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Known primarily for his turn as Lucas McCain on Rifleman, Chuck Connors was also a professional baseball and basketball player, longstanding and prolific character actor, and a conservative activist. The Early Life of Chuck Connors Born in Brooklyn in 1921, Connors was the son of two Irish immigrants from Newfoundland and Labrador, which were not at that time part of Canada yet. His father was a longshoreman and his youth was spent in an obsession with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Chuck Connors attended Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica School where he served as an altar boy. It was here that he began his baseball career, playing sandlot ball for the Bay Ridge Celtics, the team of the Bay Ridge Boys' Club, where he spent most of his free time. It was here that he first began to dream of playing for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Connors was originally slated to attend a vocational high school, but an athletic scholarship got him in the door of the prestigious Adelphi Academy. Here, he played baseball, basketball, and football, while also running track. Upon graduation, he received several scholarship offers but ultimately chose Seton Hall. In 1942, Connors' country came calling and he enlisted in the United States Army. Connors saw his action stateside, serving as a tank instructor at West Point. He trained the then-famous Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis ("Mr. Inside" and "Mr. Outside") who played for Army's National Championship-winning 1944 and 1945 football teams. Chuck Connors in Pro Sports After the War, he picked up his interrupted minor league baseball career. At the same time, he was asked to play basketball by the newly formed Basketball Association of America, the forerunner to today's NBA. He is one of 13 athletes to have played in both Major League Baseball and the NBA, playing 53 games for the Boston Celtics. Connors did eventually realize his dream of playing for the Dodgers. After a year on the practice squad, he was played in a single game by the Dodgers before being sent back to the minor-league Montreal Royals. His final season in the Majors was with the Detroit Tigers, where he served as a first baseman and sometimes pinch hitter for 66 games. His greatest achievement in the world of sport, however, was off the field. In 1966, there was a threatened strike of players against the reserve clause, led by Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax. Connors helped to negotiate a settlement allowing the 1966 season to take place. Connors was not terribly distinguished as a professional athlete, so he started looking for new ways to make money. Hollywood came calling during his final year playing baseball in 1952, with the Los Angeles Angels, a Cubs affiliate unrelated to the current team. An MGM agent in the stands, amused by Connors charismatic hijinks on the field, cast him in the role of a police captain for the Tracy-Hepburn picture Pat and Mike. Continue reading The Real Life Rifleman: Chuck Connors, American Hero at Ammo.com . We believe arming our fellow Americans – both physically and philosophically – helps them fulfill our Founding Fathers' intent with the Second Amendment: To serve as a check on state power. | ||
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I asked my Father where Lucas McCain's wife was. He said that's who he's shooting in the opening credits. | |||
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Member |
I'm quite sure I read where he was the first person to ever shatter a back board in pro basketball. "Fixed fortifications are monuments to mans stupidity" - George S. Patton | |||
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Member |
I met him once. It was in Reno, Nevada. He was there in one of the downtown casinos, as I remember he was signing books or something like that. I went up to talk with him and he was drunk. He was kind of friendly but clearly drunk. I left thinking, I hope I don't wind up signing autographs in a Reno casino drunk as a skunk. | |||
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Muzzle flash aficionado |
I met him in the 1980s at a Western event in Fort Worth. He was kind of surly. Johnny Crawford was there, too, doing rope tricks (he was good). He was friendly. flashguy Texan by choice, not accident of birth | |||
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Member |
I'm not clear on what makes him an "American Hero". | |||
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teacher of history |
I don't consider him a hero. | |||
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Frangas non Flectes |
It wouldn't be an ammodotcom thread if someone didn't point out that the thread title makes a bizarre assertion. I'm surprised the thread title didn't include the word "forgotten" somewhere. ______________________________________________ “There are plenty of good reasons for fighting, but no good reason ever to hate without reservation, to imagine that God Almighty Himself hates with you, too.” | |||
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Oh stewardess, I speak jive. |
He made big loops on a lever rifle forever cool. | |||
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On the wrong side of the Mobius strip |
So…are we talking about a forgotten real life rifleman, a real life forgotten rifleman, or a forgotten American hero? | |||
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His diet consists of black coffee, and sarcasm. |
My favorite role of his wasn't The Rifleman, but a vicious criminal by the nickname of "Slow Boy" in the pilot episode of the 1970s cop show Police Story. It also starred Vic Morrow. | |||
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Member |
"I, however, place economy among the first and most important republican virtues, and public debt as the greatest of the dangers to be feared." Thomas Jefferson | |||
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Frangas non Flectes |
Yes. ______________________________________________ “There are plenty of good reasons for fighting, but no good reason ever to hate without reservation, to imagine that God Almighty Himself hates with you, too.” | |||
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Member |
This week, a guy I worked with was fired and was escorted off the property. Always drunk and constant no show/no call. I thought of Branded and pulled up the intro on youtube and the guys my age thought it was amusing and fitting. The office guys just didn't get it, oldest one may be 26 and had never heard of it or The Rifleman. | |||
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Member |
LOL. I can imagine my grandpa saying the same thing. We believe arming our fellow Americans – both physically and philosophically – helps them fulfill our Founding Fathers' intent with the Second Amendment: To serve as a check on state power. | |||
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