Owen and his band of guides, raconteurs and artist Steve Miller hang out in front of Owen’s Hillbilly Theater in downtown Branson.
Owen’s roster included many who had pioneered floating the James and White back in the days when city folks detrained at Galena. Few guides worked full time. Some continued to offer their services to Galena operators. The Branson businessman’s aggressive advertising reeled in the most clients and in the twenty-six years he packaged trips he would use almost every river man at one time or another. Jim Owen became an institution, but some of his guides had reputations for their fishing acumen, campfire cooking skills, or country wit. A jokester himself, Owen encouraged colorful rustic behavior that fulfilled visitors’ expectations of being escorted downstream by a tractable variety of hillbilly.
James Fork of the White (p. 235)
James Fork of the White is available on this website, on amazon.com and at Barnes & Noble.
My dad was one of the guides for jim owens from Galena,and maybe my grandfather also, I’m
looking for a list of people that worked for him
Unfortunately we are not aware of any single list of Jim Owens’ guides. We suggest you check with the libraries in Galena or Branson. Also might want to check with the Stone County Historical Society (http://www.stonecountyhistoricalsociety.com/). They may have historical articles in their holdings that can help you. Certainly the float business on the James and White rivers has not been forgotten.