Around Kansas - Dodge City's Trail of Fame - April 20, 2016
(Deb) Welcome back folks and one of my favorite topics, one of my favorite places is Dodge City. Of course, when I was growing up in southwestern Virginia, my first introduction to Kansas was Gunsmoke and I am a huge fan of Gunsmoke; I always have been. But one of the real lasting legacies of Gunsmoke, and I think you'll agree Frank, is that James Arness filtered that character of Marshall Matt Dillon through his own personality but then he played him for 20 years. And James Arness a combat veteran of World War II, just an amazing person personally. James Arness gave this image of fairness and decency and strength and there were so many great Kansas qualities that he portrayed to the world. So, right now, I think they have a Go Fund Me Campaign, for the Marshall Matt Dillon statue that will be added to the Walk of Fame, the Trail of Fame in Dodge City. I think that's pretty dog gone cool, don't you? (Frank) Yes, yes it is. Some stories about James Arness. He went ashore on D-Day. Because he was so tall he was the first guy off the LST, so people could judge how deep the water was. Very true. Another thing is remember the movie, The Thing back in the 1950s? That was really one of his first movie roles. He was the Thing. (Deb) Cult classic. (Frank) He came walking in. (Deb) Cult classic. (Deb) Let's take another look at the Trail of Fame in Dodge City. The Dodge City Trail of Fame began as a simple idea back in the late 1980's. Then, in conjunction with the project to restore the huge Santa Fe Depot building, Downtown Dodge, Inc. developed a committee of a few forward-thinking citizens with the thought If Hollywood can do it, why can't we? The State Department of Travel and Tourism funded the initial planning, marketing and placement of the 24-inch bronze medallions into the sidewalks throughout the Dodge City historic district. Other beautification efforts were undertaken as well with the city and the CVB contributing. In 2004, the project had grown to the point where it had taken on a life of its own so a new entity, the Dodge City Trail of Fame, Inc. was formed with its own board of directors and group of special leaders, volunteers and supporters. So far, a total of 29 sidewalk markers have been placed as well as a larger than life statue of Wyatt Earp and a life-sized statue of John Henry Doc Holliday. The organization also contracts with Special US Deputy Marshall Charlie Meade to provide free walking tours of the Dodge City National Historic District. Bob Boze Bell and True West Magazine selected the Dodge City Trail of Fame as Best Historic Town Tour.” The next subject is a life-sized statue of James Arness in his famous role as Marshall Matt Dillon. Inductees honored with sidewalk medallions include a mixture of real life and Hollywood: Wyatt Earp, Dennis Weaver, Bat Masterson, Doc Holliday, Henry Fonda, Charles Rath, Big Nose Kate Elder, Errol Flynn, Bill Tilghman, Kurt Russell, Satanta, Dull Knife, and the list goes on and on. To nominate a legendary figure, visit the group's website. More importantly, walk the Trail of Fame yourself. You'll literally be walking in the footprints of history.
Top 12. Tourist Attractions & Things to Do in Dodge City, Kansas
Top 12. Tourist Attractions & Things to Do in Dodge City, Kansas: Boot Hill Museum, Boothill Casino and Resort, Santa Fe Trail Tracks, Cattle Feedlot Overlook, Dodge City Trail of Fame, Kansas Teachers' Hall of Fame, Fort Dodge, Home of Stone, Dodge City Zoo, El Capitan, United Wireless Arena, Gunfighters Wax Museum
List 8 Tourist Attractions in Dodge City, Kansas | Travel to United States
Here, 8 Top Tourist Attractions in Dodge City, United States..
There's Boot Hill Museum, Home of Stone, Kansas Teachers Hall of Fame, Wright Park Zoo, Long Branch Lagoon, Wyatt Earp Statue, Friendship Park, Coronado Cross and more...
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12-13-15 Dodge City, Kansas Slick Roads - Winter Storm
***NOT FOR BROADCAST***
Contact Brett Adair with Live Storms Media to license.
Brett@livestormsnow.com
Several vehicles slid off the roadway from Cimmaron to Dodge City this afternoon as sleet changed to heavy snow across the region with dynamical cooling. The Boothill museum was lit up beautifully overnight as snow covered the area.
