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Soapy Smith


 
 
Jefferson Randolph ("Soapy") Smith II (1860-July 8, 1898) was an American con artist and gangsterGangster

A gangster is a general term, though frequently misused, for a career criminal who is, or at some point almost invariably b...
 who had a major hand in the organized criminal operations of Denver, ColoradoDenver, Colorado

The City and County of Denver is the capital and largest city of the U.S....
, Creede, ColoradoCreede, Colorado

Creede is a town in Mineral County, Colorado, United States....
, and Skagway, AlaskaSkagway, Alaska

Skagway is a city in Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, on the Alaska Panhandle....
 from 1879 to 1898. He is perhaps the most famous "sure-thing" bunkoConfidence trick

A confidence trick, confidence game, also known as a con, scam, grift or flim flam, is an atte...
 man of the old west.
The development of a con manJefferson Smith was born in Newnan, GeorgiaNewnan, Georgia

Newnan is a city in Coweta County, Georgia, 39 miles south by west of Atlanta....
, to a family of education and wealth. His grandfather was a plantation owner and his father a lawyer. The family met with financial ruin at the close of the American Civil WarAmerican Civil War Summary

The American Civil War was a sectional conflict in the United States of America between the federal government and 11 Sout...
. In 1876 they moved to Round Rock, TexasRound Rock, Texas

Round Rock is a city located in the U.S....
, to start anew. Smith left his home shortly after the death of his mother, but not before witnessing the shooting of the outlaw Sam BassSam Bass

Sam Bass was a nineteenth-century American train robber and western icon....
. It was in Fort Worth, TexasFort Worth, Texas

Fort Worth is the fifth-largest city in the state of Texas and the 19th-largest in the United States....
, that Jefferson Smith began his career as a confidence man.






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1860   Born






Encyclopedia


Jefferson Randolph ("Soapy") Smith II (1860-July 8, 1898) was an American con artist and gangsterGangster

A gangster is a general term, though frequently misused, for a career criminal who is, or at some point almost invariably b...
 who had a major hand in the organized criminal operations of Denver, ColoradoDenver, Colorado

The City and County of Denver is the capital and largest city of the U.S....
, Creede, ColoradoCreede, Colorado

Creede is a town in Mineral County, Colorado, United States....
, and Skagway, AlaskaSkagway, Alaska

Skagway is a city in Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, on the Alaska Panhandle....
 from 1879 to 1898. He is perhaps the most famous "sure-thing" bunkoConfidence trick

A confidence trick, confidence game, also known as a con, scam, grift or flim flam, is an atte...
 man of the old west.

The development of a con man

Jefferson Smith was born in Newnan, GeorgiaNewnan, Georgia

Newnan is a city in Coweta County, Georgia, 39 miles south by west of Atlanta....
, to a family of education and wealth. His grandfather was a plantation owner and his father a lawyer. The family met with financial ruin at the close of the American Civil WarAmerican Civil War Summary

The American Civil War was a sectional conflict in the United States of America between the federal government and 11 Sout...
. In 1876 they moved to Round Rock, TexasRound Rock, Texas

Round Rock is a city located in the U.S....
, to start anew. Smith left his home shortly after the death of his mother, but not before witnessing the shooting of the outlaw Sam BassSam Bass

Sam Bass was a nineteenth-century American train robber and western icon....
. It was in Fort Worth, TexasFort Worth, Texas

Fort Worth is the fifth-largest city in the state of Texas and the 19th-largest in the United States....
, that Jefferson Smith began his career as a confidence man. He formed a small, close-knit gang of scoundrels, rogues, shills, and thievesTHIEF

THIEF can stand for:* This Here Isn't Even Fine or THief Isn't Even Fine, an implementation of the Emacs text-editor fo...
 to work for him, and soon became a well known crime boss. The "king of the frontier con men," he spent the next 22 years as a professional bunko man and leader of one of the most infamous gang of swindlers ever assembled. They became known as the Soap Gang, and included famous names like Texas Jack VermillionTexas Jack Vermillion

John Wilson "Texas Jack" Vermillion....
 and Ed "Big Ed" Burns. The gang moved from town to town, plying their trade on their unwary victims. Their principal method of separating victims from their cash was the use of short cons, swindles that are quick and need little setup and few helpers. The short cons included the shell gameShell game

The shell game is portrayed as a gambling game, but in reality, when a wager for money is made, it is an illegal confidence ...
, three-card monteThree-card Monte

Three-card Monte, also known as the Three-card trick, Follow the lady or Find the lady, is a confidence ga...
, and any game in which they could cheat.

