This is a list of episodes for the television series Daniel Boone .
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | Color | DVD release date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||||
1 | 29 | September 24, 1964 | April 29, 1965 | Black & White | September 26, 2006 | |
2 | 30 | September 16, 1965 | April 21, 1966 | Color | September 26, 2006 | |
3 | 28 | September 15, 1966 | April 13, 1967 | Color | May 8, 2007 | |
4 | 26 | September 14, 1967 | April 4, 1968 | Color | June 19, 2007 | |
5 | 26 | September 19, 1968 | May 1, 1969 | Color | August 7, 2007 | |
6 | 26 | September 18, 1969 | May 7, 1970 | Color | November 18, 2008 |
Character | Portrayed by | Season | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | ||
Daniel Boone | Fess Parker | Main | |||||
Yadkin | Albert Salmi | Main | |||||
Mingo | Ed Ames | Main | |||||
Rebecca Boone | Patricia Blair | Main | |||||
Jemima Boone | Veronica Cartwright | Main | |||||
Josh Clements | Jimmy Dean | Main | |||||
Gabe Cooper | Rosey Grier | Main | |||||
Israel Boone | Darby Hinton | Main | |||||
Jericho Jones | Robert Logan | Recurring | |||||
Cincinnatus | Dallas McKennon | Recurring |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Ken-Tuck-E" | George Marshall | Borden Chase | September 24, 1964 | |
When Daniel and his new friends start carrying out their plan to build a fort, they must add to their plans to prevent conflict with warring Indians. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "Tekawitha McLeod" | Thomas Carr | Paul King | October 1, 1964 | |
A slave trader shows up at the fort to sell the "adopted daughter" of the Cherokee chief. Daniel recognizes her and takes her in, but the chief intends to get her back. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "My Brother's Keeper" | John English | Paul King | October 8, 1964 | |
An Indian who resembles Mingo turns on Mingo's friends, and only Daniel's son Israel will believe Mingo is innocent. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "The Family Fluellen" | Byron Paul | Herman Miller | October 22, 1964 | |
The family of a Welsh fugitive is found in the woods and brought to Fort Boonesborough, but may be arrested and taken to pay the man's debts. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "The Choosing" | Thomas Carr | Paul King | October 29, 1964 | |
Daniel takes his daughter Jemima to see some prime territory he hopes to give her, but after they meet some men with their own agenda and are forced to fall in with them, Jemima isn't sure that land is her preferred gift. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Lac Duquesne" | Thomas Carr | Paul Savage | November 5, 1964 | |
A traitorous Frenchman has some folks in the area fooled, but Daniel is on the job to foil his plan. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "The Sound of Wings" | Harry Harris | John Hawkins | November 12, 1964 | |
A disgraced British officer impersonates Daniel Boone to attempt to turn things his way with the Indians. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "A Short Walk to Salem" | Harry Harris | Paul King | November 19, 1964 | |
Daniel takes his son Israel on a trading trip with him, and the boy is introduced to the dangers of the wilderness. | ||||||
9 | 9 | "The Sisters O'Hannrahan" | John English | Story by : Samuel Roeca Teleplay by : David Duncan | December 3, 1964 | |
Two Irish indentured girls are accidentally bought by Daniel and Yad, and the men must figure out what to do for them. | ||||||
10 | 10 | "Pompey" | Joseph H. Lewis | David Duncan | December 10, 1964 | |
Daniel meets a runaway slave who won't accept Daniel's efforts to free him. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "Mountain of the Dead" | Byron Paul | David Duncan | December 17, 1964 | |
Daniel tries to find the connection between two men who propose meeting him at a certain mountain. | ||||||
12 | 12 | "Not in Our Stars" | John English | Story by : Calvin Clements Teleplay by : John Hawkins | December 31, 1964 | |
The Kentuckians don't take kindly to threats of being driven off their lands by order of the governor of Virginia. | ||||||
13 | 13 | "The Hostages" | George Sherman | Carey Wilber | January 7, 1965 | |
Rebecca Boone is taken hostage by a band headed by a woman who plans to ally with the British. | ||||||
14 | 14 | "The Returning" | John English | Don Ingalls | January 14, 1965 | |
An old acquaintance of Daniel's kills three Indians and then heads to Boonesborough, confident that Daniel will protect him. | ||||||
15 | 15 | "The Prophet" | Robert Webb | Carey Wilber | January 21, 1965 | |
The Indians have a man staying with them who claims to be a prophet, and is inciting them to attack the settlers. | ||||||
