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・ Cimarron Historic District
・ Cimarron Hotel
・ Cimarron Hydroelectric Power Project
・ Cimarron Manifesto
・ Cimarron meridian
・ Cimarron Municipal Airport
・ Cimarron National Grassland
・ Cimarron people (Panama)
・ Cimarron Redoubt
・ Cimarron Ridge Formation
・ Cimarron River
・ Cimarron River (Arkansas River)
・ Cimarron River (Canadian River)
・ Cimarron River (Gunnison River)
・ Cimarron Solar Facility
Cimarron Strip
・ Cimarron Township
・ Cimarron Township, Gray County, Kansas
・ Cimarron Township, Kansas
・ Cimarron Turnpike
・ Cimarron Valley Railroad
・ Cimarron, California
・ Cimarron, Colorado
・ Cimarron, Kansas
・ Cimarron, New Mexico
・ Cimarron, Texas
・ Cimarron-class fleet replenishment oiler
・ Cimarron-class oiler
・ Cimarron-class oiler (1939)
・ Cimarron-Memorial High School


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Cimarron Strip : ウィキペディア英語版
Cimarron Strip

''Cimarron Strip'' is an American Western television series that aired on CBS from September 1967 to March 1968. Starring Stuart Whitman as Marshal Jim Crown, the series was produced by the creators of ''Gunsmoke''. Reruns of the original show were aired in the summer of 1971.
''Cimarron Strip'' is one of only three 90-minute weekly Western series that aired during the 1960s (the others are ''The Virginian'' and, for one season, ''Wagon Train''), and the only 90-minute series of any kind to be centered primarily around one lead character.
''Cimarron Strip'' is set in the late 1880s in the Cimarron Territory, which would become the Oklahoma Panhandle in 1890. For complex historical reasons, this rugged strip of land existed as a virtually ungoverned U.S. territory for several decades. It was sometimes called No Man's Land, with a reputation for lawlessness and vigilante activity. On the show, Marshal Jim Crown is trying to bring order to the region before its political status is finally resolved.
==Plot outline==
The Cherokee Outlet across the Cimarron River was the last free homestead land in America. It was leased and controlled by cattlemen, and the newly arriving farmers were expecting authorities in Washington to send news that they would be given rights to the land, for which they had been campaigning. U.S. Marshal Jim Crown (Stuart Whitman), who led a rather wild life and had cleaned up Abilene, was assigned to the town of Cimarron. He arrives to find that the sheriff has resigned, leaving Crown on his own to settle the increasing unrest caused by the news he brings, that the cattlemen's leases have been revoked and a final decision on the land is postponed indefinitely. With no sheriff and no support from Army troops, Crown is on his own to keep law and order in this borderland between the Kansas Territory and Indian Territory.
Dulcey Coopersmith (Jill Townsend), born in England in 1869, arrives in Cimarron City on the same train as Marshal Crown, two months after her mother's death in Providence. Dulcey worked as an upstairs maid and traveled to Cimarron to be with her father she had not seen since the age of five, only to discover he had been killed by a beer wagon. Her father's partner was MacGregor (Percy Herbert), a Scotsman, who had let the Wayfarer's Inn fall into disrepair. He was a retired Colonel in Her Majesty's (Queen Victoria) forces. Another friend of Dulcey's father was Francis Wilde (Randy Boone), born in St. Louis and trying to make his way in the world as a reporter and photographer.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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