. After the outlaws learn from the doctor that Sam's memory might return with a second shock, Tulane abducts Red and Judy and goes to the White ranch to tell Sam he will kill the children. Unaware that they have managed to escape, Tulane kills Sam in a fight. Later, the grieving Red is studying the wagon that his father gave him, and remembers that Sam taught him the Morse code. In a seam of the wagon's cover, Ted and Red find a series of dots and dashes, which spell out the words "look in bottle." Inside the bottle is a note saying that ammunition is coming by wagon that day, so Gramps rounds up the ranchers. Before Brannigan, who overhears about the ammunition, can alert the other outlaws, Ted manages to intercept the delivery and directs most of the drivers to Castle Rock, where Gramps and the ranchers will meet them. However, acting as a decoy, Ted takes one wagon on the original route, unaware that Red has followed and jumped into the back. The outlaws chase Ted and take him to their hideout at a mine, and are about to kill him, when Red sneaks in and knocks out Ted's guard. As Red and Ted escape the mine, a fire erupts inside. Meanwhile, the sheriff arrives with the ranchers, and a shootout ensues. Looking for cover, the outlaws go into the mine, and are killed when the fire reaches the ammunition brought in from Ted's wagon. Later, after order is restored, Ted says that he will stay in the area while he writes the rest of his articles, and everyone, especially Betty, is pleased.
Director
Philip Ford
Cast
Michael Chapin
Eilene Janssen
James Bell
Hugh O'brian
Steve Pendleton
Tristram Coffin
William Haade
Alice Kelley
Selmer Jackson
Edward Cassidy
George Taylor
Steve Dunhill
Billy Dix
Eddie Dunn
Crew
Frank Arrigo
T. A. Carman
Lee Lukather
John Macburnie
Bob Mark
John Mccarthy Jr.
Arthur Orloff
Adele Palmer
Rudy Ralston
Arthur Roberts
Charles Thompson
Stanley Wilson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
According to an August 1950 Hollywood Reporter news item, the film was shot on location at the Iverson Ranch, in Chatsworth, CA. A voice-over at the beginning of the film states that during Reconstruction after the Civil War, when outlaw gangs terrorized Texas, one gang, hired by Jim Tulane, held the Panhandle Ranch by force in absence of its rightful owner. Although the film was set in the late 1860s, the aluminum industry was not actually established until the 1880s.
Buckaroo Sheriff of Texas was the first in a series of four "Rough Ridin' Kids" films made by Republic in 1950 and 1951, in conjunction with Valley Vista Productions. Rudy Ralston produced all of the films in the series, and Fred C. Brannon and Philip Ford directed them. The four films featured child performers Michael Chapin and Eilene Janssen as "Red" and "Judy," respectfully, and James Bell as Red's grandfather, "Sheriff Tom White." Alice Kelley was considered for a permanent role in the series, according to an August 1950 Hollywood Reporter news item, but she only appeared in the first film. After the production of the series' final film, Wild Horse Ambush, Jimmy Fidler bought the rights to the series and planned to make more films in the same vein starring Chapin and Janssen, according to a May 1951 Hollywood Reporter news item, but the two young actors did not appear together again. For more information on the series, please consult the Series Index.