The Prize Package Soap Sell Swindle

Some time in the late 1870s or early 1880s, Smith began duping entire crowds with a ploy the Denver newspapers dubbed The Prize Package Soap Sell Swindle.

Smith would open his "tripe and keister" (display case on a tripod) on a busy street corner. Piling ordinary soap cakes onto the keister top, he began expounding on their wonders. As he spoke to the growing crowd of curious onlookers, he would pull out his wallet and begin wrapping paper money ranging from one dollar up to one hundred dollars, around a select few of the bars. He then finished each bar by wrapping plain paper around it to hide the money. He mixed the money-wrapped packages in with wrapped bars containing no money. He then sold the soap to the crowd for one dollar a cake. A shillShill

A shill is an associate of a person selling goods or services who pretends no association to the seller and assumes the air ...
 planted in the crowd would buy a bar, tear it open, and loudly proclaim that he had won some money, waving it around for all to see. This performance had the desired effect of enticing the sale of the packages. More often than not, victims bought several bars before the sale was completed. Midway through the sale, Smith would announce that the hundred-dollar bill yet remained in the pile, unpurchased. He then would auction off the remaining soap bars to the highest bidders.

Through manipulation and sleight-of-hand, the cakes of soap wrapped with money were hidden and replaced with packages holding no cash. It was assured that the only money "won" went to members of what became known as the "Soap Gang."

Smith quickly became known as "Soapy Smith" all across the western United StatesUnited States

The United States of America, also known as the United States, the U.S., the U.S.A., and America, is...
. He used this swindle for twenty years with great success. The soap sell, along with other scams, helped finance Soapy's criminal operations by paying graftFacts About Political corruption

In broad terms, political corruption is the misuse by government officials of their governmental powers for illegitimate, us...
 to police, judges, and politicians. He was able to build three major criminal empires: the first in Denver, ColoradoFacts About Denver, Colorado

The City and County of Denver is the capital and largest city of the U.S....
 (1886-1895), the second in Creede, ColoradoCreede, Colorado

Creede is a town in Mineral County, Colorado, United States....
 (1892), and the third in Skagway, AlaskaSkagway, Alaska

Skagway is a city in Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, on the Alaska Panhandle....
 (1897-1898).

Criminal boss of Denver, Colorado

In 1879 Smith moved to DenverDenver, Colorado

The City and County of Denver is the capital and largest city of the U.S....
 and began to build the first of his empires. ConConfidence trick

A confidence trick, confidence game, also known as a con, scam, grift or flim flam, is an atte...
 men normally moved around, to keep out of jail, but as Smith's power and gang grew, so did his influence at City Hall, allowing him to remain. By 1887 he reputedly had a hand in most of the criminal bunkoConfidence trick

A confidence trick, confidence game, also known as a con, scam, grift or flim flam, is an atte...
 activities in the city. Newspapers in Denver reported that he was in complete control of the city's crime and gambling underworld and accused corrupt politicians and the police chief of being on his payroll.

Tivoli Club

In the mid 1880s Soapy opened the TivoliTivoli

Tivoli usually refers to:*Tivoli, Italy, an ancient Roman town, the first bearer of the name Tivoli...
 Club, on the southeast corner of Market and 17th streets, a saloon and gambling hall. Legend has it that above the entrance was a sign that read "caveat emptorCaveat emptor Summary

Caveat emptor is Latin for "let the buyer beware"....
," Latin for Let the buyer beware. It was said that every faroFaro (card game) Summary

Faro is a card game, a descendant of Basset....
 table in the club in 1889 was gaffed (made to cheat). Soapy's younger brother, Bascomb Smith, joined the gang and operated a cigar store that was a front for crooked pokerPoker

Poker is a card game, the most popular of a class of games called vying games, in which players with fully or partially ...
 games and other swindles, operating in one of the back rooms. Other "businesses" included fraudulent lotteryLottery Summary

A lottery is a popular form of gambling which involves the drawing of lots for a prize....
 shops, a "sure-thing" stock exchange, fake watch and bogus diamond auctions, and the sale of stocks in nonexistent businesses.

Politics and other cons

Soapy's political clout was so powerful that some of the police officers patrolling the streets would not arrest him or members of his gang. If they did, a quick release from jail was easily arranged. A voting fraud trial after the municipal elections of 1889 focused attention on corrupt ties and payoffs between Soapy, the mayor, and the chief of police - a combination referred to in local newspapers as "the firm of Londoner, Farley and Smith."

