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Seasons & Episodes

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EP1  Killer Take All
Sep. 05,1958
Killer Take All

We don't have an overview of this episode, please check back later.

EP2  Outlaw's Wife
Sep. 12,1958
Outlaw's Wife

The town's women want Hoby to make an outlaw's wife (who just returned to Porter) leave town.

EP3  Chinese Cowboy
Sep. 19,1958
Chinese Cowboy

We don't have an overview of this episode, please check back later.

EP4  The Set-Up
Sep. 26,1958
The Set-Up

Henrietta's new gentleman friend is only using her to setup an alibi for a bank robbery.

EP5  A Stone for Benny French
Oct. 03,1958
A Stone for Benny French

Hoby tracks down Benny French who was the only member of the Morgan Larker gang who escaped from the bank robbery.

EP6  Trapped
Oct. 10,1958
Trapped

Hoby is held prisoner in a shack during a blizzard by the wife of husband and wife outlaws to care for her sick husband.

EP7  Matter of Justice
Oct. 17,1958
Matter of Justice

One of the outlaws who held up the Butterfield stage depot has been caught and is awaiting trial and hanging. Hoby is called in to protect the town of Talpa. The prisoner claims his outlaw gang will kill the witnesses and destroy the town.

EP8  Tenner Smith
Oct. 24,1958
Tenner Smith

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EP9  The Avenger
Oct. 31,1958
The Avenger

Lance Garth is accused of stealing the payroll from Banning Mining but he is shot and killed before the money is found.

EP10  The Schoolteacher
Nov. 07,1958
The Schoolteacher

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EP11  Deadly Decoy
Nov. 14,1958
Deadly Decoy

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EP12  Sunday's Child
Nov. 21,1958
Sunday's Child

Gambler Joe Sunday comes to Porter with a court order to take possession of his baby daughter from her mother Cindy who plays the piano in the saloon. Hoby has to enforce the order over the objections of Henrietta and the whole town.

EP13  Day of Vengeance
Nov. 28,1958
Day of Vengeance

A young man seeks the person who killed his brother. The truth is not what he expected.

EP14  Three-Legged Fox
Dec. 05,1958
Three-Legged Fox

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EP15  The Kid
Dec. 12,1958
The Kid

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EP16  Guilt
Dec. 19,1958
Guilt

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EP17  Every Man a Witness
Dec. 26,1958
Every Man a Witness

Sheriff Alvin Fremont and a mob take prisoner Char Lopez out of jail and threaten to lynch him unless he confesses. The horse bolts and Lopez is hanged. Hoby is sent in to investigate who was responsible.

EP18  McCallin's Daughter
Jan. 02,1959
McCallin's Daughter

Youngster Debby McCallin comes to town and asks Hoby to stop her father Bart McCallin from committing a robbery.

EP19  Bad Judgment
Jan. 28,1959
Bad Judgment

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EP20  Terror
Feb. 04,1959
Terror

Doc Calhoun and Hoby deal with an outbreak of typhoid fever in town.

EP21  The Feud
Feb. 11,1959
The Feud

Elderly and dying Maude Turley has her boys bring her back to Porter to die and be buried next to her husband after being run out of town 17 years ago by the Corbett's. Hoby tries to keep the two families from killing each other.

EP22  The Samaritan
Feb. 18,1959
The Samaritan

Hoby finds a man on the trail with his leg caught in a bear trap and releases him. The man then knocks Hoby out, steals his horse and gun and leaves him caught in the bear trap.

EP23  The Gang
Feb. 25,1959
The Gang

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EP24  The Threat
Mar. 04,1959
The Threat

A smiling stranger wearing a 3-piece suit and bowler hat barges into the bank manager's office carrying a package under his arm and threatens to blow the town of Porter off the face of the Earth in one hour unless he is given $10,000.

EP25  Hard Lines
Mar. 11,1959
Hard Lines

Joker Wells, who was a traitor with the Confederate Army, returns to his home town of Porter. Everybody wants Hoby to run him out of town, especially Ed Crow, who blames Joker for the loss of his arm in the war.

EP26  Fear
Mar. 18,1959
Fear

We don't have an overview of this episode, please check back later.

EP27  Stranger in Town
Mar. 25,1959
Stranger in Town

Henrietta Porter receives a letter from Harry Keller who was just released from prison warning the town of Porter to stay away from Hoby because Harry is coming to kill Hoby in revenge for killing his brother. Making things worse, Hoby doesn't even know what Keller looks like.

