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What happened to Floyd Smoot on Petticoat Junction?

By Jessica Wood

After the death of Smiley Burnette in 1967, Charley Pratt’s character was retired and Rufe’s character Floyd was made both the conductor and engineer of the Cannonball until he too was replaced by Wendell Gibbs (played by Byron Foulger). Rufe would then return for two more appearances as Floyd before the series ended.

Why did Rufe Davis leave Petticoat Junction?

Occasionally the show would display Rufe’s mimicry and musical skills. Rufe left Petticoat Junction the following year when producers refused his request for a guaranteed number of episodes, though he did return to the show twice in 1970.

Where was Petticoat Junction train filmed?

Location scenes for the show were filmed on the Sierra Railroad, with its locomotive #3 and combination baggage-passenger car #5. While the Shady Rest Hotel never existed in any form along the Sierra Railroad, the water tower was a real structure within the Jamestown yard.

Who did Betty Jo marry on Petticoat Junction?

Steve Elliott was a character on “Petticoat Junction” from fall 1966 until the series ended in 1970. Elliott married Betty Jo on the show — and Minor married Linda Kaye Henning, who portrayed Linda Jo in 1968. (Henning and Elliott were married for five years.)

Who has died from Petticoat Junction?

Mike Minor, Actor on TV’s ‘Petticoat Junction,’ Dies at 75

The son of producer Don Fedderson, he married Linda Kaye Henning (Betty Jo Bradley) on the CBS series and then in real life, too.

What happened on the last episode of Petticoat Junction?

During the show’s last season (1969–1970), Foulger became too ill to continue and Davis returned for the episode “Last Train To Pixley”. Ironically, Foulger died on the same day the final episode of Petticoat Junction aired: April 4, 1970.

Is there a real Hooterville?

Hooterville is a fictional agricultural community that is the setting for the American situation comedies Petticoat Junction (1963–70) and Green Acres (1965–1971), two rural-oriented television series created or produced by Paul Henning for Filmways and CBS.

What train was used in Tales of Wells Fargo?

Between 1957 and 1961 Sierra Railroad locomotive #3 was seen rolling down the track during the opening credits for all 167, 30-minute-long, black & white episodes of the popular “Tales of Wells Fargo” television series.

Was Casey Jones a real person?

Casey Jones was a locomotive engineer who became a folk hero after his death in a train crash in 1900 was commemorated in a number of songs. Born John Luther Jones in Missouri in 1863, the future folk hero moved with his family as a boy to Cayce, Kentucky, the town from which he got his nickname.