16 | 16 | "The First Stone" | Harry Harris | Story by : Theodore Apstein Teleplay by : Theodore Apstein & Herman Miller | January 28, 1965 | |
17 | 17 | "A Place of 1000 Spirits" | George Sherman | Story by : Cecil Dan Harmon Teleplay by : David Humphreys Miller | February 4, 1965 | |
18 | 18 | "The Sound of Fear" | Harry Harris | Story by : Truman Clay Teleplay by : Dick Nelson & Truman Clay | February 11, 1965 | |
19 | 19 | "The Price of Friendship" | John English | Frank Chase | February 18, 1965 | |
20 | 20 | "The Quietists" | George Sherman | Herman Groves | February 25, 1965 | |
21 | 21 | "The Devil's Four" | David Butler | Story by : Mark Rodgers Teleplay by : Herman Groves | March 4, 1965 | |
22 | 22 | "The Reunion" | George Marshall | Story by : Rita Lakin Teleplay by : Rita Lakin & Jack Paritz | March 11, 1965 | |
23 | 23 | "The Ben Franklin Encounter" | Nathan Juran | David Duncan | March 18, 1965 | |
24 | 24 | "Four-Leaf Clover" | John English | Preston Wood | March 25, 1965 | |
25 | 25 | "Cain's Birthday" | Paul Landres | Carey Wilber | April 1, 1965 | |
26 | 26 | April 8, 1965 | ||||
27 | 27 | "Daughter of the Devil" | Joseph Sargent | Stephen Lord | April 15, 1965 | |
28 | 28 | "Doll of Sorrow" | Paul Landres | Herman Miller | April 22, 1965 | |
29 | 29 | "The Courtship of Jericho Jones" | Nathan Juran | Story by : Edward J. Lasko Teleplay by : Edward J. Lasko & D.D. Beauchamp | April 29, 1965 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | 1 | "Empire of the Lost" | Nathan Juran | Herman Groves | September 16, 1965 | ||||||
Enemy Chickasaws help Daniel save Kentucky and its settlers from the greed of a fanatical British officer (Edward Mulhare) who means to seize the rich country for himself and sell its dwellers into bondage. | |||||||||||
31 | 2 | "The Tortoise and the Hare" | George Sherman | D.D. Beauchamp | September 23, 1965 | ||||||
Boonesborough's chances to win the annual Spring Foot-Race with the Indians hangs in the balance when Daniel, the fort's best runner, sprains his ankle prior to the hotly contested race. | |||||||||||
32 | 3 | "The Mound Builders" | Nathan Juran | Clyde Ware | September 30, 1965 | ||||||
Daniel and Mingo find themselves party to a mysterious figure from the long dead Aztec nation on a journey to the Shawnee's forbidden valley of the Death. | |||||||||||
33 | 4 | "My Name Is Rawls" | George Sherman | Story by : William Putnam Teleplay by : William Putnam & D.D. Beauchamp | October 7, 1965 | ||||||
Daniel strikes out alone to capture Rawls, a powerful runaway slave, who steals fur pelts by night to earn his passage back to Africa.The renegades who hired him to steal also want him back so they can turn him in and collect the bounty. They kidnap Jemima Boone to force Daniel to make a trade. | |||||||||||
34 | 5 | "The Old Man and the Cave" | George Marshall | Walter Black | October 14, 1965 | ||||||
Israel Boone rescues a half starved aged Indian, Nitashanta, from death in a dark cave, only to discover he has violated a centuries-old burial custom. | |||||||||||
35 | 6 | "The Trek" | George Sherman | Clair Huffaker | October 21, 1965 | ||||||
Daniel develops a mutual respect for and bonds with a notorious renegade, John Benton, as they fight untold odds together on the lengthy trek to Benton's hanging. | |||||||||||
36 | 7 | "The Aaron Burr Story" | Maurice Geraghty | Raphael Hayes | October 28, 1965 | ||||||
A stranger arrives at the fort and wins a shooting contest for a turkey with a pistol. The stranger is Aaron Burr (Leif Erickson), who impresses Jericho and wants to be at the mouth of the Cumberland River in 15 days. Daniel, unsure of Burr's motivations declines but Jericho agrees to take him for $200 and potentially more in the future. Burr is on the way to meet a 300-man party of soldiers to start a new country in that area. Daniel and Mingo catch up to arrest Burr, but are captured and taken prisoner by him. Daniel turns the tables but is stopped by Jericho, who challenges Burr to a duel, but Burr's pistol is empty and Jericho deliberately misses. In the fracas that follows, Burr escapes, but the returning trio watches him ride by, a prisoner as they return to Boonesborough. | |||||||||||
37 | 8 | "Cry of Gold" | Nathan Juran | Dick Nelson & M. Finley | November 4, 1965 | ||||||
In a plot to take over most of Boonesborough's land, owners of the Salem Land Development Company hire two rogues, Tom Cromwell and Blake, to murder Daniel Boone. Over time, however, Tom becomes Daniel's ally and eventually saves his life. | |||||||||||
38 | 9 | "The Peace Tree" | George Sherman | John and Ward Hawkins | November 11, 1965 | ||||||
