Yahoo Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: James Warner Bellah
  2. Shop Devices, Apparel, Books, Music & More. Free Shipping on Qualified Orders.

Search results

  1. James Warner Bellah (September 14, 1899 – September 22, 1976) was an American Western author from the 1930s to the 1950s. His pulp-fiction writings on cavalry and Indians were published in paperbacks or serialized in the Saturday Evening Post.

    • September 14, 1899, New York City, United States
    • September 22, 1976 (aged 77), Los Angeles, California, United States
    • Ann Bellah Copeland, John Lasater Bellah, James Bellah, Stephen Bellah
    • Author
  2. James Warner Bellah. Writer: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. In World War I, James Warner Bellah enlisted in the Canadian army and became a pilot overseas in the Royal Flying Corps, and later the Royal Air Force.

    • Writer, Actor
    • September 14, 1899
    • James Warner Bellah
    • September 22, 1976
  3. James Warner Bellah has 61 books on Goodreads with 837 ratings. James Warner Bellahs most popular book is Massacre.

  4. People also ask

  5. Sep 24, 1976 · James Warner Bellah was a prolific writer, specializing in historical, particularly western subjects, a war correspondent, a prodigious world traveler, an air pioneer, a veteran of both World...

  6. Sep 13, 2015 · If General Charles King was the Rudyard Kipling of the frontier army at the turn of the century, then journalist, short story writer and screenwriter James Warner Bellah inherited that distinction from him by the late 1940s.

  7. Novelist and journalist whose main contributions to cinema were not his (few) screenplays but the stories he provided for several notable John Ford films, particularly the 7th Cavalry trilogy: "Fort Apache" (1948), "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (1949) and "Rio Grande" (1950).

  8. She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) © RKO. “Command” by James Warner Bellah was fist published by the Post in June of 1948 and tells the story of Capt. Nathan Brittles, who is forced to evacuate the commanding officer’s wife and their niece, Olivia Dandridge, from the fort after the fall of Custer and the 7th Cavalry.

  1. People also search for