Heretic, Rebel, a Thing to Flout
An Eclectic Journal of Opinion, History, Poetry and General Bloviating
Friday, June 26, 2026
Walking the Walk and Compassion for Campers Update for June 26 2026
William Boyd's Hopalong Turned a Scruffy Cowhand to Shining Hero
Earlier this year I discovered that nearly all of the Hopalong Cassidy original films are now available streaming on Prime. I binge watched for several months.
It took me back to Summer days more than 65 years ago in Cheyenne, Wyoming when we spent our days recreating in detail elaborate cowboy sagas that lasted all day—or even all week. The we were my twin brother, Tim, a rotating cast of neighborhood kids—principally Joe Miranda and his assorted younger siblings—and when she was in town our cousin from Des Moines, Linda Strom. For authenticity real prairie started abruptly at the end of our block complete with sagebrush, tumbleweeds, and low button cactus. But the back yards the neighborhood with their lilac caves, wild rose hedges, palisade fences, brick walls, window wells, and the low flat roofs of car ports provided plenty of locations for ambushes and shoot-outs.
We had regular and defined parts. Tim, handsome and charismatic was always Roy Rogers. Linda was Bell Starr. And me? I was Hopalong Cassidy.
***
On June 24, 1948, a little less than a year before I was born, Hopalong Cassidy premiered on NBC Television. It was the first western series on the infant medium and it was wildly successful. So successful that it introduced an era lasting more than 30 years when horse operas dominated the small screen.
The character Hopalong Cassidy was first introduced in 1904 in short stories by 21-year-old Clarence E. Mulford, a native of Streator, Illinois, while he was living and working in Fryeburg, Maine. He was a fan of western lore who wanted to create more realistic stories than the simple daring-do of the old dime novels. Through research, his tales were filled with accurate details of ranch life, cowboy outfits and gear, and location. But at heart he was still a Victorian moralist with a hero performing nobly.
Cassidy started out as a twenty-something ranch hand elevated to foreman of the sprawling Bar-20 Ranch. He was rude, crude, and slovenly, attributes that hid his finer qualities. Hoppy, as he was called, got his name from sustaining a bullet to the leg in an early story, and lingering disability sometimes came into play.
Beginning with Bar-20 in 1906 Mulford churned out 28 novels through Hopalong Cassidy Serves a Writ in 1940. Enormously popular, he was a major rival of Zane Grey, the leading western novelist of the day. But the Hopalong series was the first in the genre to have continuing characters and story points from book to book. And unlike other series, Mulford’s cowboy hero and his associates, rivals, and foils aged and evolved as the series continued.
In 1935 Mulford’s near contemporary Harry A. Sherman bought the film rights to the book series and set up his own independent production company to make the movies. Sherman was originally an exhibitioner who had made good money when he became the distributor for D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation in the Western states in 1915. He had always wanted to go into production and the deal with Mulford gave him his chance.
Papa Sherman, as he was known, produced more than 50 low budget two reel westerns in the series through 1944. Although cheaply made cinematography by Russell B. Harlan and others was far above average for Poverty Row and gave the series a more expensive look.
Sherman employed a regular sort of stock company with many characters and actors carrying over from film to film. Veteran George Hayes, an early silent leading man who had become a stock villain at other studios, established his new sidekick character, Gabby Hayes by growing a salt-and-pepper beard, removing his false teeth, and donning a battered black hat with a turned up front brim. Many later stars got their starts in these productions and others found work on the down sides of their careers. Familiar costars included Victor Jory, Lee J. Cobb, Richard Dix, George Reeves, Robert Mitchum, and Albert Dekker.
What made the movie series so popular were some key decisions by producer Sherman. First and most important was the selection of a star. He turned not to some handsome young stud or a veteran of other westerns, but to a silent screen leading man fallen on hard times.
William Boyd, born on June 5, 1895 in Hendrysburg in Belmont County, Ohio was a highly successful leading man and a favorite of big-time directors like Griffith and Cecil B. DeMille. Under contract to Radio Pictures at the height of his career he was pulling down $100,000 a year. That came to a screeching halt, however, in 1931 when wire services picked up a story from the Los Angeles newspapers about the arrest of another actor, William “Stage” Boyd, on gambling and liquor charges. Unfortunately, the wrong actor’s picture accompanied the article. Citing the morals clause of his contract, Radio Pictures dumped him and he found himself virtually blacklisted in Hollywood.
