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  • Alias Smith and Jones The Day the Amnesty Came Through (Season 3, Episode 8)
  • Not Rated
    TV Episode | 60 min | Western

Alias Smith and Jones

The Day the Amnesty Came Through (Season 3, Episode 8)
Not Rated
TV Episode | 60 min | Western

Had series finales been a staple in 1972, this would have been it. Heyes and Curry get a telegram from Wyoming sheriff Lom Trevors that the Governor has at long last given them amnesty, and rush to meet the sheriff (Western veteran John ...See moreHad series finales been a staple in 1972, this would have been it. Heyes and Curry get a telegram from Wyoming sheriff Lom Trevors that the Governor has at long last given them amnesty, and rush to meet the sheriff (Western veteran John Russell takes over from Mike Road, who had played the role in the first two seasons and still voiced it in the opening credits). But the day the amnesty came through is also the day the Governor was removed from office (as a territorial governor, he was appointed by the President -- when the Executive Mansion was occupied by a President of a different party, in this case Grover Cleveland, he appointed one of his own party men to the post). The new Governor, George W. Baxter, is a friend of Trevors and agrees to keep the amnesty on the table, and maybe approve it if the boys will track down his missing daughter. Our heroes succeed, but return to find that Baxter has been removed from office ("Seems he fenced in some Federal land"). Trevors doesn't know the new Governor, Charles Midnight. The last words of the episode are a replay of the words spoken in the pilot (and in the opening credits) about the boys keeping their nose clean until the Governor figures they deserve amnesty. A printed crawl over the last shot records the tumultuous history of the Wyoming Territory governors during the period in question (although buffs will spot several flaws: Governor Midnight's name wasn't Charles -- Roy Huggins may have confused him with famous rancher Charles Goodnight; and the period where the gubernatorial merry-go-round took place was in the infamously deadly-cold and stormy winter of 1886-1887 rather than the summer where filming took place). Written by Peter Harris See less
Read more: Plot summary
Director
Writers
Roy Huggins (story) (as John Thomas James) | Glen A. Larson (created by) | Dick Nelson
Producer
Cinematographer
Editor
Albert J.J. Zúñiga (as Albert J. Zuniga)
Status
Edit Released
Updated Nov 25, 1972

Release date
Nov 25, 1972 (United States)
Awards
Series awards
2 nominations

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Cast

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14 cast members
Name Known for
Ben Murphy
Jed 'Kid' Curry (alias Thaddeus Jones) Jed 'Kid' Curry (alias Thaddeus Jones)   See fewer
Roger Davis
Hannibal Heyes (alias Joshua Smith) Hannibal Heyes (alias Joshua Smith)   See fewer
Brett Halsey
Ed Starr Ed Starr   See fewer
Lane Bradbury
Ellen Anderson Ellen Anderson   See fewer
Warren Vanders
Curly Red Johnson Curly Red Johnson   See fewer
John Russell
Sheriff Lom Trevors Sheriff Lom Trevors   See fewer
Robert Donner
Charlie Taylor Charlie Taylor   See fewer
Charles Dierkop
Clayton Crewes Clayton Crewes   See fewer
Jeff Corey
Governor George W. Baxter Governor George W. Baxter   See fewer
Robert Nichols
Magruder Magruder   See fewer
Sonny Shields
Black Henry Slade Black Henry Slade   See fewer
Frank Ashmore
Guard (as Frank Stell) Guard (as Frank Stell)   See fewer
Gerald McRaney
Telegrapher (as Jerald McRaney) Telegrapher (as Jerald McRaney)   See fewer
Ralph Story
Narrator (uncredited) Narrator (uncredited)   See fewer
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