Catalog Name: Inspired By Bonanza Vol. 3 
 
Product Name: Inspired By Bonanza  
 
Product Description: Wash n Wear Fabric
 
Product Details:
 
Fabric: Wash n Wear
Cutting: 4 Meter
10 Button Packed in Envelope

Product Code: MZ0800606WC
Bonanza is an American Western tv collection that ran on NBC from September 12, 1959, to January 16, 1973. Lasting 14 seasons and 431 episodes, Bonanza is NBC's longest-jogging western, and ranks general as the second one-longest-strolling western series on U.S. Community television (in the back of CBS's Gunsmoke), and inside the top 10 longest-strolling, stay-movement American series. The display maintains to air in syndication. The display is ready inside the 1860s and it centers on the wealthy Cartwright family who stay within the place of Virginia City, Nevada, bordering Lake Tahoe. The series to begin with starred Lorne Greene, Pernell Roberts, Dan Blocker and Michael Landon and later featured (at diverse times) Guy Williams, David Canary, Mitch Vogel and Tim Matheson. The show is understood for presenting urgent moral dilemmas.[2]

The name "Bonanza" is a time period utilized by miners in regard to a big vein or deposit of silver ore,[3] from Spanish bonanza (prosperity) and usually refers to the 1859 revelation of the Comstock Lode of wealthy silver ore mines underneath the town of Virginia City, no longer some distance from the fictional Ponderosa Ranch that the Cartwright own family operated. The show's topic track, also titled "Bonanza", have become successful song. Only instrumental renditions, absent Ray Evans' lyrics, had been used throughout the collection's long run.[4]

In 2002, Bonanza changed into ranked No. 43 on TV Guide's 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time,[5] and in 2013 TV Guide covered it in its listing of The 60 Greatest Dramas of All Time.[6] The time period for the tv series is kind of between 1861 (Season 1) and 1867 (Season 13) in the course of and shortly after the American Civil War, coinciding with the period Nevada Territory became a U.S. Kingdom.

During the summer time of 1972, NBC aired reruns of episodes from the 1967–1970 length in prime time on Tuesday evening under the name Ponderosa.[7]