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| June 18th, 1953 - Eldora, IA |
The first thing you might notice about Tom Owen's Cowboy's is that their leader, and namesake is at least 20 years older than the rest of the group. I'll get to that in a moment. Their first appearance in the Radio Guide is in December of 1938. The 15-minute show aired M-F in the morning. Different Radio Guides have them at 10:45, 11:00 and 11:15 depending, but all times CST. In the 1940s their slot moved around, and they began playing the "WMT News" Program on Wednesdays at 1:45 exclusively. In 1941 they moved around and played more Noon and 1:00 slots, playing a 15 minute spot before :Voice of Iowa News." Joe Doakes appears to have taken the news/music role.
Most of what I know about the line up of Sheriff Tom Owen's Cowboys' starts with three post cards which have hand notes identifying the members. None of them have been mailed, so we have no dates attached to any of the three. But I have some dating conjecture... Let's start with that short discography:
| Label | Sides | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Mercury | A New Ten Gallon Hat / You Can't Cry Over My Shoulder | 1946 |
| Mercury | Down By The Railroad Tracks / The Freight Train Blues | 1946 |
| Mercury | Don't Say You Love Me If You Don't / Baby You Done Flubbed Your Dub With Me | 1946 |
| Dome | Down In The Sweetheart Valley / Hey! Hey! Ioway Polka | 1948 |
| Mercury | Just Because / My Darling Tell Me True | 1948 |
| Dome | I Send Back Your Letters / The Trouble With Me Is You | 1949 |
| Mastertone | Man, Man, What A Band / The Cowboy's Dream | ???? |
Their entire known discography consists of seven 78s all released between 1946 and 1949. Some of their 78's attribute song writers, but none that were definitively written by band members. Even the Owen behind (W-1010-A) "Man, Man What A Band" is Harry Y. Owen. That disc is interesting. It is also one of the few items in their historiography which lacks a WMT logo, and Tom Owen lacks the title Sheriff. I suspect it's their first release, and that it came early in the WMT radio program because Mastertone was a local Des Moines, IA label. It did credit some players: Chuck & Johnny on side A and Jim, Chuck & Johnny on side B. So I believe those three belong to the original line up.
But Sheriff Tom Owen's Cowboys' had a few different line ups. The image above looks like Tom (calling), Charles "Chuck" Youtzy (trumpet), Mibs Allen (drums), Johnny Lyons (accordion), Harold "Bub" Goodwick (clarinet), and Jim Pye (bass). It's similar to the below pose but the bass drum head is different as is the line up. It look more like a candid than a pose because of the gap between Tom and Jim.
The line up below is Tom (calling), Jerry (accordion), Don Wachal (Clarinet), Mibs Allen (drums), Johnny Kettleson (guitar), Bub (trumpet) and Jim (bass). Supposedly at some point Leo Greco played accordion. (I've added surnames where possible) More here. Tom Owen's sheriff costume was really just a suit and a badge but sometimes he wore two holsters on his hips with pistols.I found another image (below) with a line up that looks like Tom, Chuck, Don Wachal, Mibs, Bub Goodwick, Gene and Jim. There's also one of them piled in a wagon: Tom, Chuck, Don, Mibs, Bub, Johnny, Jim and Don... I take this horse carriage promo picture to be the latest one. The band is wearing monogrammed chaps. More here. In January of 1946 they got a write up in Billboard claiming they were booked solid for all of 1946.
This phenomenal gent was Sheriff Tom Owen and His Cowboys, a six-piece band that does a business which makes other combos envious. Playing in a 100 -mile radius of Cedar Rapids, IA., where the cowboys play a daily program on Station WMT, the band is the hottest thing for box-office receipts to hit the territory. The band will gross $72,000 for 1945 plays 1,400 - 1,600 consistently...
Billboard went on to explain they play the old-time music of 25 years ago with a zip to it, westerns, Hillbilly and some modern. By Modern he means 1940s country. That's a funny thought, today we'd call it all country oldies. Tom Owen's career apparently goes back to WLS where he was a square dance caller where he worked for 13 years. The trio recorded 8 sides in Gennett’s studio, in Richmond, Indiana on February 1926.
Artist biographies are often embellished but Tom Owens recorded previously was the Tom Owen's WLS Barn Dance Trio which whom he recorded 7 discs in 1926 and 1927. [SOURCE] The members of that band are poorly documented but Tom Owen is a given, and Tommy Dandurand is credited as the fiddler player on most of them, something musicologists grant is possible. Those discs were issued on Silvertone, Challenge and Gennett. One article about the WLS Barn Dance Trio reports that Tom Owen is from Missouri.