Smith opened an office in the prominent Chever block, a block away from his Tivoli Club, from which he ran his many operations. This also fronted as a business tycoon's office for high-end swindles.

Soapy was not without enemies and rivals for his position as the underworld king. He faced several assassination attempts and shot several of his assailants. He became increasingly known for his gambling addiction, his bad temper and heavy drinking.

As dishonest as Smith was, he was also generous to charities, donating to numerous organizations and non-denominational churches that helped the poor.

Soapy takes over Creede, Colorado

In 1892, with Denver in the midst of anti-gambling and saloonBar (establishment)

----A bar is a business that sells alcoholic beverages for immediate on-premises consumption....
 reforms, Smith sold the Tivoli and moved to Creede, ColoradoCreede, Colorado

Creede is a town in Mineral County, Colorado, United States....
, a mining boomtown that had formed around a major silver strike. Using Denver based prostitutes to cozy up to property owners and convince them to sign over leases, he acquired numerous lots along Creede's main street, renting them at higher rates to his associates. Once having gained enough allies, he announced that he was the camp boss.

With brother-in-law and gang member William Sidney "Cap" Light as deputy sheriff, Soapy began his second empire, opening a gambling hall and saloon called the Orleans Club. He purchased and briefly exhibited a petrified man nicknamed "McGinty" for an admission of 10 cents. While customers were waiting in line to pay their dime, Soapy's shell and three-card monteThree-card Monte

Three-card Monte, also known as the Three-card trick, Follow the lady or Find the lady, is a confidence ga...
 games were winning dollars out of their pockets.

Smith provided an order of sorts, protecting his friends and associates from the town's council and expelling violent troublemakers. Many of the influential newcomers were sent to meet him. Soapy grew rich in the process, but again was known to give money away freely, using it to build churches, help the poor, and to bury unfortunate prostitutes.

Creede's boom very quickly waned and the corrupt Denver officials sent word that the reforms there were coming to an end. Soapy took McGinty back to Denver. He left at the right time, as Creede soon lost most of its business district in a huge fire on 5 June 1892. Amongst the buildings lost was the Orleans Club.

Back to Denver

On his return to Denver, Smith opened new businesses that were nothing more than fronts for his many short cons. One of these sold discounted railroad tickets to various destinations. Potential purchasers were told that the ticket agent was out of the office, but would soon return, and then offered an even bigger discount by playing any of several rigged games. Soapy's power grew to the point that he admitted to the press that he was a con man and saw nothing wrong with it. In 1896 he told a newspaper reporter, "I consider bunco steering more honorable than the life led by the average politician."

Colorado's new governor David H. Waite, elected on a Populist Party reform platform, fired three Denver officials he felt were the main instigators of corruption in City Hall, calling out the state militia to assist. The troops brought with them two cannon and two Gatling gunGatling gun

The Gatling gun was the first highly successful rapid-repeating firearm....
s. Soapy, called to assist the corrupt officeholders and police, was commissioned as a deputy sheriff and with some of his men climbed to the top of City Hall's central tower with rifles and dynamiteDynamite

Dynamite is an explosive based on the explosive potential of nitroglycerin using diatomaceous earth as an adsorbent....
 to fend off any attackers. Cooler heads prevailed, however, and the battle over corruption would be fought in the courts, not on the streets. Soapy Smith would be a key witness on the stand.

Governor Waite agreed to withdraw the militia and allow the Colorado Supreme CourtColorado Supreme Court

The Colorado Supreme Court is the highest court in the U.S....
 to decide the case. The court ruled that the governor had authority to replace the commissioners, but he was reprimanded for bringing in the militia, in what became known as the "City Hall War."

Waite began cleaning up Denver and ordered the closure of all gambling dens, saloons and houses of ill repute. Soapy exploited the situation, using the recently acquired deputy sheriff's commissions to stage fake arrests in his own gambling houses, apprehending patrons who had lost large sums in rigged poker games. The victims were happy to leave when the "officers" allowed them to walk away from the crime scene rather than face arrest, naturally without recouping their losses.

Eventually, Soapy and his brother Bascomb became too well known, and even the most corrupt city officials could no longer protect them. Their influence and Denver-based empire began to crumble. When they were charged with attempted murder in the beating of a saloon manager, Bascomb was jailed, but Soapy managed to escape, becoming a wanted man in ColoradoColorado

Colorado is a state in the western United States....
. Lou BlongerLou Blonger

Lou "The Fixer" Blonger, born Louis H....
 and his brother Sam, rivals of the Soap Gang, took over control as kingpins of the Denver criminal underworld.