Israel Boone, Monlutha and Dougle (son of a Scottish settler), work together to prevent a war between the settlers and Indians by preparing a "peace medicine" | |||||||||||
39 | 10 | "The Thanksgiving Story" | George Marshall | Story by : Melvin Levy & Thomas P. Levy Teleplay by : Raphael Hayes & Melvin Levy & D.D. Beauchamp | November 25, 1965 | ||||||
Daniel's eccentric father-in-law helps Israel catch a turkey and then leads the warring Choctaws into a peaceful trap where all can celebrate Thanksgiving peacefully together. | |||||||||||
40 | 11 | "A Rope for Mingo" | John Florea | Raphael Hayes | December 2, 1965 | ||||||
Daniel's effort to save Mingo from a mob intent upon hanging him for killing a white trader's family nearly fail until he can find the real culprit. | |||||||||||
41 | 12 | "The First Beau" | John Florea | Barry Trivers | December 9, 1965 | ||||||
Jemima Boone experiences the sweet pangs of first love with a dashing young outlaw, who ends up going straight because of his feelings for her. | |||||||||||
42 | 13 | "The Perilous Journey" | John Florea | D.D. Beauchamp | December 16, 1965 | ||||||
Daniel Boone acts as a messenger for the President of the United States, carrying a dispatch confirming the Louisiana purchase, despite opposition by British agents. | |||||||||||
43 | 14 | "The Christmas Story" | Maurice Geraghty | Stephen Lord | December 23, 1965 | ||||||
The birth of an Indian child poses a threat to the peace of Boonesborough as Daniel's kindness in giving shelter to the new mother is misinterpreted. | |||||||||||
44 | 15 | "The Tamarack Massacre Affair" | James Clark | Story by : David Duncan Teleplay by : David Duncan & Tom Blackburn | December 30, 1965 | ||||||
Daniel and Mingo undermine a British plot to instigate war between the settlers and the Five Nations of Indians. | |||||||||||
45 | 16 | "Gabriel" | Gerd Oswald | David Duncan | January 6, 1966 | ||||||
Daniel and Mingo sabotage a hostile Spanish search for a French Daniel Boone look-alike. | |||||||||||
46 | 17 | "Seminole Territory" | John Florea | Stephen Lord | January 13, 1966 | ||||||
The Seminoles are about to go to war at the instigation of a magician who has convinced them he's a god. | |||||||||||
47 | 18 | "The Deserter" | Nathan Juran | Robert Bloomfield | January 20, 1966 | ||||||
Bounty hunters who are seeking two army deserters capture young Shawnee Reuben Stone, and by mistake, Daniel Boone. | |||||||||||
48 | 19 | "Crisis by Fire" | Bruce Humberstone | Story by : Lee Loeb Teleplay by : Lee Loeb & David Duncan | January 27, 1966 | ||||||
A smallpox epidemic threatens Boonesborrough, and an ambitious ex-officer in the Continental Army sees a way to use the scourge to gain power. | |||||||||||
49 | 20 | "The Gun" | Robert Totten | Raphael Hayes | February 3, 1966 | ||||||
In Pennsylvania, Daniel gets a new gun made and outwits two scoundrels who try to force him to guide them through Indian country. | |||||||||||
50 | 21 | "The Prisoners" | John Florea | Robert Bloomfield | February 10, 1966 | ||||||
Escaped Army prisoners hold Daniel's children hostage to force him to aid them in revenge on their former commander, but instead he organizes their capture. | |||||||||||
51 | 22 | "The Fifth Man" | George Sherman | Jack Guss | February 17, 1966 | ||||||
Daniel Boone and four companions try to blow up a key bridge on the route to Fort Wayne to prevent the British from capturing the fort. | |||||||||||
52 | 23 | "The Gun-Barrel Highway" | John Florea | Tom Blackburn | February 24, 1966 | ||||||
The Shawnees go on the warpath when construction engineers violate an agreement with the tribe and build a highway through Indian hunting grounds. | |||||||||||
53 | 24 | "The Search" | Harmon Jones | David Duncan | March 3, 1966 | ||||||
On his way to sell furs in New Orleans, Daniel Boone is ambushed and robbed. While tracking his assailant he becomes involved in a search for pirate gold. | |||||||||||
54 | 25 | "Fifty Rifles" | John Florea | William Putman | March 10, 1966 | ||||||
A British army officer steals a wagon carrying fifty rifles that he intends to trade with the Shawnee for a tract of land. Daniel, Mingo and Jerricho must stop them. | |||||||||||
55 | 26 | "The Trap" | Gerd Oswald | Story by : Paul King Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | March 17, 1966 | ||||||
Renegade scalp hunter rob Daniel's cabin and head up river where Mingo and Israel are retrieving furs. Mingo is injured and they grab Israel. Daniel heads out after them. | |||||||||||
56 | 27 | "The Accused" | John Florea | David Duncan | March 24, 1966 | ||||||
