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Stuart Hamblen

Carl Stuart Hamblen was an American entertainer who in 1926 became one of radio's first singing cowboys, going on to become a singer, actor, radio show host and songwriter. He converted to Christianity under the ministry of Billy Graham, becoming a temperance movement supporter and running several times for political office. He is best known as the composer of the Southern gospel hymn "It Is No Secret " and the song "This Ole House" (1954); which was most notably recorded by Rosemary Clooney and Shakin' Stevens.

Early life
Hamblen was born into the family of an itinerant Methodist preacher on October 20, 1908, in Kellyville, Texas. He married Suzy Daniels and they had two children. Hamblen's father was J. H. Hamblen, a minister in the Methodist Church in Texas, who in 1946 founded the Evangelical Methodist Church denomination in Abilene. ==Career==
Career
In 1931, Hamblen began hosting the popular radio program Family Album in California. He also composed music and acted in motion pictures with cowboy stars, including Gene Autry, Roy Rogers and John Wayne. In 1934, he became the first artist signed by the American subsidiary of Decca Records. Hamblen did not cope well with the pressures of his high-profile career and sought relief in alcohol. Many times his drinking landed him in jail for public brawling and other destructive behavior. The Texas State Historical Association reports that Hamblen identified himself as the "original juvenile delinquent". Because Hamblen was hugely popular, his radio sponsors regularly bailed him out of jail and smoothed things over. Inevitably, Hamblen's drinking and gambling problems severely affected his life and career. In 1949 after years of struggle with alcohol, Hamblen converted to Christianity at a Billy Graham crusade in Los Angeles, and was soon fired from his radio program after refusing to do beer commercials. He subsequently gave up gambling and horse racing, and entered Christian broadcasting with his radio show The Cowboy Church of the Air, which ran until 1952. ==Personal life==
Personal life
During a 1949 crusade in Los Angeles, Graham called Hamblen's conversion "the turning point" in the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association's ministry, as the crowds had been rather small before Hamblen accepted Christ. Graham said Hamblen was the No. 1 radio personality in Los Angeles, which drew in crowds. He went on to relate an anecdote about Hamblen's hunting skills, instrumental in Hamblen's capture of a wild panther in the Los Angeles area prior to the crusade. That evening, also Graham's first coast-to-coast television broadcast, Hamblen shared about his faith and sang/spoke his signature hymn "It Is No Secret (What God Can Do)". Stuart Hamblen died March 8, 1989, in Santa Monica, California, of brain cancer. == Music ==
Music
In his early career as a singing cowboy Hamblen composed the song "Texas Plains". "This Ole House" was inspired during a hunting trip in the High Sierras with John Wayne and guide Monte Wolfe. The two men came upon what looked like an abandoned shack, wherein they found the body of an elderly man, apparently dead of natural causes. "Open Up Your Heart (And Let the Sunshine In)" was sung on an episode of the television cartoon series The Flintstones in the mid-1960s by characters Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm. Hamblen wrote the lyrics to the Christmas cult favorite "Hardrock, Coco and Joe". An animated Christmas cartoon short based on the song was created in the mid-1950s. Its running time is about 2 minutes and 45 seconds. The full title is Hardrock, Coco and Joe - The Three Little Dwarfs, but is commonly called Hardrock, Coco and Joe, after the song title. One of Hamblen's few secular songs to become popular was "(Remember Me) I'm the One Who Loves You", recorded by Ernest Tubb, == Awards ==
Awards
Hamblen was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970, was presented the ACM Pioneer Award 1972, received the Gene Autry Golden Boot Award 1988, and was inducted into the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame 2001. He later received a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. He was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 1994 and the Western Music Hall of Fame in 1999. Jefferson, Texas (near Hamblen's birth home of Kelleyville, Texas), celebrates "Stuart Hamblen Days" each year. A bronze plaque dedication took place in the city park in 1998, sponsored by a local opera house. == Politics ==
Politics
Hamblen supported the American temperance movement and ran as the Prohibition Party's candidate for U.S. president in the 1952 presidential election. Hamblen garnered 72,949 recorded popular votes and no electoral votes in an election in which Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president for the first of two terms, defeating Democrat Adlai Stevenson. Previously, Hamblen ran for California's 11th congressional district seat as a Democrat, losing to Carl Hinshaw in the 1938 election cycle. The race ended with Hinshaw at 47 percent and Hamblen with 41 percent of the vote. == Discography ==
Discography
Albums • ''It's No Secret'' (RCA Victor, 1956) • The Grand Old Hymns (RCA Victor, 1957) • Hymns (Harmony, 1957) • A Visit With Stuart Hamblen (Sacred, 1958) • Immortal Treasures (Sacred, 1958) • Remember Me (Coral, 1958) • Beyond the Sun (RCA Camden, 1959) • The Spell of the Yukon (Columbia, 1961) • Of God I Sing (Columbia, 1962) • This Old House Has Got to Go (Kapp, 1966) • I Believe (Harmony, 1967) • The Cowboy Church (Word, 1973) • A Man and His Music (Lamb & Lion, 1974) • The Worlds of Stuart Hamblen Volume 1: The Shooting of Dan McGrew (Voss Records, 1978) • The Worlds of Stuart Hamblen Volume 2: The Legacy of Stuart Hamblen (Voss, 1978) • The Worlds of Stuart Hamblen Volume 3: So Dear to My Heart (Voss, 1978) • The Worlds of Stuart Hamblen Volume 4: Songs the Cowboy Sings (Voss, 1978) Singles == Filmography ==
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