Having lived life large with a big house, fancy cars, and all of the accouterments of stardom along with the loss of his investments in the Great Depression, it did not take long for Boyd to fall into virtual poverty. He scrounged for work sometimes finding small supporting roles as a businessman or professional under the name Billy Boyd. He was still living hand to mouth when he responded to Sherman’s casting call.
Sherman was inclined to cast Boyd in the supporting role of Red Connors, an older hand on the Bar-20 and Hoppy’s frenemy. Boyd begged to be considered for the lead role despite not having any experience in action pictures and then barely able to stay on a horse. A screen test earned him the job—unlike other candidates, he could act.
So instead of a handsome young buckaroo Sherman found himself with a middle aged, silver haired hero.
The second big decision was to completely re-imagine the character. Instead of the hard drinking, rough talking cowhand in rags in the first film, Hop-Along Cassidy, the lead was transformed into a gentlemanly teetotaler who ordered sarsaparilla at the bar, who was unfailingly courteous to women, and always let the bad guy slap leather first or throw the first punch. And instead of tatters, Hoppy was adorned in close-fitting black from the tips of his handsomely tooled Texas cowboy boots to the Ten Gallon black Stetson on his head. Boyd was not the first cowboy star to buck the white hat rule—Tom Mix and Ken Maynard had occasionally worn them—but he was the first to make it a regular trademark.
And not just any range pony would do. Hoppy was mounted on a magnificent white stallion, nameless in early films or just referred to as "the White Horse," he was finally named Topper and made the later TV Lone Ranger’s Silver look like a puny runt. Of course, Hoppy sat comfortably in a handsomely tooled black saddle.
This recipe was enough for the new series to successfully compete against the singing cowboy movies of Gene Autry, John Wayne as Randy, and that upstart Roy Rogers who came to dominate the B movie westerns. And unlike the products of Republic and other studios who often set their films in the modern West with telephones, automobiles, and radio, the Hopalong series remained rooted in stories of the Old West.
The final decision was to chuck Mulford’s stories and novels as source material. It was just too hard to adapt the stories to Hoppy’s new image. While keeping Hopalong rooted to the Bar-20, he was given more freedom to roam becoming something of a knight errant with pearl handled revolvers righting wrongs across the West.
In the films Cassidy was usually accompanied by either an elderly comic sidekick and a hero worshiping youth or, most frequently, both. These were not characters, but types whose names and particulars changed as different actors filled the slot. George Hayes was the first sidekick, Windy Halliday billed for the first time as Gabby. Very popular with audiences he left the series in a salary dispute and moved on to Republic where he was soon paired with Gene Autry, John Wayne, Roy Rogers, and later at other studios with Randolph Scott. He was replaced first by Britt Wood as Speedy McGinnis and then by comedian Andy Clyde as California Carlson, who lasted through the end of the movie series.
The juveniles, eager and well-meaning but trouble prone, were played by James Ellison, Russell Hayden, George Reeves, and Rand Brooks. Hayden went on to a substantial career in two-reel westerns and B gangster flicks. Reeves, of course, rose to fame as TV’s Superman.
Meanwhile Mulford, the creator of the original character was making out well not only from royalties from the films but from renewed interest in his books. From 1935 to 1940 he wrote three new Hopalong books reflecting the hero as he appeared in the movies. He also went back and re-wrote many of his earlier titles adapting them to movie goers’ expectations.
Despite the continuing popularity of the series, Sherman dreamed of becoming a producer of quality A pictures. He announced he was ending the series in 1944. By then his star William Boyd was very identified with the part. He had learned how to well and how to duke it out with the bad guys reducing the use of stunt doubles. He enjoyed the adulation of young fans—and the substantial income he earned from appearances with Topper. He gambled his entire future on Hopalong Cassidy, mortgaging virtually everything he owned to buy both the character rights from Mulford and the catalog of movies from Sherman.
And then he set out, with his own production company, to continue the series. He churned out 12 more films. But he had even less production money than Sherman and the pictures were visibly cheaper.
The heyday of the two-reel western was coming to an end. Major distributors were dropping them. Unless he had the money to upgrade to color, as Roy Rogers was successfully doing, there seemed little hope. The principal culprit was the rise of a new competitive medium, television, which threatened to keep all of those Saturday afternoon popcorn munchers at home.