Before leaving, Soapy tried to pull off a swindle started in MexicoMexico

The United Mexican States, generally known as Mexico is a country located in North America, bordered at the north by t...
, where he tried to convince President Porfirio DiazPorfirio Díaz

Jos de la Cruz Porfirio Daz Mori, Mexican war hero and President, ruled Mexico from 1876 until 1911....
 that his country needed the services of a foreign legionForeign legion

A foreign legion is a regular military force consisting of foreigners who are not normally subjects of the country that empl...
 made up of American toughs. Soapy became known as Colonel Smith, and managed to organize a recruiting office before the deal collapsed.

Skagway, Alaska and the Klondike gold rush

When the Klondike Gold RushKlondike Gold Rush

The Klondike Gold Rush was a frenzy of gold rush immigration to and gold prospecting along the Klondike River near Dawson Ci...
 began in 1897, Soapy moved his operations to Skagway, AlaskaSkagway, Alaska

Skagway is a city in Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, on the Alaska Panhandle....
. He set up his third empire much the same way as he had in Denver and Creede. He put the town's deputy U.S. MarshalUnited States Marshals Service

The United States Marshals Service, a bureau within the United States Department of Justice, is a federal police organizatio...
 on his payroll and began collecting allies for a takeover. Soapy opened a fake telegraph office in which the wires went only as far as the wall. Not only did the telegraph office obtain fees for "sending" messages, but cash-laden victims soon found themselves losing even more money in poker games with new found "friends." Telegraph lines did not reach or leave Skagway until 1901. Soapy opened a saloon named Jeff Smith's Parlor, as an office from which to run his operations. Although Skagway already had a municipal building, Soapy's saloon became known as "the real city hall." Skagway was gaining a reputation as a "hell on earth," full of perils for the unwary.

Smith's men played a variety of roles, such as newspaper reporter or clergyman, with the intention of befriending a new arrival and determining the best way to rid him of his money. The new arrival would be steered by his "friends" to crooked shipping companies, hotels, or gambling dens, until he was wiped out. If the man was likely to make trouble or could not be recruited into the gang, Soapy himself would then appear and offer to pay his way back to civilization.

When a group of vigilantes, the "Committee of 101", threatened to drive out Soapy and his gang, he formed his own "law and order society," which claimed 317 members, to force the vigilantes into submission.

During the Spanish-American WarSpanish-American War

The Spanish-American War took place in 1898 and resulted in the United States gaining control over the former colonies of Sp...
 in 1898, Smith formed his own volunteer army with the approval of the U.S. War Department. Called the "Skaguay Military Company," it had Soapy as its captain. Smith wrote to President William McKinleyWilliam McKinley

William McKinley was the 25th President of the United States....
 and gained official recognition for his company, which he used to strengthen his grip on the town.

On 4 July 1898, Soapy was the hero of the day. As grand marshal of the city parade, he led his army on a gray horse. On the grandstand, he sat beside the territorial governor and other officials.

Soapy's death

On 7 July 1898, John Douglas Stewart, a returning Klondike miner, came to Skagway with a sack of gold valued at $2,800. Three gang members convinced the miner to participate in a game of three-card monteThree-card Monte

Three-card Monte, also known as the Three-card trick, Follow the lady or Find the lady, is a confidence ga...
. When Stewart balked at having to pay his losses, the three men grabbed the sack and ran. The "Committee of 101" demanded that Soapy return the gold, but he refused, claiming that Stewart had lost it "fairly".

On the evening of 8 July 1898, the vigilantes organized a meeting on the Juneau Company wharf. With a Winchester rifleWinchester rifle Overview

The Winchester rifle was any one of an early family of repeating rifles manufactured by the Winchester Repeating Arms Compan...
 draped over his shoulder, Soapy began an argument with Frank Reid, one of four guards blocking his way to the wharf. A gunfight unexpectedly began and both men were fatally wounded.

Soapy's last words were "My God, don't shoot!" Letters from J. M. Tanner, one of the guards with Reid that night, show that another guard fired the fatal shot. Soapy died on the spot with a bullet to the heart. He also received a bullet in his left leg and a severe wound on the left arm by the elbow. Reid died 12 days later with a bullet in his groin and leg. His tombstone bears the epitaph "He died for the honor of Skagway." The three gang members who robbed Stewart received jail sentences, and the rest were dispersed.

