The series revolves around former
San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) Chief of
Detectives Robert T. Ironside (
Raymond Burr), a Navy veteran, widower, and veteran of 25 years of police service. He was forced to retire from the department after a
sniper's bullet to the spine
paralyzed him from the waist down, resulting in his reliance on a
wheelchair. In the pilot episode, a
television movie, Ironside shows his strength of character and gets himself appointed a peculiar and unprecedented job; a "special department consultant", by his good friend,
Police Commissioner Dennis Randall. He does this by calling a press conference and then tricking Commissioner Randall into meeting his terms. In the pilot, Ironside eventually solves the mystery of the ambush. He requests Ed Brown and Eve Whitfield be assigned to him as his own private law enforcement squad. Supporting characters on
Ironside include Det. Sgt. Edward "Ed" Brown (
Don Galloway) and a young socialite-turned-plainclothes officer, Eve Whitfield (
Barbara Anderson). In addition, delinquent-turned assistant Mark Sanger (
Don Mitchell), who subsequently attends and graduates from law school (night classes were mentioned from early on), joins the San Francisco police force himself in the sixth season, then marries late in the run of the series. Commissioner Randall is played by
Gene Lyons. After the program's fourth season, Anderson left for personal reasons, and her character was then replaced by another young policewoman, Fran Belding (
Elizabeth Baur), the daughter of a fallen cop, who filled much the same role for four more years. Ironside uses a fourth-floor room (for living and office space) in the old San Francisco
Hall of Justice building, which housed the city's police headquarters. He recruits Mark Sanger to be his personal assistant after Sanger is brought in as a suspect who wanted to kill Ironside. Ironside acquires a specially equipped, former fleet-modified 1940 -ton Ford police patrol wagon, with bulletproof glass and a specially modified high-performance supercharged and fuel-injected V-8 engine. This is replaced in the episode titled "Poole's Paradise" after the van is destroyed by Sergeant Brown as part of a plan to trick a corrupt sheriff. At the end of the episode, the patrol wagon is replaced by a one-off fully custom modified 1969 one-ton
Ford Econoline Window Van. The show became a success as Ironside depended on brains and initiative in solving cases. Although Ironside is portrayed as good-hearted and honest, he maintains a gruff persona. The series enjoyed a seven-and-a-half-season run on NBC, drawing respectable, if not always high ratings. As the shortened eighth and final season began (only 16 of 19 episodes produced were aired by NBC), Universal released a
syndicated rerun package of episodes from earlier seasons under the title
The Raymond Burr Show, reflecting the practice of that time to differentiate original network episodes from syndicated reruns whenever possible. After NBC's midseason cancellation, however, the syndicated episodes reverted to the
Ironside title. == Cast ==