Boyd, with everything to lose, decided to throw in with the butcher who was cutting the throat of his golden goose. In 1948 he approached NBC Television which aired a handful of his old films. The response was so overwhelming that before Boyd could get in production with an original series for the air, the network put up a regular series drastically edited to a half hour format from the 66 original movies.
The series premiered on June 24, 1949. It was the first regular western series on television and a huge hit. By 1950 Boyd was a megastar, his picture as Hopalong Cassidy adorning the covers of national magazines like Look, Life, and Time.
An astute businessman, Boyd was the first western star to see the value in merchandising. He licensed hundreds of products bearing his likeness as Hopalong. Most famously the cowboy was the first ever to appear on a school lunch box causing sales for Aladdin Industries to jump from 50,000 units to 600,000 units in just one year. Hoppy merchandise generated $70 million in revenue for more than 100 companies. In 1950 Boyd personally earned over $800,000 in licensing, endorsements, and public appearances.
Fawcett Comics had been running a series of comic books since 1946 which was taken over by DC Comics in 1954. The now highly collectable books ran through 136 issues through 1959. Western Publishing issued several coloring books. January 1950 Dan Spiegel began to draw a syndicated comic strip with scripts by Royal King Cole which lasted until 1955.
In 1950 a deal with Castle Films brought the original movies distributed by Paramount to the home market in 16 mm sound and 8 mm silent versions. These stone age videos enlivened many a child’s birthday party.
Both versions of the TV series and the original movies were all available in TV syndication until they were withdrawn from circulation in the late 1960’s.
Boyd, now wealthy, retired with his fifth wife to Palm Desert, California where he had significant real estate and development holdings. Suffering from Parkinson’s disease as he aged he shunned photographs and interviews so that he would not disappoint the memory of his fans. He died in 1972 in Laguna Beach at the age of 77.
Hopalong Cassidy did not die. He did become hard to find for a while. Boyd’s heirs licensed restored prints of the films to the basic cable Western Channel in the mid-1990’s where they ran until they were again withdrawn in 2000. DVDs for home viewing were hard to find outside of a couple of cheaply made compilation discs and an expensive package of the whole television run.
The lobby card of an early 1936 Sherman drew critical praise on its release and featured Gabby Hayes as sidekick Windy Haliday. Soon he would be billed as Gabby.
Both the original movies and the TV series are once again easily available on YouTube and streaming on Prime.
The character as envisioned originally by Mulford was resurrected in four novels by western novel master Louis L’Amor and in a series of short stories in Follow Your Stars by Susie Coffman in 2005. Some of Mulford’s original novels have been reprinted, along with a few of the versions he revised to fit the movie character. Readers are advised to check carefully which they are buying as the originals are considered far better.
And, of course, Hopalong replays eternally in the memory theater of his now aging fans.
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Chicago Cubs Celebrate 150th Anniversary as Current Stars Battle Adversity
The Chicago Cubs are celebrating their 150th Anniversary--and coincidentally the anniversary of the National League--this season. That's an almost unmatched record for any American professional sport team. Only the Cincinnati Reds are older as an all-pro baseball club. After a solid Pennant run last season and a returning core roster of some of the best players in Major League Baseball (MLB) avid fans expected a romp to the Playoffs. Spectacular early success included two 10 game winning streaks. But injuries, especially to pitchers, and an inexplicable team-wide batting slump plunged the team to the bottom of the National League Central during an epic losing streak. The bats seem to be coming back with huge wins at home and romped over the Mets twice in a three-game winning streak. Pete Crow-Armstrong, Ian Happ, Nicco Hoerner, and Dansby Swanson routinely dazzle with probably the strongest defense in the game and speed on the base paths. It is a long climb back to the top, however. But it would be prefect if the Boys could take home Championship rings to crown the anniversary season.
| Almost all of this 1880 Championship team was back for another romp to the crown a year later. Cap Anson front and center. |
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
King Phillips War--When Tribes Almost Drove Out Settler Colonists
Attacking a homestead during King Philip's War.
On June 24, 1675 King Philip’s War erupted in New England with the sudden attack on isolated farmsteads in the Town of Swansea in Plymouth Colony by a band of Pokanoket. The raiders lay siege to the town for five days before capturing and burning it with several settlers killed, including some from other towns who had attempted to raise the siege.