Soapy Smith was buried several yards outside the city cemetery. Every year on 8 July, wakes are held around the United States in Soapy's honor. His grave and saloon are on most tour itineraries of Skagway.

Popular culture

Festivals

  • Skagway, AlaskaSkagway, Alaska

    Skagway is a city in Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, on the Alaska Panhandle....
    , July 8 is the annual (since 1974) Soapy Smith Wake, which is held the Eagles Hall. This event used to take place at Soapy's grave in the city cemetery but is now held in the downtown area.
  • Magic Castle, Hollywood, California, July 8 is the annual Soapy Smith Party, replete with costume contests, charity gambling, and magic shows.

Fiction

  • In at least one episode of the radio drama Challenge of the YukonChallenge of the Yukon

    Challenge of the Yukon was a long-running radio series that began on Detroit's station WXYZ....
    , Sergeant Preston of the Northwest Mounted PoliceRoyal Canadian Mounted Police

    The Royal Canadian Mounted Police or Mounties, also The RCMP acts as the federal police for all of Canada, enforcing c...
     travels to Skagway and confronts Soapy.
  • In the John M. FordJohn M. Ford

    John M. Ford was an American science fiction and fantasy writer, game designer, and poet....
     Star TrekStar Trek

    Star Trek is an American science-fiction franchise spanning six television series, ten feature films, hundreds of novels, co...
    novel How Much for Just the Planet?Facts About How Much for Just the Planet?

    How Much for Just the Planet? is a 1987 Star Trek tie-in novel by John M. Ford. ...
    , a FederationUnited Federation of Planets Overview

    The United Federation of Planets widely referred to and known as the Federation is part of the Star Trek fictional u...
     exploration and prospecting starship is named USS Jefferson Randolph Smith. (NCC-29402) Sulek-class, under the command of Captain Tatyana Trofimov.
  • Soapy Smith is the villain in the Lucky LukeLucky Luke

    Lucky Luke is a Belgian comic book series....
     album Le Klondike, by MorrisMorris (comics)

    Maurice de Bevere, better known as Morris, was a Belgian cartoonist and the creator of Lucky Luke....
    , Yann and Jean Léturgie. The story features Smith's saloon and fake telegraph, but set in Dawson rather than Skagway.
  • A fictionalized version of Soapy Smith (and his death) features in George MarksteinGeorge Markstein

    George Markstein was an American-born war correspondent who settled in England and, along with Patrick McGoohan, was the co-...
    's 1978 novel Tara Kane.
  • Soapy SlickSoapy Slick

    Soapy Slick,, cartoon character, is the crooked saloon operator and profiteer in the Scrooge McDuck comic series, modeled af...
     is a cartoon character based on Soapy Smith in the Scrooge McDuckScrooge McDuck

    Scrooge McDuck or Uncle Scrooge is a fictional Scottish character created by Carl Barks who first appeared in Dell Com...
     comic series. He is the crooked saloon operator and profiteer, and an enemy of Scrooge McDuck.
  • In the 1997 WindowsMicrosoft Windows

    Microsoft Windows is a family of operating systems by Microsoft....
    /MacMac OS

    Mac OS, which stands for Macintosh Operating System, is a series of graphical user interface-based operati...
     computer game The Yukon Trail, the player encounters several of Soapy's men and establishments, as well as other Klondike Gold RushKlondike Gold Rush

    The Klondike Gold Rush was a frenzy of gold rush immigration to and gold prospecting along the Klondike River near Dawson Ci...
     significants.
  • Smith is mentioned in James A. MichenerJames A. Michener

    James Albert Michener was the American author of such books as Tales of the South Pacific, Hawaii, The Drifters,...
    's novel AlaskaAlaska (novel)

    Alaska is a historical novel by James A....
    .
  • "Soapy Sid" is a character in P.G. Wodehouse's short story "Pearls Mean Tears." Bertie WoosterBertie Wooster

    Bertram Wilberforce "Bertie" Wooster is the wealthy, good-natured co-protagonist and narrator of P....
     is vacationing in France with his Aunt AgathaAunt Agatha

    Agatha Gregson, ne Wooster, later Lady Worplesdon, is a fictional character created by P....
     when Aunt Agatha's pearls go missing.
  • Soapy Stevens is a con merchant and bogus vicar in the 1960 British comedy 'Two way Stretch' played by the actor Wilfred Hyde-White.