Sam Thurston (Jerome Thor), a Factor (broker) and his fiancée Lacey (Joanna Moore) stage his death and the burning of his office to cover his embezzlement of company funds and blames it on Daniel Boone. The charge is that Daniel, unhappy about the sale of his furs earlier that day, murdered the factor, robbed the office and burnt it down to cover his crime. The town believes the charge mostly on the testimony of the fiancee. Daniel escapes the jail while waiting for what surely would be a foregone conclusion of a trial. He finds the fiancée on the trail after leaving town, and finds Sam, the supposedly dead man with her. The sheriff catches up with all of them and finds Sam still alive, who confesses the body they found was a company overseer whom Sam had shot when the overseer discovered his embezzlement. | |||||||||||
57 | 28 | "Cibola" | Gerd Oswald | Raphael Hayes | March 31, 1966 | ||||||
Daniel and Mingo while hunting have an old man and a boy come into their camp. The old man claims he found the boy and the boy only says one word: "Cibola", the name of a lost city somewhere in the mountains of gold. The old man persuades Daniel and Mingo to help him return the boy to his home although the two suspect the old man is only after the gold thought to be in Cibola. They find the hidden valley and the boy's father, from whom the old man in fact stole the boy. The people living there are the remnants of a French patrol that deserted in search of the fabled city and in fact fought and killed a group of natives with gold jewelry but killed all the natives before they could find out from where they came. The residents decide to kill the three to keep their area from being known but the boy and his father, convinced that Daniel and Mingo only wanted to return the boy, help them to escape. With the residents guarding the only mountain exit they know, the father shows them a second way out if they will take his son and give him a better life than he could have trapped in Cibola. | |||||||||||
58 | 29 | "The High Cumberland" | George Sherman | Story by : D.D, Beauchamp Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp & Jack Guss | April 14, 1966 | ||||||
59 | 30 | April 21, 1966 | |||||||||
Part 1: Daniel Boone leads a wagon caravan toward Kentucky where he plans to construct a settlement. One of the travellers is Rebecca Bryant (Patricia Blair), a bondswoman to Cincinnatus (Dallas McKennon) who will be a storekeeper in the settlement. Jim Santee (Armando Silvestre), a gambler, is also in the party. During an Indian attack, Rebecca takes an arrow to the shoulder and must stay behind in Clinch Station while Daniel contracts with Cash Doyle (Roy Jemson), the outpost's storekeeper, and pays for food and other items needed for the new settlement to survive the upcoming winter. When Daniel and Mingo return to Clint's Station in September to determine why the food and items had not been delivered, he finds the goods much more in demand and Doyle reneging on their earlier deal and payment. The goods that Daniel paid for are already loaded on wagons and intended for another settlement; Daniel takes the wagons and heads for Boonesborough with Jim Santee, Mingo, Rebecca, and the wagon drivers. Part 2: The group meets the people to whom Cash Doyle was going to sell their goods at a higher price. The other group offer lots of gold or the goods but Daniel will not sell to them. Dissension rises among the teamsters. The group eventually arrives in Boonesborough. Episode music by Jerry Wallace. |
Veronica Cartwright no longer appeared in the show as Jemima Boone (from some reports at the insistence of Patricia Blair [1] )
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
60 | 1 | "Dan'l Boone Shot a B'ar" | Alex Nicol | Story by : David T. Chantler Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | September 15, 1966 | |
After a bear kills his father and his brother, a Cletus Mott vows to personally kill it at the sametime that Daniel and Mingo try to track it down on behalf of Boonesborough, leading to Mott vowing to shoot them if they interfere in his hunt. | ||||||
61 | 2 | "The Allegiances" | Earl Bellamy | Story by : Luanna S. Poole Teleplay by : David Duncan | September 22, 1966 | |
When a Mohican chief forges an alliance with the British to drive out all settlers from the revolutionary Colonies, Mingo is caught between his loyalty to Daniel Boone and the patriots, and to his own people. A suspicion of Mingo informing Daniel of the plan leads to a British plot to assassinate Daniel Boone. | ||||||
62 | 3 | "Goliath" | Barry Shear | D.D, Beauchamp | September 29, 1966 | |
When Boonesborough horse trader Otis Cobb is sent to buy draft horses for the town, he instead uses the money to buy an immensely strong slave named Goliath to beat up the gang following him. This leads to a problem for Boonesborugh to determine what to do with Goliath and if he can be of any use. | ||||||
