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  1. Stage to Tucson: Directed by Ralph Murphy. With Rod Cameron, Wayne Morris, Kay Buckley, Sally Eilers. A group of outlaws posing as Southern sympathizers and led secretly by freight-line owner Jim Maroon are raiding stagecoaches, and this is a threat to the Union communications.

  2. Stage to Tucson is a 1950 American Western film directed by Ralph Murphy and written by Robert Creighton Williams, Frank Burt and Robert Libott. It is based on the 1948 novel Lost Stage Valley by Frank Bonham.

  3. Stage to Tucson (1950) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  4. Just before the outbreak of Civil War, John Butterfield, owner of the Butterfield Stage Line, pleads for assistance from President-elect Abraham Lincoln to fight the increasing number of stage thefts on his St. Louis to San Francisco run, but Lincoln encourages Butterfield to defend himself alone.

  5. Rod Cameron, Wayne Morris, Kay Buckley, Roy Roberts, Carl Benton Reid, Douglas Fowley. Two Union agents are sent to investigate charges that the Confederates are stealing Arizona stagecoaches and smuggling them into Atlanta in an effort to break the Federal's western supply line.

  6. May 14, 2024 · Stage to Tucson (1951) Rod Cameron is Grif Holbrook, a man who helped create the Butterfield stage line connecting St. Louis to California. Now he’s being called upon to save it. Seems someone has been stealing Butterfield stages and smuggling them back East to Atlanta.

  7. A group of outlaws posing as Southern sympathizers and led secretly by freight-line owner Jim Maroon are raiding stagecoaches, and this is a threat to the Union communications.

  8. Trouble-shooters (Rod Cameron, Wayne Morris) track Arizona stagecoaches hijacked for sale to the Confederacy.

  9. Stage to Tucson is a 1950 American Western film directed by Ralph Murphy and written by Robert Creighton Williams, Frank Burt and Robert Libott. It is based on the 1948 novel Lost Stage Valley by Frank Bonham.

  10. A group of outlaws posing as Southern sympathizers and led secretly by freight-line owner Jim Maroon are raiding stagecoaches, and this is a threat to the Union communications.

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