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History
Of Branson, Missouri
| 1837: Taney
County was established with Forsyth, a popular and important river town,
named as county seat. |
| 1882: Rueben Branson
opened a general store which became the post office and was listed as
Branson, Missouri - obviously named after Rueben. During the 1880's and
90's one of the largest industries in the area was tomato canning. |
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| 1884:
Settlers began to move to the Ozarks for the promise of free land and the
area was homesteaded on 160 acre lots. |
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| 1894:
William Henry Lynch bought a cave 6 miles outside of Branson. Later, the
Marvel Cave would become a tourist attraction in the heart of Silver Dollar
City. |
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| 1903: The
men who founded Branson were planning an industrial center that would
generate trainload after trainload of logs, lumber, and manufactured
products for the world outside the ozarks. |
| 1904: A new bank,
livery stable and hotel, and resorts began to spring up to accommodate
travelers and fisherman. |
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| 1907: "The Shepherd
of the Hills," a book written by Harold Bell Wright about this area of
the Ozarks, was published and became a nationwide best seller.
Overnight, tourists from across the country began coming to "The
Shepherd of the Hills Country" and tourism was born. |
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| 1912: This
was a banner year for Branson with incorporation on April 1 with 1200
residents, and the idea of Branson as a resort began to take hold and become
a reality. Major industry came to Branson such as The Winch Spoke Company,
which built spokes and wagon parts, and the American Pencil Company of New
York established a logging factory in Branson. The business section of
Branson burned in August of 1912 and was rebuilt. The Powersite Dam at Ozark
Beach created Lake Taneycomo with its construction in 1912 and 1913. |
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| 1914: The
women of Branson, many of whom were employed or helped operate family
businesses, organized a Civic League. They began a decades long effort to
beautify the streets, establish parks, and make life better in their
community. This included a well-equipped municipal bathing beach and picnic
grounds on Lake Taneycomo. |
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| Post World War II:
Many artists, craftsmen and retirees came to the area, along with returning
servicemen and war industry workers. Branson proved to be the perfect spot
for a growing hand-craft community. |
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| 1949: Hugo
and Mary Herschend bought the Marvel Cave from Mr. Lynch's daughters and
began square dances in the cave. Artist Steve Miller and businessman Joe
Todd, with the help of local carpenters, created and constructed a huge
lighted Adoration Scene on the bluff of Mount Branson overlooking the
downtown and Lake Taneycomo. The creche's figures, up to28 feet tall were
lighted on the first day of December in front of thousands of awe-struck
visitors, beginning a Branson tradition. |
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| 1953: With
more people coming for the lighting of the Adoration Scene each year, the
Chamber of Commerce included with the lighting of the scene the Adoration
Parade, adding to the long history of other Branson parades. Today it draws
crowds as large as 30,000 people. |
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| 1959: The
first show in Branson, The Baldknobbers Hillbilly Jamboree Show, opened,
taking the name of their show from a vigilante group of the Civil War Era
which roamed the area making their own justice. |
| 1960:
"Shepherd of the Hills" opened its Old Mill Theater and Silver Dollar City
opened its doors for the first time as a theme park. The Presley Family
began a music show in the Undergound Theatre, now known as Talking Rocks
Cavern near Branson West. Just as tourism began to increase rapidly in the
area, the Missouri Pacific canceled its service on the White River Line.
