Jim Davis (born August 26, 1909, Edgerton, Missouri, U.S.—died April 26, 1981, Northridge, California) was an American character actor who was best known for his portrayal of Jock Ewing, the tough gravel-voiced patriarch of the oil-rich Ewing family on Dallas, a top-rated American television series.
Davis graduated in 1930 from William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri. He worked in a variety of different jobs before pursuing a career in acting. In 1942 he began getting small roles in movies. His first major role came in the melodrama Winter Meeting (1948), in which he starred with Bette Davis. He went on to appear in dozens of westerns, including Little Big Horn (1951) and The Big Sky (1952).
In the early 1950s Davis also began taking roles on television. He starred in the series Rescue 8 (1958–60), and soon thereafter his TV career eclipsed his film acting. He appeared frequently in such series as Laramie, Wagon Train, Branded, Death Valley Days, Daniel Boone. and Gunsmoke. It was his gruff characterization of Jock Ewing in the 1978–91 series Dallas, though, that catapulted him to stardom. Davis’s death from cancer in 1981 occurred during the fourth season. Rather than recast the role, the show’s producers had Jock die in a helicopter crash.