63 | 4 | "Grizzly" | William Wiard | Raphael Hayes | October 6, 1966 | |
After a backwoods trapper is accused of killing a debtor, Daniel must clear his name, with some very unexpected help from Israel. | ||||||
64 | 5 | "First in War, First in Peace" | Barry Shear | Story by : Frank L. Moss Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | October 13, 1966 | |
65 | 6 | "Run a Crooked Mile" | Anton Leader | D.D, Beauchamp | October 20, 1966 | |
66 | 7 | "The Matchmaker" | Robert Douglas | Story by : Sam Gilman Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | October 27, 1966 | |
A spirited and colonially educated Creek princess Little Faun (Brenda Benet) is given to Daniel and Mingo to transport to the Shawnee tribe to marry the son of the tribe's chief to avert a war between the two tribes. The indian princess turns out to be quite a handful for everyone involved. Larie Main and James J Griffith guest as two ne'er-do-wells (Stinch and Coll) that briefly kidnap the princess for ransom only to glady return her after a short time. | ||||||
67 | 8 | "Onatha" | Earl Bellamy | David Duncan | November 3, 1966 | |
68 | 9 | "The Loser's Race" | William Wiard | Story by : Judith Barrows Teleplay by : Judith Barrows & D.D, Beauchamp | November 10, 1966 | |
69 | 10 | "The Enchanted Gun" | R. G. Springsteen | Story by : William L. Stuart Teleplay by : David Duncan & Charles O'Neal & William L. Stuart | November 17, 1966 | |
70 | 11 | "Requiem for Craw Green" | George Sherman | Story by : Sid Harris Teleplay by : William Driskill | December 1, 1966 | |
71 | 12 | "The Lost Colony" | Alex Nicol | Story by : Ken Pettus Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp & Ken Pettus | December 8, 1966 | |
Daniel and Mingo must escape bondage by descendants of the "Lost Colony of Roanoke" | ||||||
72 | 13 | "River Passage" | William Witney | D.D, Beauchamp | December 15, 1966 | |
73 | 14 | "When a King Is a Pawn" | Lesley Selander | Story by : William Davis Jr. Teleplay by : David Duncan | December 22, 1966 | |
Daniel and Israel travel with a man, woman, and young boy as Daniel has been hired to drive their stagecoach. Although secretive at first the young boy is France's Louis XIV, fleeing the revolution in France and his certain execution there. As it becomes clear they are being pursued and that all is not as it seems, it becomes also clear that the man is likely to murder the Boones at the end of their journey. Nearing the river Daniel leaves with who he thought was Israel but is in Fact Louis. Meeting the followers Daniel turns Louis over to them for protection and rides off to save Israel. At the coach the leader of following party also meets and he and the man in from the coach shoot each other, both revealing neither had good plans for Louis. Madam decides to go to some French settlement in America where she and Louis can live out their lives in the safety of anonymity. | ||||||
74 | 15 | "The Symbol" | R. G. Springsteen | Story by : W.J. Voorhees Teleplay by : David Duncan & W.J. Voorhees | December 29, 1966 | |
75 | 16 | "The Williamsburg Cannon" | William Witney | Story by : Raphael Hayes Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp & Raphael Hayes | January 12, 1967 | |
76 | 17 | January 19, 1967 | ||||
77 | 18 | "The Wolf Man" | Earl Bellamy | William Driskill | January 26, 1967 | |
78 | 19 | "The Jasper Ledbedder Story" | William Wiard | Helen McAvity & Martha Wilkerson | February 2, 1967 | |
79 | 20 | "When I Became a Man, I Put Away Childish Things" | Earl Bellamy | Story by : Jack Guss Teleplay by : Joel Bernard | February 9, 1967 | |
80 | 21 | "The Long Way Home" | Earl Bellamy | D.D, Beauchamp | February 16, 1967 | |
81 | 22 | "The Young Ones" | Gerd Oswald | Story by : Sid Harris Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | February 23, 1967 | |
82 | 23 | "Delo Jones" | R. G. Springsteen | Clyde Ware | March 2, 1967 | |
83 | 24 | "The Necklace" | Earl Bellamy | David Duncan | March 9, 1967 | |
84 | 25 | "Fort West Point" | Gerd Oswald | Story by : Terry Kingsley-Smith Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | March 23, 1967 | |
85 | 26 | "Bitter Mission" | R. G. Springsteen | Jim Byrnes | March 30, 1967 | |
86 | 27 | "Take the Southbound Stage" | Gerd Oswald | Story by : Terry Kingsley-Smith Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | April 6, 1967 | |
87 | 28 | "The Fallow Land" | William Witney | Story by : William Driskill Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp & Terry Kingsley-Smith | April 13, 1967 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
88 | 1 | "The Ballad of Sidewinder and the Cherokee" | Gerd Oswald | Melvin Levy | September 14, 1967 |
