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Sam Logan (The Man from Blackhawk)

Created by Herb Meadow

Perhaps the only genre more popular than private eyes in television’s early years was the western, so it didn’t long before someone came up with the idea of combining the two.

By far the most successful attempt (and one of the first) was Have Gun, Will Travel, which made it debut in 1957. But it was joined by several others, all hoping to cash in, including the Frank Gruber-created Shotgun Slade, James Brooks, Frank Gruber and Gene Reynolds’ Tales of Wells Fargo, and Herb Meadows’ The Man From Blackhawk. Neither was nearly as successful, although Slade lasted two years and Tales five. Latecomer The Man from Blackhawk lasted only one, possibly because it offered too little, too late.

According to Larka in Television’s Private Eyes,  the show’s hero, SAM LOGAN,  was “a combination insurance investigator-private eye distinguished from his modern day counterparts only by his mode of dress and transportation.”

Sam was the star investigator for the Blackhawk Insurance Company of Chicago– the guy they sent out on the biggest cases.

Perhaps taking a cure from Paladin of Have Gun, Will Travel, Clad was presented as a dude, in a “cityslicker” outfit, complete with string tie and briefcase. He didn’t actually hand out business cards, but the promos weren’t shy about boasting that “His calling card spells ACTION!”

Sam rarely used his gun, although he had no such compunctions about using his fists. His investigations into possibly fraudulent claims frequently took him deep into the heart of the frontier of the American West of the 1880’s, although he also travelled to New York City, New Orleans and… Canada in the 1960 episode “The Montreal Story.”

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

 

 

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