With so many visitors now arriving by automobile travel often slowed to
a crawl on the 75 mile winding route between Springfield and Branson. So
dynamite crews and massive earth moving equipment blasted a new road
through our limestone hills, shortening the route to 40 miles. |
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| 1963: Table
Rock Dam was completed and the area's largest man-made lake, Table Rock
Lake, was formed. |
| 1964: The
Baldknobbers music show moves into a downtown Branson theatre. |
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| 1967: The
Presley family opened the first theatre on "the Strip," Hwy. 76. |
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| 1968: The
Baldknobbers moved to a theatre on Hwy. 76. The movement to Hwy. 76 had
begun and the first two shows were followed closely by the Plummer Family
Music Show on West Hwy. 76. |
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| 1974: The
Foggy River Boys, who had been performing since 1971 at a theatre in
Kimberling City, moved to Hwy. 76. Mutton Hollow Entertainment Park opens. A
four lane by-pass was completed in the mid-1970's routing traffic away from
Branson's congested downtown district, creating interchanges at Hwy. 76 and
Hwy. 248, and a new bridge across Lake Taneycomo. At that time, businesses
were just beginning to develop along W. Hwy. 76 with only a few scattered
shops and music shows. Today the number of theatres top 40 and there are
over 100 live theatre shows. |
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| 1981: The
Wilkerson Brothers Theater, Hee Haw Theater and Starlite Theater are
completed. |
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| 1983: While
tourism remained steady throughout the 1970's and 1980's, 1983 marked the
start of a tremendous boom. The Swiss Villa with 7,500 seats opens. The Lowe
Family moves to "The Strip." The Roy Clark Celebrity Theater, The
Thunderbird Theater, and the Echo Hollow Amphitheater at Silver Dollar City
open. |
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| 1984: The
Braschlers Music Show opens in the old Lowe's Theater. Musicland USA opens
with the Lester Family and The Sons of the Pioneers opens at Lowe's theater. |
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| 1985: The
Braschlers Music Show moves to Musicland USA, The Hee Haw Theater becomes
Country Music World and the Sons of the Pioneers join the Foggy River Boys. |
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| 1986: The
Texans join Bob Mabe and open the Texans/Bob-O-Links Music Show. The Ozark
Mountain Amphitheater opens with 8,500 seats. |
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| 1987: "Box
Car Willie" becomes the first celebrity entertainer to perform on a
permanent schedule in his own theater. Campbell's Ozark Country Jubilee and
the 76 Music Hall open their doors. |
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| 1988: The first
Ozark Mountain Christmas is held and The Factory Merchants Mall opens. |
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| 1989:
Inspiration Tower opens at Shepherd of the Hills. Shoji Tabuchi opens a
music show. Christy Lane buys the Starlite Theater and Danny Davis & the
Nashville Brass perform at Country Music World. |
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| 1990: Shoji Tabuchi
moves to Shepherd of the Hills Expressway. Mel Tillis moves to Branson and
starts a music show. Mickey Gilley starts a new theater. |
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| 1991: National news
organizations "discover" Branson. In August of 1991 "Time" magazine
published a story about their "discovery" of Branson and the interest by
that media giant was followed closely by coverage in "People," "The Los
Angeles Times" and the "Wall Street Journal." "60 Minutes" put the
television spotlight on this small town in the Ozarks that had more seats
than Broadway and a host of impressive names headlining its then 22
theaters. |
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| 1991: Shepherd of the
Hills and Ray Stevens start the Ray Stevens Theater. Moe Bandy opens the
American Theater and Buck Trent opens a dinner theater. |
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| 1992: Mel Tillis and
Andy Williams each open their own theaters. Willie Nelson plays at the Ozark
Theater and Jim Stafford starts performing at Stars of the Ozark Theater.
Kenny Rogers and Silver Dollar City start the Grand Palace. The Osmonds and
Jennifer Wilson come to town. |
| 1993: Pump Boys and
Dinettes, John Davidson, Tony Orlando, Bobby Vinton, Five Star Theater,
Yakov Smirnoff, IMAX, Branson Scenic Railways and Wayne Newton all start
shows and open venues in Branson. |
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| 1994: The Polynesian
Princess sets sail on Table Rock Lake. Charley Pride, The Welk Resort &
Champagne Theater, $25,000 Game Show, Will Rogers Follies, Radio City
Rockettes and Country Tonite all open shows. |
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| 1995: The Dixie
Stampede and The Showboat Branson Belle open their new dinner theaters. |
| 1997: Shepherd of the
Hills becomes America's most performed outdoor drama with its 5,000th show. |
| 1999:
Grand Palace opened its doors to feature a host of
legendary stars appearing for select dates. The Oak Ridge Boys,
Tony Bennett, Charlie Pride, LeeAnn Rymes and more. |
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