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Fort Smith Goes to the Movies: Hang 'Em High (Site Bulletin)

Fort Smith in Fact and Fiction

Since the late 1800s, the characters who played out their lives in Fort Smith and the Indian Territory have inspired many books and novels. In the 20th century, American cinema found a goldmine of imaginative stories of harrowing adventure. Hollywood’s vision of this region is gripping – but the real story of what happened here is just as fascinating!

Background: He Hanged Them High

The first and the most significant of the popular accounts of the federal court in Fort Smith is Homer Croy’s He Hanged Them High: An Authentic Account Of The Fanatical Judge Who Hanged Eighty-Eight Men published in 1952. Croy, a newspaperman from Missouri, was a prolific writer whose historical works include other western topics, such as Jesse James Was My Neighbor. Adept at spinning a good tale, Croy had a reputation among other writers as someone who “frequently dreams up things.” The first edition of the book featured a bright and dramatic cover with illustrations of Judge Parker and the gallows in the background. Later paperback editions would go even further with this imagery.

Published by Little, Brown and Company, He Hanged Them High reached a national audience. The vivid, engaging style of Croy made a good story even better. Croy’s work was based on the standard narrative of the federal court and Judge Parker as established in earlier books, but it extends through many embellishments that would soon form a part of the standard orthodoxy/retelling of the Judge Parker story. Previously, writers of the early twentieth century had separated Judge Parker from the story of the executions. Croy intertwines Judge Parker with the gallows and executions. Croy depicted him as a man driven by fanatical religious beliefs who was obsessed with punishing the wicked. In regards to the number of executions, Croy states, “there is no way to establish that eighty-eight were hanged ... I have used eighty-eight for Judge Parker … because it appears to be as accurate as any. After eighty, a man or two, one way or another, doesn’t matter.” While sensational and inaccurate, Croy’s book is significent in that it raised public attention to the history of the federal court and helped spark the community movement to restore the courtroom and gallows.

Judge Isaac C. Parker as depicted by Homer Croy came to represent the idea of frontier justice. Common elements of the mythology of frontier justice are that justice was simple, moral, necessary, swift, public and rugged. As presented by Homer Croy, Judge Parker and the executions at Fort Smith include all of these elements.

The Film

Clint Eastwood starred in the television series Rawhide in the late 1950s and 1960s. In the mid 1960s, Eastwood went to Italy and starred in Sergio Leone’s ‘Spaghetti-Western’ series, A Fistful Of Dollars, For A Few Dollars More and The Good, The Bad And The Ugly. Hang’em High was Eastwood’s return to Hollywood.

The story of the film appealed to Eastwood; “it had a subject matter that was interesing; the pros and cons of capital punishment.” Director Ted Post had first worked with Eastwood during his time on Rawhide. The film became a breakthrough role for Clint Eastwood, and a few years he would go on to star in the first of the “Dirty Harry” series and gain prominence as a major western star.

More than just a revenge thriller, the film is about the politics of law enforcement and the consequences of justice. Hang’em High was made in a leery, late sixties visual style, with cameras pushing in on faces and cuts which seem timed to upset a viewer’s internal rhythms and accentuates the violence featured in the film.

Fact and Fiction

Hang’em High, starring Clint Eastwood, is loosely based on Homer Croy’s book, He Hanged Them High. While the film’s connection to Homer Croy’s book is uncredited, there are numerous similarities between the film and the story by Croy, including the title of the two works, certain reoccurring terminology (the phrase “tumbleweed wagon”), and the characterization of the judge. Significant for its violent and stylized view of the executions, Hang’em High is notable in its visual presentation and mixed message regarding frontier justice.

As in Croy’s book, the judge character is in control of the execution, nodding at the hangman to begin the execution. While Judge Parker never attended any of the executions that occurred during his tenure, Hang’em High not only places him at the scene, but also actively involves him, setting up the mythology of the Judge standing at the window, watching the executions out of a sense of duty.

Further reinforcing the mythology established in the narrative of He Hanged Them High, a condensed version of the novel appeared in True magazine in April of 1952. Accompanying the article was an illustration depicting an angry, absorbed judge, looking out his window to the gallows featuring six hanging nooses and a large crowd. It is significant to note that scenes almost identical to this illustration are used in the film, demonstrating the power of the imagery contained in Croy’s book.

In the film, the hangings are all depicted as public, with children sitting on a fence watching, and a massive crowd in attendance. The federal court’s role is played down, accentuating the judge’s obsession with ridding the land of bad men.

The execution scenes do have passing similarities to the executions at Fort Smith; some details are based on events that occurred during the real executions. Many of the condemned men at Fort Smith would speak on the platform for some time, confessing the crime and attempting to be an example for the attending witnesses. James Lamb, executed in 1887, asked for a chew of tobacco and was allowed to put the remainder in his pocket before the execution.

Hang’em High came out at a time when Hollywood was producing films that pushed the accepted levels of violence. During the same year, films such as Bonnie And Clyde and The Wild Bunch, both notorious and highly criticized for their violent content, were also released. The graphic depictions of lynching, execution by hanging, and gun violence fit this visual style. The theatrical trailer for Hang’em High is even punctuated by a cartoon figure of a man hanging from a noose.

Hang’em High is typical of many films of the western genre in that it took historical truth and exaggerated it to create a captivating movie. Due to its appealing imagery and extensive utilization of the symbol of the noose, Hang’em High remains the most influential of the films based on the Fort Smith story.

Questions to Consider

This film, like all movies, is intended primarily as entertainment. However, as a historical drama, the film contains a great number of messages and misconceptions about the past. When watching Hang’em High, use the following questions to think further about the movie and its message:
  • How does the film stereotype "frontier justice"?
  • In depicting executions at Fort Smith, what kind of statement does the film make about capital punishment?
  • How does this film characterize Judge Fenton? Is he seen as a sympathetic and fair character?
  • Is Hang'em High just a revenge-seeking story? What message does the film contain about the politics of law enforcement and the consequences of justice?
  • Hang'em High begins by showing a group of vigilantes attempting to lynch the character of Jed Cooper. How does this scene contrast with the executions shown later in the film?
  • How are the deputy marshals depicted throughout the film? Does Deputy Bliss, the man who saves Jed Cooper at the beginning of the film, seem to be a fair man?
  • Hang'em High was released at a time when Hollywood films contained what was considered excessive and increasingly graphic violence. How does this film compare to violence as seen in movies today?

Read More About Fort Smith on Film

True Grit and Hang'em High movie posters and book in three yellow exhibit frames.
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Learn more about the movie True Grit in this site bulletin.

Text reading Fort Smith in Fact and Fiction
Fort Smith in the Movies (Site Bulletin)

Read about some of the ways Fort Smith has been featured on film in this site bulletin.

Fort Smith National Historic Site

Last updated: January 20, 2025