EP28  The Protector
Apr. 01,1959
The Protector

We don't have an overview of this episode, please check back later.

EP29  False Witness
Apr. 08,1959
False Witness

A strange girl arrives in Porter and tells Hoby that she knows that Joe Corbett is innocent of murder even though he was convicted and sentenced to hang because she was a witness and saw somebody else do it.

EP30  The Trick
Apr. 15,1959
The Trick

Tully Saxon knocks on the door to Tenner Smith's office in the saloon. When Tenner opens the door, he is surprised to see someone he had not seen in 8 years. Tully tells Tenner he will kill him before he leaves town.

EP31  The Eyes of Jerry Kelso
Apr. 22,1959
The Eyes of Jerry Kelso

When traveling salesman Emanuel Brock is found shot to death in his hotel room, Hoby has to figure out who did it.

EP32  The Gift Horse
Apr. 29,1959
The Gift Horse

Two old men (Zack and Levi) tell Ralph that they are his long lost uncles but Hoby thinks something about the two men rang sour.

EP33  The Vote
May. 06,1959
The Vote

A man and a woman came to Porter bringing with them the idea of "Give Women the Vote".

EP34  The Unwanted
May. 13,1959
The Unwanted

Hoby is called to the town of Glenville who are afraid that a group of religious people who moved in outside of town are practicing witchcraft and are causing bad luck.

EP35  Toss-Up
May. 20,1959
Toss-Up

We don't have an overview of this episode, please check back later.

EP36  Inquest
Sep. 02,1959
Inquest

Hoby is helping Sheriff Lee look into a murder. But the widow, the doctor and even the sheriff have motives with none helpful in finding the killer.

EP37  Back to Crawford
Sep. 09,1959
Back to Crawford

Hoby returns home to Crawford to help his sister Nora after she sends him a telegram that somebody has been threatening her and because he gets a telegram from town drunk Fred Sales to come home quick because his sister is going to die.

EP38  Blind Alley
Sep. 16,1959
Blind Alley

Rufus Cole shoots Mike Hardesty off his horse on the trail. Hoby who had been trailing Rufus for six weeks comes along to save Mike but he has lost his sight.

EP39  Quiet Night in Porter
Sep. 23,1959
Quiet Night in Porter

Chad Winter, the owner of the general store, finds an old woman in his store after closing then two men walk in and shoot him. Hoby has to find out who killed him.

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Trackdown is an American Western television series starring Robert Culp that aired on CBS between 1957 and 1959. More than seventy episodes of this series were produced by Dick Powell's Four Star Television and filmed at the Desilu-Culver Studio. The series was itself a spin-off of Powell's anthology series, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater.