89 | 2 | "The Ordeal of Israel Boone" | James B. Clark | Paul Playdon | September 21, 1967 |
90 | 3 | "The Renegade" | William Wiard | Story by : Rick Husky Teleplay by : Rick Husky & David Levy | September 28, 1967 |
91 | 4 | "Tanner" | John Newland | Raphael Hayes | October 5, 1967 |
92 | 5 | "Beaumarchais" | Arthur H. Nadel | Story by : Terry Kingsley-Smith Teleplay by : Richard J. Collins | October 12, 1967 |
93 | 6 | "The King's Shilling" | Ida Lupino | Joel Oliansky | October 19, 1967 |
94 | 7 | "The Inheritance" | Nathan Juran | David Duncan | October 26, 1967 |
95 | 8 | "The Traitor" | William Wiard | Jack B. Sowards | November 2, 1967 |
96 | 9 | "The Value of a King" | John Newland | Judith Barrows & Robert Guy Barrows | November 9, 1967 |
97 | 10 | "The Desperate Raid" | Nathan Juran | Story by : Fred De Gorter & Frank Goss Jr. Teleplay by : Harold Medford | November 16, 1967 |
98 | 11 | "The Spanish Horse" | William Wiard | Story by : Tom W. Blackburn Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | November 23, 1967 |
99 | 12 | "Chief Mingo" | Gerd Oswald | Jim Byrnes | December 7, 1967 |
100 | 13 | "The Secret Code" | William Wiard | Joel Oliansky | December 14, 1967 |
101 | 14 | "A Matter of Blood" | Nathan Juran | Judith Barrows & Robert Guy Barrows | December 28, 1967 |
102 | 15 | "The Scrimshaw Ivory Chart" | George Marshall | Story by : Melvin Levy Teleplay by : Melvin Levy & Thomas P. Levy | January 4, 1968 |
103 | 16 | "The Imposter" | William Wiard | Merwin Gerard | January 18, 1968 |
104 | 17 | "The Witnesses" | William Wiard | Rick Husky | January 25, 1968 |
105 | 18 | "The Flaming Rocks" | Nathan Juran | David Duncan & Lee Karson | February 1, 1968 |
106 | 19 | "Then Who Will They Hang from the Yardarm If Willy Gets Away?" | Fess Parker | Martha Wilkerson | February 8, 1968 |
107 | 20 | "The Spanish Fort" | William Wiard | Raphael Hayes | February 15, 1968 |
108 | 21 | "Hero's Welcome" | Nathan Juran | Story by : Erich Faust Teleplay by : Joel Oliansky | February 22, 1968 |
109 | 22 | "Orlando, the Prophet" | William Wiard | Story by : Patricia Bouchard Teleplay by : Mevlin Levy | February 29, 1968 |
110 | 23 | "The Far Side of Fury" | William Wiard | Judith Barrows | March 7, 1968 |
111 | 24 | "Nightmare" | George Marshall | Paul Playdon | March 14, 1968 |
112 | 25 | "Thirty Pieces of Silver" | Nathan Juran | Story by : Richard J. Collins Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp & Jim Byrnes | March 28, 1968 |
113 | 26 | "Faith's Way" | Joel Oliansky | Martha Wilkerson | April 4, 1968 |
Ed Ames no longer appeared in seasons 5 and 6.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
114 | 1 | "Be Thankful for the Fickleness of Women" | William Wiard | Don Balluck | September 19, 1968 |
115 | 2 | "The Blackbirder" | William Wiard | Story by : Robert Bloomfield Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | October 3, 1968 |
116 | 3 | "The Dandy" | William Wiard | Merwin Gerard | October 10, 1968 |
117 | 4 | "The Fleeing Nuns" | William Wiard | Story by : Patricia Falkenhagen Teleplay by : Irve Tunick | October 24, 1968 |
118 | 5 | "The Plague That Came to Ford's Run" | Fess Parker | Harold Medford | October 31, 1968 |
119 | 6 | "The Bait" | Nathan Juran | Raphael Hayes | November 7, 1968 |
120 | 7 | "Big, Black and Out There" | William Wiard | Harry Basch | November 14, 1968 |
121 | 8 | "Flag of Truce" | William Wiard | Irve Tunick | November 21, 1968 |
122 | 9 | "The Valley of the Sun" | Nathan Juran | Story by : James Raker Teleplay by : David Duncan | November 28, 1968 |
123 | 10 | "The Patriot" | Fess Parker | Melvin Levy | December 5, 1968 |
124 | 11 | "The Return of Sidewinder" | Nathan Juran | Melvin Levy | December 12, 1968 |
125 | 12 | "Minnow for a Shark" | Nathan Juran | Nathan Juran | January 2, 1969 |
126 | 13 | "To Slay a Giant" | Nathan Juran | Story by : Rapahel Hayes Teleplay by : Raphael Hayes & Arthur Browne Jr. | January 9, 1969 |
127 | 14 | "A Tall Tale of Prater Beaseley" | George Marshall | Melvin Levy | January 16, 1969 |
128 | 15 | "Copperhead Izzy" | William Wiard | James Duncan | January 30, 1969 |
129 | 16 | "Three Score and Ten" | George Marshall | Raphael Hayes | February 6, 1969 |
130 | 17 | "Jonah" | William Wiard | D.D, Beauchamp | February 6, 1969 |
131 | 18 | "Bickford's Bridge" | Nathan Juran | Story by : Al Ramrus & John Herman Shaner Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp & Al Ramrus & John Herman Shaner | February 20, 1969 |
132 | 19 | "A Touch of Charity" | William Wiard | Judith Barrows | February 27, 1969 |
133 | 20 | "For Want of a Hero" | Lee Philips | Stanley Adams & George F. Slavin | March 6, 1969 |
134 | 21 | "Love and Equity" | William Wiard | Melvin Levy | March 13, 1969 |
