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» » The Fugitive Joshua's Kingdom (1963–1967)

Short summary

While working for a small town veterinarian, Dr. Kimble comes across the sick baby of an unwed mother whose religious father doesn't believe in medicine. As Kimble secretly treats the baby, a jealous dismissed deputy discovers his true identity.

Skerritt says to Janssen "aren't you a little bit too old for her?" meaning Kim Darby. Actually Skerritt is only two years younger than Janssen.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Hulbine
    Kimble gets a job working as assistant to a rural veterinarian. While there, he meets Joshua Simmons (actor Harry Townes) and his daughter Ruth (actress Kim Darby). Joshua is a religious man devoted to old fashioned principles. He is ashamed that Ruth had a baby out of wedlock. Kimble gets involved because the baby is sick. Joshua feels that calling in doctors is morally wrong, fighting against the will of God.

    Kimble faces danger from the obstinancy and anger of Joshua, as well as the interference of Pete (actor Tom Skeritt), a former deputy anxious to regain his job by capturing Kimble.
  • comment
    • Author: Use_Death
    Kimble's still out in the country, assisting an aging veterinarian who travels around caring for farm animals. They encounter Harry Townes, who has nothing against veterinarians but people doctors are somehow against his religion. His daughter, (Kim Darby) is concerned about her sick baby and so is Kimble. He goes to the point of signing the vet's name to a prescription for antibiotics. Meanwhile a deputy, (Tom Skerritt) is after Kimble with a couple of bloodhounds.

    Townes, who had played a cop who harassed Kimble in the premiere, plays a religious fanatic who seems, as some do, to have made up his own religion. He seems to be converted away from it rather easily, although his role in Kimble's escape is a clever one. Townes retied from acting in the 1970', (but occasionally returned) to become an Episcopal priest in his hometown of Huntsville, Alabama. I assume he liked doctors better than the guy he played here.
  • comment
    • Author: Thozius
    Sure, making thirty episodes a season isn't easy but this is the one episode in four seasons that really stands out for having borrowed plot elements from previous episodes to cobble together another episode.

    Let's start with the wonderful Kim Darby who plays the daughter of a devout Christian who believes only God can heal people. In a strange bit of type casting, Darby had also played the blissfully naive niece of a faith healer in "An Apple a Day" from last season. As you would guess, a medical emergency becomes the major plot point in both episodes.

    Kimble's occupation in this episode is an assistant to a veterinarian. If you go back to season one's episode "Bloodline", Dr. Kimble used his medical abilities at a kennel (yes, the Fugitive had an episode about the practice of fraudulent dog breeding). I guess they had to get Kimble to the farm to discover Darby's plight and they remembered how well his medical training worked in that episode so they quickly fitted those two pieces together.

    In the end, a person sympathetic to the convicted murder purposely leads the police off Kimble's trail. Well, that same trick happened at the end of the first episode of the season, "The Last Oasis" so it was hardly a surprise this time around. The dismissed deputy tracking Kimble is also far too similar to the deputy with a chip on his shoulder who hunted Kimble in that earlier episode since their failure to catch him resulted in the same professional humiliation.

    This is part of the fun of watching a hundred episodes of a television series over a few weeks. Naturally the writers would have to retread previous territory but this is the only episode where I saw everything coming because I remembered seeing it in earlier episodes days or weeks ago.
  • comment
    • Author: Malien
    This episode revolves around Joshua Simmons (Harry Townes), a self- styled religious zealot who has determined that God hates medicine. In fact, his wife died because Joshua refused to get her medical treatment. Now, his daughter Ruth (Kim Darby) has an illegitimate child and it's sick...and it appears as if Joshua would be just as happy if the child died! Naturally, Richard Kimble is horrified and does everything he can to save the child...even if the gun-toting Joshua doesn't approve. Add to this mix a disgraced ex-deputy (Tom Skerritt) and you've got a couple of guys hankering to see Kimble punished!

    This is a very good episode...very compelling and worth seeing. While Harry Townes is no household name, he did a lot of TV in the 60s and was very good at his craft. Here, in a bit of a change of pace, he plays a villain...and quite well.
  • comment
    • Author: huckman
    Joshua's Kingdom came early in The Fugitive's fourth season and as new producers Wilton Schiller and John Meredyth Lucas were beginning to better understand the show's subtleties; they'd wanted to play up the chase element of the series but here they better grasp the emotional interaction between Kimble and those he meets, resulting in a strikingly touching story.

    Joshua Simmons is a farmer in the west who hires Kimble to help treat his horses, but Simmons has a daughter, Ruth, who has given him a grandchild. Simmons, however, is devout to a religious doctrine that forbids the use of medicines to cure illness, and he also harbors hatred of his grandchild for he believes Ruth bore him illegitimately, unaware that the man she loved gave her their child and vowed to marry her as soon as he returned from military duty, only to be killed.

    Kimble must navigate this emotional minefield while also dodging Pete Edwards, a boorish young deputy prospect who has harassed Ruth, and when Ruth's child falls ill, Kimble must save its life despite the resistance of Joshua, who holds Kimble at gunpoint while calling the sheriff. Kimble, however, saves the child while appealing to Joshua's devout beliefs. It is one of the series' strongest moments and also one of the most powerful for Harry Townes, a real-life preacher off-screen.

    The scene at the very end, with a powerful music cue from Jerry Goldsmith, almost by itself is worth the price of admission.
  • Episode cast overview:
    David Janssen David Janssen - Dr. Richard Kimble / Jim Corbin
    Harry Townes Harry Townes - Joshua Simmons
    Kim Darby Kim Darby - Ruth Simmons
    Tom Skerritt Tom Skerritt - Pete Edwards
    Walter Burke Walter Burke - Doc Martin
    John Milford John Milford - Sheriff E. Tate
    Barry Morse Barry Morse - Lt. Philip Gerard (credit only)
    Vaughn Taylor Vaughn Taylor - Pharmacist Feeney
    Mark Russell Mark Russell - Deputy - Jay
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