Life in a fictional Tombstone in the 1880s.Life in a fictional Tombstone in the 1880s.Life in a fictional Tombstone in the 1880s.
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Featured reviews
The Town Too Tough To Die
I vaguely remember this series as a kid in the 1950s. Grit TV is currently showing two episodes each weekday at 1PM and 130PM. All the episodes seem new to me. It was a well done western series with Pat Conway and Richard Eastham as the stars. Conway as Sheriff Clay Hollister always had a deputy during the run, but they often seemed to be elsewhere when the trouble starts and Eastham and newspaper man Harris has to fill in and help catch the bad guys.
The scripts were well written and the action fast in the half hour shows. It really makes me feel young again to see these old shows from my youth.
I do recommend Tombstone Territory if you ever have a chance to see it. It's worth watching.
The scripts were well written and the action fast in the half hour shows. It really makes me feel young again to see these old shows from my youth.
I do recommend Tombstone Territory if you ever have a chance to see it. It's worth watching.
"The Town to tough to die"
This half hour TV Western is set in Tombstone, Arizona some years after thr
Earps and Clsntons had done their thing and left the scene. The new sheriff in
town is Clay Hollister played by Pat Conway.
The format of the show has the publisher and editor of the Tombstone Epitaph Richard Eastham narrate the story, ripped from the headlines of his paper as it were. The Tombstone Epitaph was a real paper, the accounts we have o the Earp/Clanton feud come from the stories in the Epitaph which had a pro-Earp bias.
Conway was a resolute defender of the law in the three seasons the show ran. As for Tombstone the town did die and like Virginia City in Nevada tje remnants are a tourist site.
The format of the show has the publisher and editor of the Tombstone Epitaph Richard Eastham narrate the story, ripped from the headlines of his paper as it were. The Tombstone Epitaph was a real paper, the accounts we have o the Earp/Clanton feud come from the stories in the Epitaph which had a pro-Earp bias.
Conway was a resolute defender of the law in the three seasons the show ran. As for Tombstone the town did die and like Virginia City in Nevada tje remnants are a tourist site.
Western version of Dragnet
After watching two episodes I was convinced the formula was simply Dragnet in the West. The true account from the paper (just the facts) and a costar with the same tone and temblor as Joe Fridays partner.
It is a show my father loves as a kid he watched western in the theater. Was also to see Eastman other roles on iMDB.
It is a show my father loves as a kid he watched western in the theater. Was also to see Eastman other roles on iMDB.
10Ramar
"Whistle Me Up A Memory"
Sheriff Clay Hollister defended the law in "The Town To Tough To Die" and did it with a no nonsense approach. The narration by Harris Claibourn editor of the Tombstone 'Epitaph' brought a sense of additional realism to this high quality show.
10bl2moons
Bring it Back! Tombstone Territory!
A show like this would attract millions of viewers in this day of sleaze. Good stories with a moral lesson in each episode, based on factual accounts that are dramatized ... great stuff!!!
Western updated in color with good solid characters regardless of which side of the law they are on would sell. Hollywood should return to fiction with a realistic wholesome story line and leave the fringe c=garbage alone. The public is tired of it. I can't tell you the last time I watched current TV.
Did you know
- TriviaPayroll to Tombstone (1959), Grave Near Tombstone (1959) and The Hanging (1959) all supposedly happened the same day: 8/12/1881.
- GoofsAt the beginning of each episode, the narrator claims each is "An actual account from the pages of my newspaper, the Tombstone Epitaph." While the Epitaph was an actual newspaper in Tombstone circa 1881, the series is hit or miss for actual events- and characters. For example, the actual Territorial Governor John C. Fremont is mentioned in the pilot, however, Clay Hollister is referred to as Sheriff of Tombstone. Tombstone by late 1881 was in newly-formed Cochise County, so Hollister would have been called Sheriff of Cochise County. The actual Sheriff of Cochise County in late 1881 was Johnny Behan. Tombstone had a city marshal at the time, Virgil Earp. While Curly Bill Brocius, an actual person, appeared in the pilot (dated August 6, 1881) and two other episodes, no mention is made of the Earp family, who had resided in Tombstone since 1879. The third episode, dated November 1, 1881, was less than a week after the famous October 26, 1881 OK Corral shootout involving the Earps with Doc Holliday against Ike Clanton, Billy Claiborne, Tom and Frank McLaury, and Billy Clanton, yet no mention is made of this significant event.
- Quotes
[before the title card of each episode]
Harris Claibourne: [narrating] An actual account from the pages of my newspaper, the Tombstone Epitaph. This is the way it happened... in the town too tough to die.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood (2019)
- SoundtracksWhistle Me Up a Memory
Composed by William M. Backer
Performed by Jimmy Blaine
[Theme song sung during closing credits]
- How many seasons does Tombstone Territory have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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