135 | 22 | "The Allies" | George Marshall | Story by : D.D, Beauchamp & Rick Husky Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp | March 27, 1969 |
136 | 23 | "A Man Before His Time" | William Wiard | Don Balluck | April 3, 1969 |
137 | 24 | "For a Few Rifles" | John Newland | Judith Barrows | April 10, 1969 |
138 | 25 | "Sweet Molly Malone" | William Wiard | Story by : Patricia Falkenhagen & Jack Guss Teleplay by : Patricia Falkenhagen | April 17, 1969 |
139 | 26 | "A Pinch of Salt" | William Wiard | Merwin Gerard | May 1, 1969 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
140 | 1 | "A Very Small Rifle" | Nathan Juran | Melvin Levy & Thomas P. Levy | September 18, 1969 |
141 | 2 | "The Road to Freedom" | William Wiard | Frank L. Moss & Virginia Rooks | October 2, 1969 |
142 | 3 | "Benvenuto... Who?" | William Wiard | Walter Black | October 9, 1969 |
143 | 4 | "The Man" | Nathan Juran | Jack Guss | October 16, 1969 |
144 | 5 | "The Printing Press" | William Wiard | Lionel E. Siegel | October 23, 1969 |
145 | 6 | "The Traitor" | Nathan Juran | David Duncan | October 30, 1969 |
146 | 7 | "The Grand Alliance" | Nathan Juran | Judith Barrows | November 13, 1969 |
147 | 8 | "Target Boone" | William Wiard | Story by : M. Bernard Fox Teleplay by : D.D, Beauchamp & M. Bernard Fox | November 20, 1969 |
148 | 9 | "A Bearskin for Jamie Blue" | William Wiard | Frank Chase | November 27, 1969 |
149 | 10 | "The Cache" | Nathan Juran | Irve Tunick | December 4, 1969 |
150 | 11 | "The Terrible Tarbots" | Nathan Juran | Harold Medford | December 11, 1969 |
151 | 12 | "Hannah Comes Home" | Fess Parker | Harry Basch | December 25, 1969 |
152 | 13 | "An Angel Cried" | Fess Parker | Martha Wilkerson | January 8, 1970 |
153 | 14 | "Perilous Passage" | Nathan Juran | Lee Karson | January 15, 1970 |
154 | 15 | "The Sunshine Patriots" | William Wiard | Story by : Merwin Gerard & Jack Guss Teleplay by : Jack Guss & Rick Husky | January 22, 1970 |
155 | 16 | "Mama Cooper" | William Wiard | Lionel E. Siegel | February 5, 1970 |
156 | 17 | "Before the Tall Man" | George Marshall | Albert Beich & William H. Wright | February 12, 1970 |
157 | 18 | "Run for the Money" | Christian Nyby | Walter Black | February 19, 1970 |
158 | 19 | "A Matter of Vengeance" | Nathan Juran | Teleplay by : Irve Tunick Story by: Al Ramrus & John Herman Shaner | February 26, 1970 |
159 | 20 | "The Landlords" | William Wiard | Melvin Levy | March 5, 1970 |
160 | 21 | "Readin', Ritin', and Revolt" | William Wiard | Lee Karson | March 12, 1970 |
161 | 22 | "Noblesse Oblige" | Nathan Juran | David Duncan | March 26, 1970 |
162 | 23 | "The Homecoming" | Nathan Juran | Melvin Levy | April 9, 1970 |
163 | 24 | "Bringing Up Josh" | William Wiard | Jack Guss | April 16, 1970 |
164 | 25 | "How to Become a Goddess" | William Wiard | Story by : Jim Byrnes & Melvin Levy Teleplay by : Don Balluck & Melvin Levy | April 30, 1970 |
165 | 26 | "Israel and Love" | Nathan Juran | Melvin Levy | May 7, 1970 |
Daniel Boone was an American pioneer and frontiersman whose exploits made him one of the first folk heroes of the United States. He became famous for his exploration and settlement of Kentucky, which was then beyond the western borders of the Thirteen Colonies. In 1775, Boone founded the Wilderness Road through the Cumberland Gap and into Kentucky, despite resistance from Native Americans. He founded Boonesborough, one of the first English-speaking settlements west of the Appalachian Mountains. By the end of the 18th century, more than 200,000 people had entered Kentucky by following the route marked by Boone.
Nancy Jean Cartwright is an American actress. She is the long-time voice of Bart Simpson on the animated television series The Simpsons, for which she has received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance and an Annie Award for Best Voice Acting in the Field of Animation. Cartwright also voices other characters for the show, including Maggie Simpson, Ralph Wiggum, Todd Flanders, and Nelson Muntz. She is also the voice of Chuckie Finster in the Nickelodeon series Rugrats and its spin-off All Grown Up!, succeeding Christine Cavanaugh.
The Daniel Boone National Forest is a national forest in Kentucky. Established in 1937, it includes 708,000 acres (287,000 ha) of federally owned land within a 2,100,000-acre (850,000 ha) proclamation boundary. The name of the forest was changed in 1966 in honor of the explorer Daniel Boone.
Patrick Charles Eugene Boone is an American singer, actor, author, television personality, philanthropist and composer. During his recording career, he sold nearly 50 million records and had 38 Top 40 hits; he also appeared in various Hollywood films.