Trackdown Audience Reviews

Marketic It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.
Bessie Smyth Great story, amazing characters, superb action, enthralling cinematography. Yes, this is something I am glad I spent money on.
Ella-May O'Brien Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.
Jenni Devyn Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.
classicsoncall As a kid in the Fifties, I used to catch as many TV Westerns as I could with my Dad, as long as they didn't go past my bedtime. I've seen episodes of most, but the two I remember watching regularly are virtually unknown today. One was 'Johnny Ringo' starring Don Durant, and the other was 'Trackdown', the story of Texas Ranger Hoby Gilman, portrayed by Robert Culp. Culp was every bit as cool as another TV Western star, Steve McQueen, and if you've seen him in action, you know he worked the part. With his upturned jacket collar and the strutting walk, Culp exuded a unique confidence in his role, standing up to bad guys and delivering justice to the Old West. Ranger Gilman even smoked, rather unusual now as I think of other popular TV characters of the era. I could be wrong, but I don't think I've ever seen guys like Josh Randall, Marshal Matt Dillon, or Rebel Nick Adams light one up. Now that I mention it, I'll have to be attentive when I catch some of those shows.Since I bring up Steve McQueen's name, it's worth mentioning that 'Trackdown' first introduced the character of bounty hunter Josh Randall in a first season episode appropriately titled 'The Bounty Hunter', airing on March 7th, 1958. McQueen was brought back ten episodes later as a completely different character, actually two characters, when he portrayed a pair of brothers, one good and one an outlaw. Interestingly, the character of Hoby Gilman was first introduced by Culp in an episode of 'Zane Grey Theater' from May 3rd, 1957.It wasn't unusual for guest actors to show up in a series back then more than once, almost always in different roles. Nick Adams, Richard Devon, Warren Oates and DeForrest Kelley each made three appearances in 'Trackdown'. Michael Landon, Johnnie Crawford and Don Durant both had two along with McQueen. Other favorites of mine who appeared a single time include Vic Morrow, Pernell Roberts, Elisha Cook Jr., James Best, Strother Martin and Keye Luke.Watching the series in episode order over the past few months (there were seventy), the only one I remember seeing fifty years ago was one called "The Schoolteacher". That's probably why it's one of my favorites, in which Richard Cornthwaite portrays a non-violent, milquetoast sort of character who's bullied by Harold J. Stone. The teacher trains himself to shoot accurately under the watchful eye of Gilman, who emphasizes that shooting straight and hitting a target is more valuable than being quick on the draw. When the inevitable showdown eventually occurs, the teacher first displays his shooting prowess to his adversary, causing the town bully to back down. It was a neat way to show the audience that violence doesn't always have to be the answer if you use your head.As a Texas Ranger, Hoby Gilman was called on to fight trouble in various towns, but a good portion of the stories took place in Porter, Texas. There were a handful of regulars supporting Culp, most notably Ellen Corby as Henrietta Porter, the publisher of the town newspaper 'The Enterprise'. Norman Leavitt was Gilman's deputy Ralph, and later shows brought in Peter Leeds as Tenner Smith, owner of the Buckhorn Saloon, and Addison Richards as Doc Calhoun. All had significant roles in various stories, demonstrating their loyalty to the town's peace officer.Produced by Four Star Films and airing on the CBS network, the show lasted only two seasons, but back then, over thirty episodes per season was pretty standard. The thirty minute episodes began on October 4th, 1957, and ran until September 23rd, 1959. That last episode by the way, guest starred DeForest Kelley and Don Durant as a pair of brothers protecting their mother who was going senile. A week later, Don Durant debuted my other favorite TV Western on October 1st with the initial episode of 'Johnny Ringo'. I'll eventually get to reviewing that one as well.
Allen J. Duffis (sataft-2) This show's character was a major departure for standard western characterizations of the late 1950's. And the individual solely responsible for that swing in characterization was the series star, Robert Culp.Culp played the show's lead character, Texas Ranger Hobey Gillman, as a hip, cool dude; somewhat reminiscent of the then running top rated detective series, Peter Gunn.Culp gave the character a cool walk 'hip-diddy' walk, and spoke his lines as though he'd taken his responses off the top of his head and, basically, without any thought whatsoever before doing so. He was even cool when someone had the drop on him, or when he outdrew the bad guy. He was just plain 'cool'.Robert Culp sharpened this image during his tenure in his first television starring role and vehicle. He then deftly transferred it, intact, to the character Kelly Robinson in the 1965 TV espionage hit, "I Spy." In that top rated series in which he starred with acting newcomer Bill Cosby, to this day, many fans of the show felt that it was Culp's acting demeanor that gave the show it's real appeal. Unfortunately, Cosby's being the first Black in a television series in a lead role, stole the show from him. Cosby became the viewer draw.Culp was initially hired to be the 'lead' star in the series, but in the last three years of its run, Cosby was the everyone talked about even though, clearly, he was not the veteran or polished actor Cosby was.In the final two years, Cosby was even paid more for his participation than Culp was, which did not come out until some ten or more years after the series ended.Regardless, the series was a good one for its time, even though now quite dated to a younger generation who know little of and care less about the 'Cold War' period of history.
Virgil_Hilts_1964 This, along with Wanted Dead or Alive, was one of the better written and scripted of the routine weekly western TV dramas that glutted late 1950s TV.Robert Culp was unique in his character of Hobie Gilman. Gilman looked for the moral justice behind each situation he found himself in. It was not just 30 minutes of chase 'em and shoot 'em.Interestingly, Steve McQueen got his first shot at a TV series by playing Josh Randall on an episode of Track Down. His spin off series Wanted Dead or Alive was also a unique series, and launched another great actor's career.By today's standards, yes, most of the 1950s westerns were formulaic. But if you have the time to catch a group of them for comparison, Track Down stands out. Culp is a great actor, as subsequently shown in every piece of work he did later on.
arcticsnows Robert Culp is the most unique actor I've ever seen. He's one of the most believable characters--no matter what he portrays, from Trackdown to I Spy... Rarely does one see an actor with such natural finesse and brillance.