Jefferson Drum

Jefferson Drum, also known as The Pen and the Quill, is an American Western television series starring Jeff Richards that aired on the NBC network from April 25 to December 11, 1958.[1]

Jefferson Drum
Publicity still with Jeff Richards
GenreWestern
Written byE. Jack Neuman
Gene Roddenberry
Directed byHarmon Jones
StarringJeff Richards
Eugene Mazzola
Cyril Delevanti
Robert J. Stevenson
Country of origin United States
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes26
Production
Executive producer(s)Mark Goodson
Bill Todman
Running time25 mins. (approx)
Production company(s)Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions
Screen Gems
DistributorColumbia Pictures Television
Columbia TriStar Television
Sony Pictures Television (current)
Release
Original networkNBC
Picture formatBlack-and-white
Audio formatMonaural
Original releaseApril 25 
December 11, 1958

Overview

Jefferson Drum, portrayed by Jeff Richards, is a crusading newspaper editor in the Old West town of Jubilee. A widower, he rears his son, Joey, played by 10-year-old Eugene Mazzola, also known as Eugene Martin. Drum's printer is Lucius Coin, played by Cyril Delevanti. Big Ed, the town bartender, is portrayed by Robert J. Stevenson, later a member of the Los Angeles City Council. Hal J. Smith, later known for his role of the town drunk, Otis Campbell, on CBS's The Andy Griffith Show, was cast five times on Jefferson Drum as Hickey.[1]

In the episode entitled "Pete Henke" (November 20, 1958), the character Henke, portrayed by Strother Martin, is a violent sharpshooter known for causing trouble. Editor Jefferson Drum challenges Henke to a fistfight in the saloon, but Henke prevails in the third round when he throws something into Drum's eyes and blinds him temporarily. The saloon hostess who gave Henke the blinding substance is later seen at Henke's "medicine show." In the end, the persistent Drum knocks over Henke with a punch. "Pete Henke" also starred Frank Wolff as Sam Creighton and Bert Remsen as Jim Ford.[1][2]

The series first aired at 7:30 Eastern on Friday opposite repeats of I Love Lucy on CBS and Leave It to Beaver on ABC. For its second round of episodes it moved to Thursdays in the same 7:30 p.m. time slot. Rebroadcasts were aired during the first half of 1959. Jefferson Drum was produced for Screen Gems by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions (known more for their game show output), and ran for parts of two seasons before it was cancelled.[1]

Cast

  • Jeff Richards .... Jefferson Drum
  • Eugene Mazzola (billed as Eugene Martin) .... Joey Drum
  • Cyril Delevanti .... Lucius Coin
  • Robert J. Stevenson .... Big Ed

Guest stars

Episodes

Season 1

Episode #Episode titleOriginal airdate
1-1"Arrival"April 25, 1958
1-2"The Bounty Man"May 2, 1958
1-3"Law and Order"May 9, 1958
1-4"A Bad Day For a Tinhorn"May 16, 1958
1-5"The Cheater"May 23, 1958
1-6"A Very Deadly Game"May 30, 1958
1-7"Madame Faro"June 6, 1958
1-8"Bandidos"June 13, 1958
1-9"The Outlaw"June 20, 1958
1-10"Wheel of Fortune"June 27, 1958
1-11"The Post"July 4, 1958
1-12"A Matter of Murder"July 11, 1958
1-13"The Lawless"July 18, 1958
1-14"The Hanging of Joe Lavett"August 1, 1958

Season 2

Episode #Episode titleOriginal airdate
2-1"Showdown"September 26, 1958
2-2"The Keeney Gang"October 3, 1958
2-3"Stagecoach Episode"October 10, 1958
2-4"Obituary"October 16, 1958
2-5"Band of Iron"October 23, 1958
2-6"Return"October 30, 1958
2-7"The Captive"November 6, 1958
2-8"$50 For a Dead Man"November 13, 1958
2-9"Pete Henke"November 20, 1958
2-10"Thicker Than Water"November 27, 1958
2-11"Prison Hill"December 4, 1958
2-12"Simon Pitt"December 11, 1958
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gollark: To be fair, it could be esolang code *disguised* as bad C.
gollark: - no # before the preprocessor directive- no main function or anything, although that may be deliberate- `void`, but does `return`- `18h` is hopefully not a valid integer literal- `me`, `tolife`, `willpower` and `time` are never actually declared
gollark: Yes, that is very bad code.
gollark: The official docs are like apioforms then; async IO is just trendier.

References

  1. "Jefferson Drum". ctva.biz. Retrieved December 22, 2012.
  2. "Pete Henke". Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved December 21, 2012.
  • McNeil, Alex. Total Television (1996). New York: Penguin Books ISBN 0-14-024916-8
  • Brooks, Tim and Marsh, Earle, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows (1999). New York: Ballantine Books ISBN 0-345-42923-0
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