Boonesborough or Boonesboro is an unincorporated community in Madison County, Kentucky, United States. Founded by famed frontiersman Daniel Boone in 1775 as one of the first English-speaking settlements west of the Appalachian Mountains, Boonesborough lies in the central part of the state along the Kentucky River and is the site of Fort Boonesborough State Park, which includes the Kentucky River Museum. The park site has been rebuilt to look like a working fort of the time that Boone resided there.
The sixth season of the science fiction television series The X-Files commenced airing on the Fox network in the United States on November 8, 1998, concluding on the same channel on May 16, 1999, and consisted of twenty-two episodes. The season continued from the 1998 feature film and focused heavily on FBI federal agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully's separation from the X-Files Division and the demise of the Syndicate—a "shadow government" group attempting to cover up the existence of extraterrestrials—in the two-part episode "Two Fathers" and "One Son".
Fess Elisha Parker Jr. was an American film and television actor best known for his portrayals of the title characters in the Walt Disney television miniseries Davy Crockett and the television series Daniel Boone.
Pernell Elven Roberts Jr. was an American stage, film, and television actor, activist, and singer. In addition to guest-starring in over 60 television series, he was best known for his roles as Ben Cartwright's eldest son Adam Cartwright on the Western television series Bonanza (1959–1965), and as chief surgeon Dr. John McIntyre, the title character on Trapper John, M.D. (1979–1986).
Veronica Cartwright is a British-born American actress. She is known for appearing in science fiction and horror films, and has earned numerous accolades, including three Primetime Emmy Award nominations. Her younger sister is actress Angela Cartwright.
Angela Margaret Cartwright is an English-born American actress primarily known for her roles in movies and television. On television, she played Linda Williams, the stepdaughter of Danny Williams in the long-running TV series The Danny Thomas Show, and Penny Robinson in the 1960s television series Lost in Space. Cartwright's most famous movie role was the part of Brigitta von Trapp in the film The Sound of Music (1965). Her older sister is actress Veronica Cartwright.
Daniel Boone is an American action-adventure television series, starring Fess Parker as the frontiersman Daniel Boone, that aired from September 24, 1964, to May 7, 1970, on NBC for 165 episodes, and was produced by 20th Century Fox Television, Arcola Enterprises, and Fespar Corp. Ed Ames co-starred as Mingo, Boone's Cherokee friend, for the first four seasons of the series. Albert Salmi portrayed Boone's companion Yadkin in season one only. Country Western singer-actor Jimmy Dean was a featured actor as Josh Clements during the 1968–1970 seasons. Actor and former NFL football player Rosey Grier made regular appearances as Gabe Cooper in the 1969 to 1970 season. The show was broadcast "in living color" beginning in fall 1965, the second season, and was shot entirely in California and Kanab, Utah. The show was highly fictionalized with very little historical accuracy.
William Franklin Walker was an American television and film actor. Walker is best remembered for his role as Reverend Sykes in the 1962 film To Kill a Mockingbird.
Daniel Boone is a book by James Daugherty about the famous pioneer and frontiersman. Daniel Boone was first published on 1939 by Viking Press. It won the Newbery Medal for excellence in American children's literature in 1940. It deals with the life, death, and legacy of Daniel Boone. The book is currently out of print, but scans can be found on the Internet.
"Patient X" is the thirteenth episode of the fifth season of American science fiction television series The X-Files. It was written by series creator Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz, directed by Kim Manners and aired in the United States on March 1, 1998, on the Fox network. The episode earned a Nielsen household rating of 12.6, being watched by 20.21 million people in its initial broadcast. The episode received moderately positive reviews from critics.
Richard Compton was an American actor, director and writer, primarily in television.
Patricia Blair was an American television and film actress, primarily on 1950s and 1960s television. She is best known as Rebecca Boone in all six seasons of Daniel Boone, and appeared in 22 episodes of The Rifleman.
The women's 200 metres at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics was held on August 10, 11 and 12 at the Helsinki Olympic Stadium.
Andrew Powell is an American actor. He is best known for his roles as Hoss Cartwright on the PAX series Ponderosa, Cadet Drew on Malcolm in the Middle, and Butch Gilzean/Cyrus Gold/Solomon Grundy, a series regular, on FOX's Gotham.
"The Dramaturg" is the eighteenth episode of the American television series Smash. It was written by Bryan Goluboff and directed by Larry Shaw. The episode premiered on NBC on February 19, 2013, the third episode of Season 2. Eileen introduces Tom and Julia to a new writing partner in order to fix Bombshell's script; Karen confers with Derek about Jimmy and Kyle's musical that they are working on; Derek tries to get reinstated as the director for The Wiz revival with Veronica Moore.
InSight is a 2011 American mystery thriller drama film starring Sean Patrick Flanery, Natalie Zea, Adam Baldwin, Thomas Ian Nicholas, Christopher Lloyd, Veronica Cartwright and Max Perlich.