Cowboys and Cattletowns Ready-Made-Adventure
The larger-than-life cowboy legends of the Old West were born on the frontier plains and in the cattletowns of Kansas. Wichita grew from a cattletown to the largest city in the state and few towns capture the spirit of the American cowboy like Dodge City. The Old West still lives in many other Kansas communities as well - Abilene, Newton, Caldwell and Ellsworth all keep the cowboy culture alive year-round!
Around Kansas - Meet Marshall Allen Bailey - December 21, 2016
(Frank) We're back again. This is Around Kansas in case you just didn't know. (Deb) Still Around Kansas. We're still Around Kansas. It's great when we started Around Kansas and we're still Around Kansas and it's still good fun. You don't know what comes with that experience. (Frank) Yes. (Deb) You get to do all the fun people. You get Marshall Allen Bailey. Oh my gosh, what a hoot he is. (Frank) Again, we keep going back to my childhood, which is shortly after dirt was made. I grew up down in Newton, Kansas and of course, the radio stations were in Wichita. Almost all of them had live western bands that would perform in the morning and all of that. It's really kind of cool that the tradition is still around. (Deb) So you grew up listening to Bob Wills? (Frank) Oh yes. (Deb) Of course, Asleep at the Wheel was kind of a new Bob Wills' band. I love Asleep at the Wheel. Marshal Bailey plays this stuff and just a mishmash of really great western swing and other things. Sometimes they'll throw Bing Crosby in there. Whatever he takes the notion to throw in. Then you got all these corny jokes between him and Cowgirl Janey. He's a great showman and he's just a great ambassador for Kansas. Kansas Grassroots. He's the real deal. (Allen Bailey’s Grandpa) This is Allen Bailey’s Grandpa. Views expressed by my grandson on Western Swing and Other Things do not express the views of the staff, management and all the other ya-hoos around public radio. And they definitely don’t express the views of his family. I don’t know where he come up with that junk anyway. Durn little nut! (Frank) That's a pretty unassuming introduction for a show that has been on the air for 27 years garnering numerous awards along the way. Western Swing and Other Things is broadcast every Saturday morning on High Plains Public Radio reaching an audience in five states, in addition to the online listeners. Hosted by Marshal Allen Bailey, and yep, he is really Dodge City Marshal, and his wife, Cowgirl Janey; the music is lots of western swing and lots of surprises punctuated with some admittedly pretty corny jokes. It's a winning combination as its longevity proves. Allen was born in Oklahoma but moved to Cimarron, Kansas, as a child. An accomplished musician, he taught himself to play guitar at the age of 13. A mere year later, he was playing dances professionally. He now plays a number of instruments, including the bass guitar, pedal steel, fiddle, tenor banjo, and piano. He is a member of Partners of the Prairie, a group of cowboys who tour the country and perform cowboy poetry, stories, and lore to delighted folks as far away as Germany. He is also a sought-after emcee where his larger than life personality makes any event more fun. In 2014, he was inducted into the initial group of the new Wild West Walk of Fame in Dodge City. He was in fine company with Buck Taylor, from Gunsmoke, Johnny Crawford, from The Rifleman, Brent Harris, Marshal of Boot Hill Museum, Dr. RC Trotter, Dodge City Icon and rodeo promoter, Harry Vold, famous rodeo stock contractor, The Duke Of The Chutes, Justin Rumford, rodeo clown, Wes Sander, stock contractor, John Lehr and Nancy Hower, star and producer of the Hulu series 'Quick Draw', Jule Hazen, world champion steer wrestler, and Boyd Polhamus, champion rodeo and announcer. Allen is a 2004 inductee into the Kansas Western Swing Hall of Fame, a 2009 inductee into the Western Swing Society of the Southwest Hall of Fame, the 2010 Disc Jockey of the year for the Cowtown Society of Western Music and recipient of the 2012 Western Swing Guild Award of Appreciation and the 2014 Academy of Western Artists Award of Appreciation. He was a nominee for the AWA's 2015 DJ of the Year. His art reflects the same themes--western landscapes, cowboys and critters. Among his most popular paintings are those depicting historic scenes, like Ham Bell's livery stable in Dodge City. Allen is incredibly proud of serving as Dodge City's Marshal and treats that duty respectfully. And despite what his Grandpa says, we figure he's pretty proud of Allen's accomplishments as well.
