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  1. James Warner Bellah (September 14, 1899 – September 22, 1976) was an American Western author from the 1930s to the 1950s. His pulp-fiction writings on cavalry and Indians were published in paperbacks or serialized in the Saturday Evening Post.

  2. James Warner Bellah. Writer: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. In World War I, James Warner Bellah enlisted in the Canadian army and became a pilot overseas in the Royal Flying Corps, and later the Royal Air Force.

    • Writer, Actor
    • September 14, 1899
    • James Warner Bellah
    • September 22, 1976
  3. Sep 24, 1976 · James Warner Bellah was a prolific writer, specializing in historical, particularly western subjects, a war correspondent, a prodigious world traveler, an air pioneer, a veteran of both World...

  4. James Warner Bellah has 60 books on Goodreads with 851 ratings. James Warner Bellahs most popular book is Massacre.

  5. Apr 16, 2019 · Massacre by James Warner Bellah. Owen Thursday was a tall man, dried out to leather and bone and sinew. Whatever he was doing, he moved about incessantly, not with nerves, but with primeval restlessness; not with impatience, but with an echo of lost destiny. Bellah’s elegiac story was adapted into John Ford’s excellent Fort Apache.

  6. Sep 13, 2015 · “Wherever ten or twenty of them in dirty shirt blue were gathered together—that became the United States.” —James Warner Bellah, from his screen adaptation of She Wore a Yellow Ribbon

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  8. Novelist and journalist whose main contributions to cinema were not his (few) screenplays but the stories he provided for several notable John Ford films, particularly the 7th Cavalry trilogy: "Fort Apache" (1948), "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" (1949) and "Rio Grande" (1950).