Lawman Essays

  • The Western Lawman

    641 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Western Lawman The west was filled with various characters ranging from cowboys, bandits, bar owners, and ultimately the law. The different attitudes towards men of authority during the western era can be seen through the national radio show of Gun smoke. The knowledgeable, caring, and just sheriff of Dodge County named Matt Dillon portrays many societal roles as he is faced with perplexing situations. Through three episodes of Gunskmoke, the reoccurring theme is that Matt Dillon is the

  • The Makings of a Good Lawman

    664 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Makings of a Good Lawman Gunsmoke is about the violence that moved throughout the west and the united states marshal Matt Dillon along with his sidekick Chester, who moved along solving the crimes and lending a hand to anyone who needed it along the way. The staring cast of Gunsmoke was William Conrad as Matt Dillon, Howard McNear as Doc, Parley Baer as Chester, Georgia Ellis as Kitty. Usually the west is describes as a time in history filled with outlaws, gun fights, ghost towns, wagon

  • The Stereotypical Old-West Lawman

    643 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Stereotypical Old-West Lawman Justice, duty, silence, wisdom, bravery, self-reliance, independence, respect; these are all characteristics of the old-west lawman. Matt Dillon, marshal of Dodge City, is just such a lawman. His sense of justice, duty, and wisdom epitomize the stereotypical old-west hero. In the episode entitled Fawn, Marshal Dillon is charged with a woman that escaped an Indian camp. She is accompanied by a young Indian girl. They are in Dodge till the womans husband arrives

  • Stereo-typical Characteristics of the Old West Lawman

    584 Words  | 2 Pages

    Marshall Matt Dillon - Stereo-typical Characteristics of the Old West Lawman The sound of pounding horse hooves and the piercing ricochet of a gunshot break the silence over the radio. As theme music begins to play, an announcers voice is heard, Around Dodge City and in the territory out West, theres just one way to handle the killers and the spoilers, and thats with the US Marshall and the smell of gun smoke. (Radio Spirits) Thus begins the program Gunsmoke, a program in which the hero, United

  • Stereotypical Old West Lawman in the Radio Series Gunsmoke

    718 Words  | 2 Pages

    Stereotypical Old West Lawman in the Radio Series Gunsmoke When considering the attributes of the Old West lawman, the mind frequently turns to the lawmen made familiar through works of fiction, created for the purposes of entertainment. One specific example of such a fictional depiction of "the lawman" exists in the episodic radio series entitled, "Gunsmoke." In this series, Matt Dillon, the Sheriff of Dodge City, repeatedly exhibits many qualities, which could be labeled as stereotypical.

  • Bonnie And Clyde

    1134 Words  | 3 Pages

    Bonnie and Clyde Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker burst upon the American Southwest in the Great Depression year of 1932. At the time of Clyde’s first involvement with a murder, people paid little attention to the event. He was just another violent hoodlum in a nation with a growing list of brutal criminals, which included Al Capone, John Dillenger, Pretty Boy Floyd, and the Barker Gang. Not until Bonnie and Clyde joined forces did the public become intrigued. The phrase “Bonnie and Clyde';

  • Gunsmoke: Character of the Old West Marshal, Matt Dillon

    1224 Words  | 3 Pages

    those that were willing to "serve and protect". No ordinary lawman would do though. The needs and demands that were placed on those in authority during that time called for someone extraordinary. The people in the few scattered cities here and there depended on marshals and their ability to uphold the law. Dodge City was no exception, in fact it was the rule. Many ruffians came and went through Dodge and therefore the City needed a lawman like no other. What they had was Marshal Matt Dillon. Marshal

  • U.S. Marshall Matt Dillon as the Ideal American

    742 Words  | 2 Pages

    U.S. Marshall Matt Dillon as the Ideal American The old-west lawman is an American hero and represents the ideals of American society. He is immediately thought of when one contemplates strength of character and other fine qualities. As an irreplaceable part of American tradition, his characteristics are looked upon as a model to all other Americans. Much of what is known about the old-west lawman comes from stories of fiction one of these being the radio program Gunsmoke. Matt Dillon, a U.S

  • Literacy And The Internet: Video Analysis

    1820 Words  | 4 Pages

    defined by their ability to read, write and communicate within a network information environment (Lawman, Browne, & Leu, 2017). Kids

  • Project Management Theory

    4264 Words  | 9 Pages

    1. Introduction The High Speed Two is a high speed rail that is of very high profile within the UK right now. The project is to update the current rails as well as gaining better punctuality of service, less crowded trains and an increase of business travellers as well as a reduction in carbon emissions. The project is designed to update the rail network between London and the North West of England initially with the intention of expanding further north. The reason for this report is to evaluate

