Joe Friday's S&W Snubbie

The picture sure looks like it is from the black and white '50s Dragnet. I don't think Friday ever wore a hat in the '60s revival of the series.
 
Yes, I believe that is the original series as that looks like Ben Alexander on the left with the hat on and his face partly hidden. He played Webb's partner long before Harry Morgan came along.
 
Back in the 50s, a lot of actors/actresses who are now well known started off doing bit parts in such TV series. "Twilight Zone" was full of them. As I earlier noted, Lee Marvin was in the very first Dragnet episode playing the part of a very talkative and hungry murderer.
 
Come on guys and help me out here! I'm old enough to have watched the show way back when; of course I was only a kid.

I (at about age 9) very vaguely remember a show where they had a guy holding up places and he was wearing some sort of a body armor and the cops regular .38s would not do the job.

Somehow Friday got his hands on a .357 and put an end to the perp's successes. Anyone else on here remember that show or can fill in more details!
 
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Could be but it could take some research to find out. The IMDB website has plot summaries of some of the 1950s Dragnet episodes, but by no means all of them. I have seen a lot, but I don't remember that one.
 
Model 12 Airweight.

I remember Joe was sitting at his desk and Frank, (Ben Alexander) his patner at the time came in and handed him a package and joe set it on his desk. Then Frank says "Aren't you going to open it" and Joe says "no". Then Frank gets real nosey and says "why not" and Joe says "because I know whats in it".
Then Frank says "Well what is it?" And Joe says it's a new Airweight 38 or something like that and Frank says "Well, lets see it" so finally Joe opens the package and Frank gets to see it.
That's as I remember it from several decades ago.
Somebody look it up and see if I didn't come pretty close.
 
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I recall a guy asking Friday if he knew what an "Army .45" looked like and he said yes. Some holdup man was using one.

I certainly recall the episode where the new Airweight .38 arrived and how Friday tantalized his partner by not wanting to open the box. It amused him to make the other guy wait. I think Friday had a mean streak.

As a cop, I liked Martin Milner better on, "Adam 12."

I agree with a post here that the Korean cop Cho on, "The Mentalist" reminds me a little of Friday's attitude. Not much humor or joy in living, but he probably got that cynical from dealing with the scum that he's had to. He was even right about that "ho" who went back on drugs after I hoped that she'd straighten out and they'd get together.


Of course, these days, they all carry autos. :rolleyes: But that reflects cop reality. Now that I think about it, Dick Tracy in the comics was the only cop with an auto, or a wrist radio, but some civilian good guys had autos, like Smilin' Jack. I may open a topic about that, in The Lounge.
 
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Watching Dragnet today and it involved our favorite cop with an Officer Involved Shooting. They read off the Serial Number and said it was a Smith & Wesson .38. The number was either 175806 or 1755806 [sorry, I wasn't quick enough]. Any ideas on what model or year it would be, or is it just Hollywood's spouting off?

Since the discussion of Dragnet has also turned into mention of Adam-12, here goes:

Dragnet (late 60s version):

Joe Friday, 2 inch Model 10
Bill Gannon, 4 inch Model 15 Combat Masterpiece

Adam-12 (early seasons):

Malloy and Reed, duty, 6 inch Model 14 K-38s
off-duty, Chief's Special 2 inch

Adam-12 (later seasons):

Malloy and Reed, duty, 4 inch Model 15 Combat Masterpiece,
off-duty, Chief's Special 2 inch.

Both series used then LAPD issue Ithaca Model 37 12 gauge shotguns.

When LAPD created SWAT Teams, there was an Adam-12 episode about SWAT in which the Colt M16 or AR15 rifles were used by the team along with a scoped bolt action rifle.
 
So, the crook in the striped shirt is Leonard Nimoy? It does resemble him a lot.

Nah, that can't be Leonard Nimoy. The ears are all wrong.


"Captain Kirk, I can't believe my ears."

"Mister Spock, I can't believe your ears either."
 
More TV nostalgia

Making a tangential jump, the local cable is showing the 1950's Broderick Crawford "Highway Patrol" which is a show I also watched when I was in grade school.

I remembered the big Buicks but didn't remember the hardware.

The revolvers were all 6 inch Colt Official Police with a mix of service and factory full-checker target stocks.

The first couple of episodes I saw, the uniforms were carrying a non-descript swivel holster, then a few episodes showed a really high riding spring-post cross draw.

Then the surprise -- clam shells. Lots and lots of clam shells.

The actors could draw well, but reholstering was an awkward process for them, requiring both hands, holding the holster horizontal. They hadn't mastered the one-hand reholster.

Great fun.
 
Nimoy - Boyett - Highway Patrol - Dragnet - Adam 12

How's this for seredipity & tying a thread together?

Leonard Nimoy was on Highway Patrol today. IMDB puts this one at 1958.

William Boyett, of course, was on Jack Webb's Adam-12 -- along with Highway Patrol narrator Art Gilmore.

hpnimoywalkorbleed1958.jpg



hpnimoy6inop1958.jpg


Boyett didn't even try to reholster in this sequence. The revolver in his belt is his own.

I've seen Broderick Crawford with a crossdraw holster, but in this one he just sticks his Colt DS in his pants.

hpboyettnimoycrawfordcl.jpg


"Highway Patrol" Blood Money (TV episode 1958) - IMDb
 
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I remember reading that Jack Webb's Model 39 had the serial number 714 from his badge number. Note that Model 39 serial numbers started at 1000 or 1001. I don't know the number of his 44 revolver.
 
What was the idea of the "book hinge" type holster William Boyett is wearing? I noticed that Reed and Malloy also wore those for a while in the Adam 12 series. What was the supposed advantage that floppy, awkward looking holster?
 
What was the idea of the "book hinge" type holster William Boyett is wearing? I noticed that Reed and Malloy also wore those for a while in the Adam 12 series. What was the supposed advantage that floppy, awkward looking holster?


Those were called "clamshell" holsters, and they offered presumed added security. You have to reach inside the gun's trigger guard and press a release to open the holster.
 
What a thread!:)

Thanks to all who participated.

Yes I enjoyed it when I was somewhere I could watch it. Too often I was in an airplane going to and fro and round about.

Wonderful information for an old guy.:)
 
Those were called "clamshell" holsters, and they offered presumed added security. You have to reach inside the gun's trigger guard and press a release to open the holster.
Texas Star, thanks for the explanation.

Let me be sure I understand:
The officer puts his finger inside the trigger guard while drawing the revolver so that the clamshell pops open. Thus he has his finger on the trigger while the gun's muzzle is pointed in the direction of his leg / foot? All this in a possibly in a high stress situation? :confused: :eek:

... and someone thought that was a good idea?
 

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