The Young Pioneers (miniseries) explained

Genre:Western/family/drama
Based On:Young Pioneers by Rose Wilder Lane
Developer:Blanche Hanalis (developed for television by)
Runtime:varied – 97 and 47 minutes
Country:United States
Network:ABC
Opentheme:Dominic Frontiere (instrumental)
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:3

The Young Pioneers was a trial-run ABC Western television series about young newlyweds who settle in the Dakota Territory during the 1870s. If the first three episodes had received good ratings the series may have found a place on the network’s fall lineup.[1]

The series was based on the plot of Rose Wilder Lane’s 1933 novel Let the Hurricane Roar, which was reissued as Young Pioneers[2] though the main characters names came from her novel Free Land.[3]

In March 1975 the television film Young Pioneers was watched by 40 million viewers,[4] so in December 1975 a second film Young Pioneers' Christmas continued the story of homesteaders Molly and David Beaton, and served as a pilot for a planned ABC series.[5] The Young Pioneers series aired on Sundays at 7 p.m.[6] The first episode was a two-hour movie, followed by two sixty-minute episodes.[7]

Cast

Production

The series’ exterior scenes were filmed on the Empire Ranch, near Sonoita, Arizona,[4] with interior shots filmed at the 20th Century-Fox studios in Hollywood. Four sod structures were built for the series, with a house and a barn in both Arizona and California.[9]

Ed Friendly, who had earlier produced the two-hour pilot film for NBCs Little House on the Prairie, was The Young Pioneers producer.[4] Earl Hamner, creator of The Waltons, was brought in to help with the project. He wanted the series to progress like a novel, with each episode to be a single chapter, and the audience seeing the progression of the nearest town of Wildrose.[10]

Notes and References

  1. https://www.newspapers.com/image/384156175/?terms=%22Young%20Pioneers%22&match=1 Lee Margulies, Trial Run for Young Pioneers, The Los Angeles Times, April 1, 1978, page 32
  2. Rose Wilder Lane, Young Pioneers, Bantam Book, 1976
  3. Rose Wilder Lane, Free Land, pages 1, 13, The World Publishing Company, 1945
  4. https://www.newspapers.com/image/5522906/?terms=%22The%20Young%20Pioneers%22&match=1 Spend Christmas with 'Young Pioneers' Dec. 19, Lebanon Daily News (Lebanon, PA), December 11, 1976, page 26
  5. https://www.newspapers.com/image/551028767/?terms=%22The%20Young%20Pioneers%22&match=1 "Young Pioneers", The Reporter-Times (Martinsville, Indiana), December 6, 1975, page 16
  6. https://www.newspapers.com/image/296829577/?terms=%22Young%20Pioneers%22&match=1 'Young Pioneers' new family western, News-Journal (Mansfield, Ohio), April 2, 1978, page 78
  7. https://www.newspapers.com/image/612653221/?terms=%22Young%20Pioneers%22&match=1 Earl Hamner’s new series, The Salt Lake Tribune, April 2, 1978, page 48
  8. Terry Rowan, The American Western A Complete Film Guide, page 453, Lulu, 2013
  9. https://www.newspapers.com/image/787761543/?terms=%22The%20Young%20Pioneers%22&match=1 Grass Houses, The Herald-Sun (Durham, NC), January 9, 1977, page 68
  10. https://www.newspapers.com/image/612653221/?terms=%22Earl%20Hamner%22&match=1 Earl Hamner’s new series, The Salt Lake Tribune, April 2, 1978, page 48