Kansas' Hell on Wheels
(Deb) Welcome back to Around Kansas. I'm Deb Goodrich. (Frank) I'm Frank Chaffin. (Deb) And he is my handsome co-host, Frank Chaffin. So, Frank a couple of weeks ago, you know I got to go down to Oklahoma City for the Wrangler Awards at the Cowboy Hall of Fame and while I was there I got to meet the riders and the star of the, I think it's a series on AMC, Hell on Wheels. (Frank) Hell on Wheels, yea. (Deb) And... (Frank) Great series. (Deb) It's a fantastic series and of course, the term hell on wheels came from where ever the end of the track was being laid while they were building the railroad. So, Hell on Wheels moved literally, as the railroad moved west. But so many of these sites were in Kansas of course, as they were building the railroad. And after, the Civil War was over and the railroad just takes over, it's the center of the news. It's the heart of the nation. It's everything. (Frank) And the series is going to start up again here, I believe this summer. (Deb) Yes. (Frank) So, look for it. It is a fantastic series. Of course, there's a lot of drama. But there is a lot of true history in the show. (Deb) Yea. And I was visiting with Julie O'Brien who is one of the writers and she was talking about that. Just taking the most dramatic events from history and how they use those in the show. Of course you take literary license with this. It's just fantastic. So, I want to share with you our own Hell on Wheels in Kansas. So much of Kansas history, and that of the West, rides on the rails and trails. Commerce and trade between the East and Santa Fe guided the course of settlement. The railroad inched westward, supplanting the stage coaches, steam boats and mule teams that had carried passengers and supplies. As it moved, the end of the line was called, for a time at least, Hell On Wheels, wherever it was located. In June 1866 the Union Pacific Railroad, Eastern Division, arrived at Junction City just west of Fort Riley. The town became at once the first of several prairie ports which dispensed freight and mail from the various railheads to connect with the Santa Fe Trail. By the summer of 1867, the tracks reached Fort Harker which had changed its name from Fort Ellsworth, and its location a mile north. Thus, Fort Harker became the eastern terminus of the Santa Fe Trail, taking the title from Junction City. Fort Harker's hold on the eastern terminus of the Santa Fe Trail was short lived. By October 1867 trains were running on a regular schedule to the newly-established town of Hays City, and immediately the little municipality near Fort Hays assumed the title of the Santa Fe Trail's eastern terminus. In the meantime, warehouses were dissembled, loaded onto flat cars, and transported to Hays City where they were hastily reassembled to receive the incoming and outgoing freight. A freighter said, Hundreds of freighting outfits have come to Hays City with the arrival of the railroad, and soon the surrounding country looked like a large tent city, except covered wagons took the place of tents. He continued, During those busy days, firms remained open both day and night. Those busy days in Hays City came to a close in June 1868 when the railroad arrived at the little town of Phil Sheridan, twelve miles east of Fort Wallace. The end-of-the-tracks town located on the edge of a ravine became at once the home of the ever-present commission houses where their warehouses were quickly reassembled and business was continued within a matter of days. From Sheridan, as it was most often known, freight was shipped on a new 120-mile road through Fort Wallace and on to Fort Lyon located on the so-called Mountain Route of the Santa Fe Trail. Sheridan took on the appearance of its predecessors, Ellsworth and Hays City. Said our young freighter, In many ways, Sheridan was like Hays City. It had much the same Main Street, much of the same saloons and dance halls, and houses of prostitution. During this period, the laying of tracks ceased because of financial troubles. Consequently, the railhead remained at Sheridan until 1869. The railroad company, reorganized and renamed the Kansas Pacific Railway, pushed westward to Kit Carson in Colorado Territory in 1870. This town, said the freighter, was different from the others. It was decent.
FORT HARKER MUSEUM
A quick look at historic Fort Harker in Kanopolis Kansas
Farm Factor - National Drovers Hall of Fame in Ellsworth - June 28, 2016
(Jamie) Welcome to Farm Factor! Let’s join Kyle and Jim Gray as they discuss the story behind the National Drovers Hall of Fame in Ellsworth.