  • Explanatory Synthesis on Gunsmoke

    830 Words  | 2 Pages

    Explanatory Synthesis on "Gunsmoke" Gunsmoke the radio program, which aired on the CBS Radio Network, was first broadcast on April 26, 1952 and the final broadcast aired on June 18, 1961. During its nine year radio run, Gunsmoke would air 413 radio stories and six of the seasons would coincide with Gunsmoke the television series. Many of the original cast members of the radio show would go on to have memorable television careers: William Conrad, who played Matt Dillon, went on to play in "Cannon"

  • The Great Dionysia

    609 Words  | 2 Pages

    Theatre played a central role in Greek culture; therefore, theatrical festivals in honor of the Great Dionysia were held, which the greatest playwrights competed to perform their works, and the Athens’s citizens came out to support tragedy or to laugh at uproarious comedy (Matthews et al., 2014). The Greeks divided their theater into three genres: satyr-play, tragedy, and comedy. The Greek word tragedy means “goat song” and this word may refer to a prehistoric religious ceremony in which competing

  • Morgan Earp Research Paper

    782 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mariah Ann, Martha Elizabeth Earp. Virgil was the second real brother Virgil secretly married Ellen Rysdam in Iowa. Morgan Earp the younger brother to Wyatt as well as he was a participant in the O.K. Corral. Morgan worked as a lawman just like his brothers and he was a lawman before Wyatt. Warren Earp the youngest Earp of them came to tombstone right after Morgan’s death to help in bringing his dead body back to Colton, California to bury him. James Earp was a member of Union Army and fought in the

  • The Gunslinger Hero

    2224 Words  | 5 Pages

    figure of the gunslinger is part of this iconography, his law was through the gun and his boots with spurs signaled his arrival, commanding order by way of violent intentions. The Western also had other iconic figures that populated the Old West, the lawman, in contrast to the gunslinger, had a different weapon to yield, the law. In the frontier, his belief in law and order as well as knowledge and education, brought civility to the untamed frontier. The Western was and still is the “essential American

  • Biography of Wyatt Earp

    908 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp, was born on March 19, 1848 in Manmouth, Illinois to Nicholas and Virginia Earp. When Wyatt was two, his parents moved him across the Mississippi River to Pella, Iowa. He was considered a great western lawman. His first experience as a lawman was as a constable of Lamar, Missouri for four months in the year 1870. In April, 1875, he was appointed to the Wichita Kansas police force only to be released from that job on April 2, 1876 for insubordination. After that, Wyatt

  • The Three Generations Represented in No Country For Old Men

    1263 Words  | 3 Pages

    Bell, Sheriff Bell hints more at hopelessness then hope” (Cheuse). Bell is not with out the wisdom that age brings and has seen his share of atrocities World War 2, “Decorated for bravery sheriff bell has family links to the old west and to the Texas lawman tradition. He represents the vanished world where sheriffs knew and cared for their people” (Deirdre). Bell from a generation of Children raised to answer, “yes ma’am,” and, “no ma’am,” is devout to his sense of right and wrong and his calling in

  • Wild West Flaws

    525 Words  | 2 Pages

    themselves as fearless fighters and tamers of these gun slingers. Outlaws and law men were the mainstay of the Wild West. The odd thing is that both these categories of men, one for the law and one against it were in fact interchangeable. Thus a lawman in one state was an outlaw in another state and vice versa. Some of the outlaws made a name for themselves that still lives today. One of these was Billy the Kid. He was shot dead in 1881 by his friend a sheriff named Pat Garret and mind you he was

  • The Bride Comes To Yellow Sky Analysis

    1717 Words  | 4 Pages

    A lawman has returned to deal with the town‟s notorious “terror.” Telling you that this story took place in the old west, the knee-jerk reaction is to expect this confrontation to be settled with pistols at dawn. Our hero, however, has crossed a threshold that is foreign to most of the western heroes we‟re familiar with, changing the dynamics of the game entirely. He‟s just gotten married. Speaking of Stephen Crane, Donald Vanouse of the State University of New York writes, “Crane is comparable to

  • Persuasive Essay On Texting And Driving

    768 Words  | 2 Pages

    To put it plainly, death is inevitable. However, fatalities among car crashes is among the most preventable situations we encounter today. Contrary to what many believe, texting and driving is not the only hazard among the road. Believe it or not, the elderly have posed as a serious threat among fellow drivers. To keep dangerously incapable folks off the road, the Texas Department of Public Safety, should lower the age from 79 to 65 to require people to personally visit the facility for a vision

  • Pierre-Auguste Renoir's Luncheon The Boating Party

    762 Words  | 2 Pages

    States. He was later shot by Charles Guiteau at a Washington, D.C. train station and died 11 weeks later. VP Chester Adams became president. Czar Nicholas II of Russia was assassinated. Jews are blamed. Outlaw Billy the Kid was shot and killed by lawman Pat Garrett in New Mexico territory. Irish political leader Charles Stewart Parnell was arrested and imprisoned by British authorities. The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral took place in Tombstone, Arizona. Industrialization and Ruskin: The first thing