Alarm spread across the colonies. Forces of Plymouth and Boston responded by raiding and burning a Wampanoag town at Mt. Hope (modern Bristol, Rhode Island). The war quickly spread across the region with the Wampanoag, Pokanoket, Nipmunk, Podunk, Narragansett, and Nashaway peoples rising up against the colonists and their native allies the Mohegan and Pequoit.
It was the bloodiest conflict between settlers and natives in the early colonial period and per-capita on both sides the bloodiest war ever fought in North America. Out of a total English population of about 56,000 more than 800 were killed, about 1.5% of the total. Nearly half of all New England towns were attacked and more remote areas were swept of settlers.
Losses were even worse for native tribes. Out of about 20,000 people in the various tribes, 3,000 or so were killed outright—about 15% of the population—and many more were injured. Smaller tribes were nearly destroyed, and many fled their homes to an uncertain fate in the territory of hostile tribes further inland.
What stunned the settlers was that the war erupted after 50 years of general peace and was led by the Wampanoag, long-time allies and trading partners. The original peace had been made by Massasoit, Sachem of the tribe and Plymouth leaders shortly after their 1620 landing. It was Massasoit and his band that had helped the struggling colony survive the first brutal winter, taught them how to grow corn, and were the guests at the semi-mythical First Thanksgiving. The Wampanoag prospered trading pelts, meat, and crafts with the colonists for knives, pots, and other desired iron goods. And the alliance protected them from their enemies including the Iroquoian Mohegans.
But tensions had gradually been rising as Plymouth and the Massachusetts Bay colony centered at Boston spread inland, north and south along the coast, and up the Connecticut River stabbing deep into tribal hunting grounds. The rapid population growth of Colonists put pressure on game populations. And an economic crisis of sorts arose as the friendly tribes began running out of trade goods and turned to bartering for land—often land that they shared with other tribes.
Attempts to Christianize the tribes was also resented by most, although a few hundred did convert and moved to Praying Towns where they studied the Gospel and learned English crafts and trades. These Praying Indians were resented by traditionalists, and, when push came to shove, distrusted by their White protectors.
After the elderly Massasoit, who crafted the alliance died in 1661, relations rapidly deteriorated. His eldest son Wamsutta became Grand Sachem of the Wampanoag Confederacy. Wamsutta himself died suddenly, and somewhat mysteriously, while visiting Plymouth Governor Josiah Winslow’s home for negotiations. He was succeeded as Sachem by his younger brother Metacom, who would become known among the colonists as King Philip.
Paul Revere imagined this is what Metacom looked like in this engraving for the book The Entertaining History of King Philip's War.
In council Metacom had long advocated resistance to the English. Now he circulated among the tribes, both members of the Wampanoag Confederacy and ancient tribal enemies urging them to unite and rise up. An advisor to Metacom, Praying Indian John Sassamon and the first native educated at Harvard, became alarmed and warned Plymouth officials of a possible uprising. His mutilated body was soon found frozen in a pond, likely assassinated by Metacom’s supporters.
Plymouth authorities, acting on tips from other Praying Indians, arrested three warriors, tried them before a jury that included some natives, and hanged them on June 8. Two weeks later war broke out.
Early in the war the natives were triumphant. During the summer the towns of Middleborough, Dartmouth, Mendon, Brookfield, and Lancaster were attacked, and survivors fled. In early September they attacked Deerfield, Hadley, and Northfield.
100 Militia and unarmed farmers sent to reap harvests abandoned by panicked settlers were ambushed and nearly massacred at Battle of Bloody Bank.
The New England Confederation consisting of the colonies of Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut, and New Haven, declared war on September 9 and began organizing a common defense. Their first action was a disaster. A column of about 100 militia and farmers was dispatched to the burned over areas to try to reap abandoned harvests and retrieve other supplies for the coming winter. They were ambushed near Hadley and nearly massacred at the Battle of Bloody Bank. More raids against the frontier towns of Springfield and Hatfield continued in the early Fall.
Plymouth Governor Josiah Winslow was the main New England leader in King Philip's War. The death of Wampanoag Grand Sachem Wamsutta at his home while visiting for negotiations may have been an assassination or an accident, but it set of the war. He would order the attack on the neutral Narragansett Praying Indians was not only an atrocity, it spread the war.