(Kyle) Hi, this is Kyle Bauer. I have the opportunity to visit with Jim Gray. Jim is the Executive Director of the National Drovers Hall of Fame. Jim you’re at Ellsworth. That’s where the Hall of Fame is. Tell us about the Hall of Fame. (Jim) The National Drovers Hall of Fame was conceived as a way to honor the old trail drivers of the cattle trailing industry going back into the middle 1860s and ‘70s and all the way up to the turn of the century. It’s this massive story of the driving cattle from Texas to Illinois, from Texas to Kansas, across the Western States into Montana and Wyoming. It’s that whole adventure of trailing cattle and men and horse adventures. (Kyle) Ellsworth, of course, was one of the cow towns. If people want to take advantage of the work that you’ve done on restoring that heritage, how might they participate? (Jim) Okay. We have a newsletter that we put out that you can contact us for and that keeps you up to date as to what we are doing. We’re developing a website but that is not in place yet. You can contact us through the National Drovers Hall of Fame, Post Office Box 415, in Ellsworth 67439. If you want to give me a call I’ll put my phone number out there. It’s 785-531-2058, and we can bring you up to date on what we’re doing. (Kyle) Jim, a few years ago you even drove cattle for several weeks into Ellsworth. Was that part of also the Drovers Hall of Fame? (Jim) That was actually separate from the National Drovers Hall of Fame, although we participated in that. But it was meant to help celebrate the 150th Anniversary of the State of Kansas. So, we got together and put together 400 head of cattle that we drove from south of the Caldwell on the Kansas state line all the way to Ellsworth, 220 miles in three weeks. (Kyle) That’s quite an adventure. We’re visiting with Jim Gray. We’re in Ellsworth, Kansas, and this is Kyle Bauer reporting.
(Jamie) Folks, stay with us after the break for information about the 150th Anniversary of the Chisholm Trail.
Around Kansas - Deb and Frank's Chat - April 20, 2016
(Frank) Good morning, it's Wednesday again. I'm Frank. (Deb) I'm Deb. (Frank) And this is Around Kansas. Good morning. (Deb) Another beautiful day in April. (Frank) Yes and so, let's see you're several days into your most recent trip around the sun here too. (Deb) Yes, I am. (Frank) In case you didn't wish her a Happy Birthday... (Deb) There's still time. (Frank) It was a while ago. (Deb) The whole birthday month. Do you know who I share my birthday with, that I'm really proud? It is Libby Custer, George Custer's wife and she was the best thing that ever happened to him by far. His press agent for all eternity. And Josephine Markus Earp, who was Wyatt Earp's wife. Two really interesting women in Western history. Pretty good company there. (Frank) Dixie Lee, also turned the corner. (Deb) Dixie Lee retired. (Frank) Dixie Lee retired. (Deb) Heather, our producer, decided it was time for Dixie to retire. So, Dixie Lee's moved off to some honey bun in the South somewhere. (Frank) Oh my, oh my, oh my. (Deb) She's having some sweet tea and honey buns somewhere. (Frank) You may see soemthing in the background here, they're mowing the lawn here today. We are of course at the Dillon House, which is obviously across from the Capitol, here in the Capital of Topeka. (Deb) From snow blowing to mowing, there's no in between. (Frank) Oh, there goes somebody. (Deb) Hey we've got some cool stuff coming up I want to tell you about. (Frank) OK. That's what we need to talk about. (Deb) Yes, we do. Number one, the Topeka Western Vintage Baseball Team. Their season has begun and they play their games on the lawn at the Kansas State... (Frank) Yes, couple of places, mostly they play out at the Historic Museum in the grass because the vintage baseball was in the grass. (Deb) Right. (Frank) They didn't have all of the infield and all that. They play by various rules. (Deb) Old rules. (Frank) Yes and old rules meaning, they could play 1870 rules; they could play 1898 rules. That's what they decide when they get there. So, they play the game differently each time, so it's fun to watch. (Deb) Wow. Check out their schedule. They've got a game coming up this Saturday, the Westerns versus Emporia. Also, later this month on the 30th is the Celebrity Pancake Feed at the Combat Air Museum and I will be one of the celebrities, once again, flipping pancakes. I love those guys. The Combat Air Museum is just one of my favorite places on earth. They do amazing things and we were out there the other day, and there were visitors from Europe. There were visitors from Canada. There were families from Wichita. There were kids on the flight simulator. There was a pilot, experienced pilot, trying out the flight simulator. There were families of people who had things on display. It's just a treasure. Love that place. So, come out on the 30th from 7-12 in the morning to say hello and support all the good things they're doing out there. (Frank) And she'll make you a pancake that looks like a bunny. (Deb) I will. I will do it. Order, custom orders, whatever you want. We'll have it for you.
