Edward Smith Scott, a radio and television broadcaster who played the role of “Sheriff Scotty” in a popular Denver-based TV show in the 1950s, died Tuesday at home of natural causes.
He was 91.
Scott was a young, 20-something, broadcasting pioneer when he debuted the role of Sheriff Scotty — a grizzled, 70-year-old lawman on the black-and-white television show that ran for nearly a decade. In the popular children’s show, the sheriff urged followers, called his posse, to “ and treat their friends with honesty and respect,” according to the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences website.

Scott was inducted into the Broadcast Pioneers of Colorado Hall of Fame in 2005.
Born on Aug. 4, 1928, in Denver, Scott attended Englewood High School and the University of Washington. He began his television career in 1949 as a freelance actor, show host and announcer in Chicago.
Scott moved to Denver in 1953, and his career in television took off, in part because of the Sheriff Scotty character. At one point during the show’s nine-year run, about cards, and the show’s ratings were among the best in the market.
“During the show, he would take a little break from the action and tell the kids: ‘Letap drink some milk,’ ” recalled Dick Kreck, a longtime Denver Post staff writer and columnist who covered television.
Sheriff Scotty would drink a glass of milk on air, and the audience would join him.
“He was a good guy,” Kreck said of Scott. “He wasn’t a frantic host. He was quite calm and matter-of-fact with the kids. He always talked to the kids on their level.”
During a 45-year career in Denver TV, Scott was a producer, host, announcer, analyst, narrator and puppeteer at various stations including KMGH, KUSA, KCNC, KWGN and Rocky Mountain PBS. He won a first-place Telly award — a national recognition — for his work on the documentary “There Was a Time.” He also was a former chairman of the board of directors for the Broadcast Pioneers of Colorado.
In the 1960s, Scott founded KLAK-AM radio in Denver. He went on to own an additional Denver radio station and another in the Kansas City area.

While working in television and radio, Scott entered the political arena in the 1950s, holding a succession of offices, including Englewood councilman and mayor, Arapahoe County commissioner and state senator.
Scott was a member of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church and a former member of Zion Lutheran Church where he was involved in church and school activities and served as a committee chairman, president and director.
He is survived by his wife, Agnes; his children, Christopher Scott, Wendy Lanser, Cynthia Bier, the Rev. Bradford Scott, Rebecca Wilson and Jonathan Scott; two stepdaughters, Rebecca Nolde-Hurlbert and Grace Ann Nolde-Lopez; 15 grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren; and four stepgrandchildren.
Private funeral services will be at St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church with interment at Golden Cemetery.




