Where does the phrase, "Get the hell out of Dodge come" from?

I think that it may be one of those misquotes, like "Play it again, Sam" never said in "Casablanca, or "We don't need no stinkin' badges!" never said in "Treasure of the Sierra Madre."

Errol Flynn played the new sheriff in 1939's "Dodge City" but never says that line, though it was the same year as Gone With The Wind's famous, " ... Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn!" Flynn's character says something like "If you don't like it (the new rules of law and order) then you can leave Dodge!"
 
The line, "Get the Hell out of Dodge" refers to a western that was set in Dodge City, Kansas. It originated with Gunsmoke, either in the 1950's or 1960's - quite possibly since that show was set in that locale.

But, certainly not with the Dukes of Hazzard in either the TV show or the movie.

The "hero" of the show Matt Dillon (not the actor) - James Arness was ready to get into a gunfight with the "villain" and was giving him his last chance before probably shooting him down (as all heroes do to villains).
 
I've heard it was attributed to the "Gunsmoke," the long running western series. Marshal Dillon would bark that command at outlaws, and teenagers of the '60s supposedly picked up on it as a variant of "Let's get out of here."

I'm a little skeptical of it being an exact quote, as I know the word "Hell" was banned from TV for at least a part of the time Gunsmoke was on the air, but then, Captain Kirk never actually said, "Beam me up, Scotty."
 
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