RARE! NICE Vintage 1950s Davy Crockett Belt Buckle & Belt Walt Disney/TV Western
You are bidding on a kinda RARE! DAVY CROCKETT belt and buckle combination. You just don't see a lot of this type of buckle at all (see pics). The buckle is not broken or missing any parts from it. Others I have seen were painted. I do believe this one was also painted too, but nearly 70 years has worn away most of the paint (see pics). The "STEERHIDE TOP GRAIN BRIDLE" leather belt is a little twisted from being worn a lot at some point in time long ago (see pics). Also someone punched 2 additional hole in the belt (see pics). The belt still has nice graphics and colors for being so old (see pics). Also there's a couple of other wear spots on the belt too (see pics). Belt is marked 26 (see pics). The belt os 30" long from tip to were it meets the belt buckle (see pics). The buckle is 3-1/2" long x 1-3/4" tall.
You won't be disappointed in this nice vintage DISNEY Television show "DAVY CROCKETT" belt and buckle 



SOME HISTORY ON "DAVY CROCKETT" THE TV SERIES FROM 1954 to 1955.

Davy Crockett (television) The most well-known of all the Disney television shows. The shows won an Emmy Award for Best Action or Adventure Series in 1956. They started a national craze and raised Fess Parker to stardom. Because of their fame, many people erroneously believe that it was a lengthy series. In fact, there were only three shows the first season (1954-55) of the Disney television series, ending with Davy’s death at the Alamo. By then, however, the series had become so popular that Walt Disney realized too late his mistake in killing off his hero at the end of the third show. So, he made two additional shows the next year based on legends of Davy Crockett. Thus, there were only five hour-long episodes starring Fess Parker. The shows were combined to make two theatrical features. The Davy Crockett craze started a run on coonskins, both real and artificial, as kids across America yearned to dress like their frontier hero with the telltale cap. “The Ballad of Davy Crockett” rushed to the top of the Hit Parade, and remained there for 16 weeks. In all, the nationwide Crockett frenzy helped Disney licensees sell $300 million worth of merchandise. Fess Parker was never able to match the success of his Davy Crockett role, though he did don frontier garb again and star in a popular Daniel Boone series for NBC in the 1960s. Five more Davy Crockett episodes were made by Disney in 1988-89 starring Tim Dunigan as Davy and Gary Grubbs as George Russel. These shows were entitled Rainbow in the Thunder (2 hours, 11/20/88), A Natural Man (12/18/88), Guardian Spirit (1/13/89), A Letter to Polly(6/11/89), and Warrior’s Farewell (6/18/89). The new series tried but failed to rekindle the enthusiasm of audiences which Fess Parker’s episodes had seen almost four decades earlier.


PICTURES TELL THE STORY.. ASK ANY QUESTIONS AT ALL BEFORE BUYING.. BUYING AS IS, AS SEEN..A MUST FOR YOUR COLLECTION..BUY WITH CONFIDENCE FROM THIS QUALITY E-BAYER.. Shipped SUPER FAST & SAFE! 

NOTE: THIS IS A NO RESERVE 10 DAY AUCTION STARTING AT ONLY $1.00