I don't think that's Tom Own's only bands. One Gennett discography reports that the band uses the name Uncle John Harvey’s Old Time Dance Orchestra on Herwin. [SOURCE] I also found an image where Tom Owen is posed next to a group with a bass drum painted with the logo for "Tom Owen's WLS Entertainers." I also found a few Gennetts with the name Tom Owen's Barnstormers, a newspaper listing Tom Owen's Cornhuskers. I think that's the band with Matt Hickey. It's all probably the same group, more or less affiliated with the WLS Barn Dance. (discography below) More here.
The WLS Barn Dance was only debuted on April 19, 1924. So Tom Owen was a very early figure. For his start the book Exploring Roots Music by Nolan Porter told the story. "As a listener that night, I remember that a request went out for a square dance caller and the announcer reported: "Tom Owen, a hospital worker, telephoned that he used to call dances down home in Missouri and he'll be right over." Such things did happen in those early days of radio. The story is canonized in the 1969 book Prairie Farmer and WLS by James Evans.
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| The Daily Iowan 10-10-1952 |
The National Barn Dace website lists Tom among the early stars. "Early stars of the National Barn Dance included Tommy Dandurand, Tom Owens, Chubby Parker, Pie Plant Pete, Walter Peterson, Rube Tronson and Cecil & Ethel Ward among others." [SOURCE] You wouldn't think a square dance caller was such a big deal but they were re-creating a type of music which was already considered old-timey. As the Barn Dance Trio Tom Owen's recorded the below. You can see the later three are re-releases.
Richard Peterson in the book Creating Country Music claimed that Square dance calling only constituted part of the WLS Barn Dance radio program from 1924 to 1929. That could have also been the end of Tom Owen on the program but a 1935 issue of Radio Guide suggests Tom Owen was still on air. We know he was at WMT in late 1938 so instead of a gap there may even be an overlap.
| Label | Sides | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Silvertone | Ocean Waves / Kings Head | 1926 |
| Silvertone | Stoney Point / Buffalo Girls | 1926 |
| Silvertone | Buckwheat Batter / The Irish Washerwoman | 1926 |
| Silvertone | Hell On The Wabash / McLeod's Reel | 1926 |
| Gennett | Stoney Point / Ocean Waves | *1926 |
| Gennett | Buckwheat Batter / Hell On The Wabash | *1926 |
| Challenge | Ocean Waves / Buffalo Girls | *1927 |
| Herwin | Buckwheat Batter / Hell On The Wabash | ???? |
In 1949 Tom Owen appeared with Pat Barrett, aka Uncle Ezra, Bradley Kincaid, Malcolm Clair, and Joe Kelly to celebrate the 25th birthday of the WLS Barn Dance. In September 1952 Feedstuffs (a trade newspaper for the feed industry" listed Tom Owen and his Cowboys playing an industry event. Then he appeared again in 1952 for it's 28th birthday alongside Ford Rush and Glenn Roswell. In 1952 there's an ad for a dance Tom Owen's Cowboys are playing, it refers to their 16th WMT anniversary. That'd put their start in 1936 or 1937. This may even overlap with Tom's time touring with his Entertainers in 1937 as a "WLS artist" but probably no longer on the air at the Barn Dance.
Tom Owen died in 1956. Variety wrote "Tom Owens, 63 bandleader who
headed a western music group known as Tom Owens's Cowboys died May 27th
in Cedar Rapids, IA after a long illness. He joined radio station WMT, Cedar Rapids, in 1937 and continued with that outlet until his illness. Surviving are his wire, daughter and son." The Cowboys had been on WMT for about 20 years. Owen's radio tenure included at least another 10+ years at WLS.
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| Arlington Heights Herald, 07-29-1932 |
In January and February of 1958 Sponsor and Broadcasting magazine carried an ads for a country special on WMT, Noontime RFD, which lists Tom Owen's Cowboys. But there the trail ends. Some ads for that Noontime RFD program co-branded Owen and Johnny Kettleson. The group photo no longer includes Owen but they kept his name at least on the print ads.
Johnny Kettleson played with his own band from the early 1950s into the early 1970s. Their short-lived accordionist Leo Grecco started Leo & The Pioneers, which eventually became the Leo Greco band. He broke into television and started his own WMT-AM radio program on Sunday mornings "Variety Time" which ran for decades. Charles "Chuck" Youtzy might have become an electric utility worker at Jo-Carroll Electric. Harold ‘Bub’ Goodwick had previously been in the Glen Victoria Band and he left Tom Owen's Cowboys in 1949. In 1952 he started Bub and His Boys in Illinois with his brother Donovan. He continued to perform until his death in 1991. Like with Tom Owen, his band carried on for another few years. [SOURCE]
But in a strange kind of serendipity Sheriff Tom Owen's Cowboys were mentioned in Billboard in 1995. Mercury released a 50th anniversary Country music box set which included 73 artists who recorded between 1945 and 1995. The first name was Sheriff Tom, the last name was Shania Twain. What a mismatched pair of bookends.





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