Around Kansas - Native Sons & Daughters Honor Jim Hoy - Feb. 17, 2016
(Frank) Here we are again. (Deb) Welcome back. So, Frank, I of course, obviously, am not a native daughter of Kansas. I am a transplant. So, it is possible, maybe in some realm of reality that I could one day be a distinguished Kansan. But were you born, are you a native son? (Frank) Oh ya. (Deb) You're a native son. So where were you born? (Frank) Topeka. (Deb) In Topeka. So, we'll put your name in the running there for the Native Sons and Daughters who honor folks every year. (Frank) Yea. (Deb) Have you ever been to that awards show? (Frank) Yes, I have. (Deb) It's an awesome deal. I did not get to go this year. But it's incredible. (Frank) Yea, it really is. The year Roy Williams was inducted and then the next year you saw him going to North Carolina now. (Deb) Well bless his heart. You know Roy, being very fond of Roy and Dean Smith, the whole connection. When people were not happy with Roy Williams, I'm like you know, Roy was born near Asheville and I grew up in the mountains, the top end of the state. And I'm like golly, if you could see where Roy grew up - it is gorgeous, it's just gorgeous. But you know, home has a strong pull. (Frank) Yea. (Deb) I got to meet Dean Smith speaking of Roy Williams, when Dean was here. You know he graduated from Topeka High and from KU and so he came back to be honored at Topeka High and was President of Shawnee County Historical Society at the time. So, I got to, I was kind of assigned to take care of Dean Smith and oh man, that was awesome. (Frank) Yea. Now, you mentioned Topeka High, this is a transition, listen to this, Hoy, hoy mighty Troy! (Deb) Yea. That's great. (Frank) And guess what, we have a story about someone named Hoy. (Deb) Hoy, Hoy. (Frank) Yea, and we talked about all of the talent that is in the state of Kansas-in music and art and literature and he happens to be another one. (Deb) He does. Amazing. (Frank) Yea. (Deb) Hoy, Hoy. (Frank) Mighty Troy. Here it is. Each year, the Native Sons and Daughters of Kansas gather on or near Kansas Day to honor, well, native sons and daughters. This year's choice for Kansan of the Year was almost a given. He was sure to receive this award sometime in his life. Jim Hoy, who taught at Emporia State University for 45 years before retiring in 2014, is recognized throughout Kansas and beyond for his story-telling as well as his recording of western lore. He has authored, co-authored, or edited seventeen books, including the story of the Cowboys Lament, the song commonly known as the Streets of Laredo. Hoy loves telling crowds that the popular song originated in the streets of a Kansas cowtown, not one in Texas. Hoy’s other books include co-authored Vaqueros, Cowboys and Buckaroos, Cowboys and Kansas: Stories from the Tallgrass Prairie, Prairie Poetry: Cowboy Verse of Kansas, and two volumes called Plains Folk. Hoy holds degrees from K-State, Emporia State, and the University of Missouri-Columbia. The teacher and rancher has also been inducted into the Kansas Cowboy Hall of Fame. Since he is not a native son, Dr. Jerry Farley, president of Washburn University was honored with Distinguished Kansan of the Year. Washburn marked its 150th anniversary in
2015, and under Dr. Farley's guidance the landscape of the campus has been dramatically changed, including the brand new KBI forensic facility there. Congrats, Jim & Jerry!
Ikes Old Driftwood (Taylor Tx)
Eddie Sutton Part 1 - 2009 Kansas Sports Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
Eddie Sutton (Part 1) enshrined into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame during the 2009 Induction ceremony. Presenting keynote speaker is Gary Bender, 2008 KSHOF inductee.