Movies

By year of release:
  • The Girl Alaska, 1919. This film is believed to be the first that has a portrayal of Soapy Smith. The film was shown in a theater in St. LouisSt. Louis, Missouri

    St. Louis , sometimes written Saint Louis, encompasses an independent city in the U.S....
    , where Soapy's widow and son lived and caused them enough grief for them to sue the production company.
  • Honky Tonk, 1941. Actor Clark GableClark Gable Overview

    Clark Gable was an Academy Award-winning American film actor and the biggest box office star of the early sound film era....
     portrayed Soapy Smith in this MGM film, Honky Tonk. Due to legal pressures from the descendants, the name "Soapy Smith" was changed to "Candy Johnson."
  • The Great Jesse James Raid, 1953. Actor Earl Hodgins portrays Soapy in Creede, ColoradoCreede, Colorado

    Creede is a town in Mineral County, Colorado, United States....
     (1892) and is involved in the murder of Bob Ford.
  • The Far CountryThe Far Country

    The Far Country is a 1955 American western movie directed by Anthony Mann and starring James Stewart in their fifth and ...
    , 1955. Actor John McIntireJohn McIntire

    John McIntire was an American character actor....
     portrays a likable badman, clearly, but loosely based on Soapy Smith. The film, starring James StewartJames Stewart (actor)

    James Maitland "Jimmy" Stewart was an iconic, Academy Award-winning American film and stage actor, best known for his homeb...
    , is set in Skagway, AlaskaSkagway, Alaska

    Skagway is a city in Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska, on the Alaska Panhandle....
     during the Klondike gold rushKlondike Gold Rush

    The Klondike Gold Rush was a frenzy of gold rush immigration to and gold prospecting along the Klondike River near Dawson Ci...
    .
  • The StingThe Sting

    The Sting is an Oscar winning caper film from 1973 set in September of 1936 and revolving around a complicated plot by t...
     (prequel)
    . This film was never produced, due to the failure of the sequel. Soapy Smith was to be portrayed as the mentor of Henry Gondorff (Paul Newman).
  • The Klondike FeverKlondike Fever

    Klondike Fever is a 1980 Canadian adventure film, based on the writings of Jack London....
    , 1980. Actor Rod SteigerRod Steiger

    Rod Steiger was an American Academy Award-winning actor best known for his intense performances in such films as In the H...
     portrays Soapy, in a Canadian fictional film about the Alaskan and Klondike adventures of Jack LondonJack London

    Jack London, probably born John Griffith Chaney was an American author who wrote The Call of the Wild and over fi...
    .

Television

  • The Alaskans (1959-1960). Actor John Dehner portrayed Soapy. In one episode, Remember the Maine, the story of Soapy's army in Skagway is retold.
  • Alias Smith and JonesAlias Smith and Jones

    Alias Smith and Jones was a television western series on ABC from 1971 to 1973, starring Pete Duel and Ben Murphy....
    (1971-1972). Actor Sam JaffeSam Jaffe

    Sam Jaffe may refer to:*Sam Jaffe, American actor...
     portrayed Soapy in three episodes: "The Great Shell Game" (aired February 18, 1971), "A Fistful of Diamonds" (aired March 4, 1971), and "Bad Night in Big Butte" (aired March 2, 1972).
  • DeadwoodDeadwood (TV series)

    Deadwood was a weekly American television drama that premiered in March 2004 on HBO....
    (2004-2006). Actor Gill Gayle plays "the Huckster," a prize soap package salesman based on Soapy, in all three seasons.
  • The Saga of Soapy Smith (1968). An episode on Bill Burrud'sBill Burrud

    Bill Burrud, was a former child star and TV host....
    , Treasure.

Other

  • The Ballad of Soapy Smith (1983). A play by Michael WellerMichael Weller

    Michael Weller is a playwright who is best known for his plays Moonchildren and Loose Ends....
     which premiered in Seattle, WashingtonSeattle, Washington

    Seattle is the largest city in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States....
    , and later in New York, New York with actor Denis ArndtDenis Arndt

    Denis Arndt is an actor, writer and producer....
     as Soapy.
  • The Ballad of Soapy Smith (1965). A song by Al Oster, Northland Music Company (Call of Alaska, FR-1009).

External links

  • - website of The Soapy Smith Preservation Trust.
  • - Discussion board and new information regarding Soapy Smith. Run by the descendants.
  • - Photographs taken at the 2003-2008 Soapy Smith Wakes.
  • - Leave a message on Soapy's virtual gravesite.



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