Led by Plymouth Governor Winslow the Colonists elected not to strike west into the Wamponoag heartland, but south against the Narragansett, who tried to remain neutral in the war. Winslow suspected them of harboring Wamponoag women and children and feared that they might join the general uprising. With friendly Indians for guides the force moved into Rhode Island, not a member of the New England Confederacy and generally friendly to the tribe. In December they found and destroyed several villages then located the Narragansett stronghold palisade fort near modern South Kingston. Winslow attacked with about a thousand men across a frozen bog. The Great Swamp Fight ended with the fort and most of the tribe’s winter provisions burned. The Narragansett lost at least 300 and the remnants of the tribe were forced away from their homes where many died of exposure or starvation and the surviving warriors joined the general uprising.
The colonists also lost heavily in the fight with 70 killed, including many of their most experienced officers, and 150 wounded.
The Great Swamp Fight.
Over the Winter the tribal offensive intensified. Twenty-three towns and villages were attacked. And in reprisal for the Narragansett raid the Jireh Bull Garrison House near the site of the Great Swamp Fight was attacked, burned to the ground, and its 15-man garrison massacred. It was a rare instance of a well-fortified colonial post being taken by assault.
Things got even worse that Spring. Plymouth Plantation itself, deep in the most settled and well defended area, was attacked on March 12. Although the attack was repulsed it demoralized the colonists. Three more towns were attacked within two weeks. A sizable company of Massachusetts Militia under a Captain Pierce was ambushed between Pawtucket and Blackstone’s settlement. Most were killed outright and those taken captive were tortured and killed.
The Rhode Island capitol of Providence had to be abandoned and was later burned. Across the region colonists were forced back on their most populous towns which were fortified to withstand repeated attacks. Rhode Islanders were forced into a small defensive perimeter around Newport.
But despite battlefield victories, the Indian offensive began to grind to a halt for lack of provisions. The war had left their own crops neglected and a hunting season was lost to battle. Hoped for aid from the English enemy the French in Canada did not materialize except for some arms and ammunition used in the northernmost battleground—Massachusetts’s colonies in what is now Maine.
The Wampanoag’s traditional enemies the Pequot and Mohegans joined the colonists in greater numbers and began raiding Wamponoag villages and burning crops. They played a big role in defending Connecticut from the kind of destruction faced elsewhere.
Desperately Metacom traveled to the lands of his traditional enemies the Mohawks to secure an alliance but instead they launched attacks on his exposed villages and fields. Hungry bands began leaving the area for safety in Maine, New Hampshire, New York, and even Canada.
In April 1676 the remnants of the Narragansett under Canonchet were defeated and the chief killed. The next month Massachusetts Militia under Captain William Turner fell upon a large group of natives in a fishing camp at Peskeopscut on the Falls of the Connecticut River killing nearly 200 and forcing many survivors to jump into the river where they likely drown. It was an expensive victory. Turner and 40 of his men were also killed.
Battles near Hadley and Marlborough scattered native survivors. Colonial authorities offered an amnesty to those who would come in to surrender and who could show that they had not been combatants. Hungry bands began to straggle in. By early July over 400 had surrendered.
Metacom went into hiding in the Assowamset Swamp near Providence and near where the war started. He was hunted by mixed teams of settlers and native allies. He was found and killed by Praying Indian John Alderman. He was beheaded, drawn and quartered.
Victorious militia troops march into Plymouth with Metacom's head on a pike.
The severed head of “King Philip” was on display at Plymouth for the next twenty years. Fighting in northern Maine dragged on another year, but the New England heartland was secure.
Many of the tribes were essentially eliminated as organized bands or pushed beyond the frontier. Hundreds of native captives were tried and executed or sold as slaves in Bermuda, where many residents today trace their lineage to exiled Indians.
Although Plymouth and other colonies had gone deeply in debt and much capital was destroyed, the amazing population growth of the colonies recouped losses within a few years. Western settlement was delayed by lingering fears of Indian attacks and by the growing threat of the French but that allowed the core settlements to grow into real cities and encouraged a move away from subsistence farming to trade and manufacture. By the end of the century the per capita income and standard of living in New England exceeded that of Mother England.