A native of Bucklin, Kansas, Eddie E. Sutton learned the game of basketball from one of the best the legendary Hank Iba at Oklahoma A&M and went on to become one of NCAA basketballs most accomplished and successful coaches. Sutton won a total of 804 games in his 39-year career and retired No. 5 all-time in total wins. Sutton was the first coach to take four different teams to the NCAA Tournament - Creighton, Arkansas, Kentucky, and Oklahoma State. His teams played in 26 NCAA tournaments and reached the Final Four three different times once with Arkansas (1978) and twice with Oklahoma State (1995, 2004). Sutton played basketball at Oklahoma A&M from 1956-58 and helped lead the Cowboys in the NCAA Tournament as a senior. He began his coaching career as an assistant coach under Iba at Oklahoma State in 1958 and also coached at Tulsa Central High School before founding the basketball program at College of Southern Idaho, where the program became a national contender at the junior college level. Suttons coaching stops at Creighton (1969-74), Arkansas (1975-85), Kentucky (1985-89), Oklahoma State (1990-2006) and San Francisco (2007-08) produced a record of 804-327. Sutton was a four-time national coach of the year and Oklahoma State honored him by naming their floor Eddie Sutton Court in 2005. His teams won nine regular-season conference titles. Sutton won his 800th game on Feb. 2, 2008. He was inducted to the Oklahoma State Hall of Honor in 1997. Born March 12, 1936 Dodge City, Kansas. Graduated Bucklin H.S., 1954; Oklahoma State University, 1958; M.S., Oklahoma State University, 1959.
Visit Abilene, Kansas
Explore everything there is to see and do in Abilene, Kansas! Named one of the Best Small Towns to Visit by Smithsonian Magazine, Abilene is home to five-star attractions, including the Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum & Boyhood Home! Visit us this summer!
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Abilene Travel Talks: Seelye Mansion History
Ever wonder about the story being Abilene's historic Seelye Mansion? Hear the history live with owner Terry Tietjens
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Eddie Sutton Part 2 - 2009 Kansas Sports Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
Eddie Sutton (Part 2) enshrined into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame during the 2009 Induction ceremony. Presenting keynote speaker is Gary Bender, 2008 KSHOF inductee.
A native of Bucklin, Kansas, Eddie E. Sutton learned the game of basketball from one of the best the legendary Hank Iba at Oklahoma A&M and went on to become one of NCAA basketballs most accomplished and successful coaches. Sutton won a total of 804 games in his 39-year career and retired No. 5 all-time in total wins. Sutton was the first coach to take four different teams to the NCAA Tournament - Creighton, Arkansas, Kentucky, and Oklahoma State. His teams played in 26 NCAA tournaments and reached the Final Four three different times once with Arkansas (1978) and twice with Oklahoma State (1995, 2004). Sutton played basketball at Oklahoma A&M from 1956-58 and helped lead the Cowboys in the NCAA Tournament as a senior. He began his coaching career as an assistant coach under Iba at Oklahoma State in 1958 and also coached at Tulsa Central High School before founding the basketball program at College of Southern Idaho, where the program became a national contender at the junior college level. Suttons coaching stops at Creighton (1969-74), Arkansas (1975-85), Kentucky (1985-89), Oklahoma State (1990-2006) and San Francisco (2007-08) produced a record of 804-327. Sutton was a four-time national coach of the year and Oklahoma State honored him by naming their floor Eddie Sutton Court in 2005. His teams won nine regular-season conference titles. Sutton won his 800th game on Feb. 2, 2008. He was inducted to the Oklahoma State Hall of Honor in 1997. Born March 12, 1936 Dodge City, Kansas. Graduated Bucklin H.S., 1954; Oklahoma State University, 1958; M.S., Oklahoma State University, 1959.
Explore the Old West Trail Country
A travelogue that highlights the natural beauty of the five states that comprise the Old West Trail Country: Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska. Narrated by Chet Huntley, with a new introduction by filmmaker Robert Henkel. Produced in 1973. (collection MOV 0099)
The Montana Historical Society is the owner of this film and makes available reproductions for research, publication and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from the MHS Photograph Archives before any reproduction use. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission to use may require seeking additional authorization from the copyright owners.
Milburn Stone
Hugh Milburn Stone, sometimes known as Milly Stone, was an American film and television actor best known as Doc on the CBS western series Gunsmoke.
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2018 ローズパレード - 京都橘高等学校吹奏楽部マーチングバンド他 - KTLA
2018年1月01日にカリフォルニア州ロスアンゼルス近郊のパサデナ市で行われた正月恒例の第129回ローズパレードで、地元TV局 KTLA (Ch 5 ) で放送されたものです。
37:03 頃から京都橘高等学校吹奏楽部マーチングバンドが登場します。