Shepherd of the Hills Country

$29.95

Tourism Transforms the Ozarks, 1880s–1930s
Lynn Morrow and Linda Myers-Phinney
294 pages, 6″ x 9″
978-1-55728-574-4 (paper)
July 1999

 

Modern tourism in the Ozark Mountains of Missouri and Arkansas is concentrated around the area’s glistening man-made lakes, its fish-filled streams and rivers, and the entertainment mecca of Branson. But recreational excursions into this part of the country began over one hundred years ago as urban Midwesterners, many of them captivated by Harold Bell Wright’s novel The Shepherd of the Hills, sought the outdoors for spiritual and physical regeneration.

Morrow and Myers-Phinney excavate the beginnings of commercial tourism in the region and follow it through six decades as the influx of visitors who became familiar with the Ozarks and its investment opportunities brought capital, new commerce, and additional residents to the hills. Chapters focus on float fishing, game parks, cave exploration, the influence of the railroad, and the men who were instrumental in the region’s transformation. The authors discuss traditional lifestyles rooted in “living off the land,” with stock raising and lumbering providing basic subsistence, and changes wrought by tourism, which affected all classes of people across the White River landscape. They describe the flowering of “Ozarks folklore”—how stories told around gravel-bar fishing camps and retold by newspaper journalists translated the hills’ oral tradition for mass audiences.

While the main theme of this study is the development of tourism, it is also a social history of the interior highlands of the Ozarks. We see how the residents and their way of life were discovered, exploited, and changed by new opportunities and the demands of tourism and increasing trade. As such, this book is a valuable new addition to the University of Arkansas Press’s Ozarks Collection.

Lynn Morrow is director of the Local Records Preservation Program at the Missouri State Archives. He is coeditor of A Connecticut Yankee in the Missouri Ozarks: The Writings of Theodore Pease Russell (University of Missouri Press, 1988) and The White River Chronicles of S. C. Turnbo: Man and Wildlife on the Ozarks Frontier (University of Arkansas Press, 1994).

Linda Myers-Phinney is a field archivist in the Local Records Preservation Program at the Missouri State Archives. She has previously published “Arcadia in the Ozarks: The Beginnings of Tourism in Missouri’s White River Country” in the spring 1990 issue of OzarksWatch.

“[Shepherd of the Hills Country] is a well argued discussion of the transformation of a subsistence, open-range economy into a modern economy and society. Grounded in primary sources, using oral history to great advantage, and providing sophisticated commentary on other scholarship, the work of Morrow and Myers-Phinney is a model of regional history. . . . The superb collection of photographs and maps enhances the prose.”
—Lawrence O. Christensen, Professor of History and Political Science, University of Missouri-Rolla

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