Sergeant Preston of the Yukon is a half-hour long American action adventure northwestern television series, broadcast in color on CBS Thursday evenings at 7:30 to 8:00 p.m. from September 29, 1955, to September 25, 1958. It was based on the radio drama Challenge of the Yukon.
Richard Simmons starred as Sergeant Preston, who patrolled the Yukon Territory in search of renegades and outlaws, during the time of the Klondike Gold Rush of the 1890s. In every episode, Preston was assisted by his Alaskan Malamute Yukon King, who had been raised by a female wolf. Simmons was signed to play the role in May 1955 by executive producer-director Charles E. Simmons. In episodes taking place during the summer he rode his horse Rex.
The show's theme music was the overture to Emil von Reznicek's opera Donna Diana. As the theme played the announcer stated: "Sergeant Preston of the North-West Mounted Police, with Yukon King, swiftest and strongest lead dog, breaking the trail in the relentless pursuit of lawbreakers in the wild days of the Yukon."
At the end of each episode, Preston would turn to his dog and say "Well, King, this case is closed."
In March 1955 before filming of the series began, Quaker Oats inked a three-year $10 million deal for the rights to sponsor the half-hour adventures series. The program was filmed in mountainous sections of Big Bear, California and the historic mining ghost town of Ashcroft, Colorado, which was reconstructed to look like the Klondike Gold Rush towns of Dawson and White Horse in Canada's Yukon Territory. During the first season and most the second season, the show's interior scenes were shot at the Westfilm Studios on Yucca Street in Hollywood, which Charles E. Skinner Productions leased for a four-year term in June 1955, the same month Sergeant Preston of the Yukon began filming. Trendle-Campbell-Meurer, Inc. Enterprise produced all three seasons of the program in association with Charles E. Skinner Productions, which handled production of the first 52 episodes, and Tom R. Curtis Productions, which took over producing the series on December 1, 1956 when it went back into production at Paramount Sunset Corporation rental studios on Bronson Avenue in Hollywood to film an additional 26 episodes for the tail end of the second season (starting with The Stolen Malamute) and third and final season. Curtis, a former production man for Skinner, served as the series new Executive Producer while Skinner went on to develop pilots for two new television series, Riders of the Pony Express and Men of the Crime Lab. In June 1957, the Jack Wrather Corporation purchased all rights, including comic strip, merchandising, license and novel, serialization and film rights, to the series and package of 78 completed color episodes being broadcast on CBS from George W. Trendle, Allen Campbell, and Raymond Meurer, the three principals of Trendle-Campbell-Meurer, Inc. Enterprise of Detroit, for $1.5 million. .
The guest stars on Sergeant Preston included:
Because the series was filmed in color it remained popular long after its original prime-time broadcast. Starting in the early 1960s it was shown on Saturday mornings. The popular show aired internationally for decades.
During the 2010s, the series was shown on GRIT classic TV/movie network, and on FETV (Family Entertainment TV).
Timeless Media Group released a two-disc best-of set featuring ten episodes from the series in Region 1 on November 21, 2006.
Infinity Entertainment has released all three seasons of the series on DVD in Region 1.
Dell Comics had produced Sergeant Preston comics based on the radio version, and then from 1956 to 1959 they brought out 29 issues based on the television series.
In the 1980s, Don Sherwood adapted the series into comic books, with scripts by Stan Stunell.
In 1955, the Quaker Oats company gave away land in the Klondike as part of the Klondike Big Inch Land Promotion which was tied in with the television show. Genuine deeds each to one square inch of a lot in Yukon Territory, issued by Klondike Big Inch Land Co. Inc., were inserted into Quaker's Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice cereal boxes.