Background
Born in Winter Park, Florida, Rogers was the namesake of two prominent architects in the family - his father James Gamble Rogers II and great-uncle James Gamble Rogers.
Born in Winter Park, Florida, Rogers was the namesake of two prominent architects in the family - his father James Gamble Rogers II and great-uncle James Gamble Rogers.
As a young man, he chose the path of a musician. While on his way to interview for a job at an architecture firm, he attended a Serendipity Singers audition in New New York
He died a heroic death and was honored by his native state. He was a 1998 inductee into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame. Rogers borrowed a guitar, tried out, and was admitted to the group.
By the 1970s, he was a regular fixture at the Florida Folk Festival, often as the headliner.
He appeared in James Szalapski"s 1976 country music documentary film Heartworn Highways, performing an onstage comic monologue followed by "Black Label Blues." By the 1980s, he was often featured on public television and public radio. As a self-described "modern troubadour," Rogers influenced musicians such as Jimmy Buffett and David Bromberg, with the former dedicating his album Fruitcakes to him.
While Rogers was camping at Flagler Beach, a frightened young girl ran to him, begging him to help her father, who was in trouble in rough surf. Compromised by spinal arthritis that had been worsening since childhood, Rogers nevertheless grabbed an air mattress and headed into the ocean in a rescue attempt.
Both men died in the surf.
In honor of his heroism, the Florida Legislature renamed the state park Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area at Flagler Beach. In Saint Augustine, Florida, there is a middle school named Gamble Rogers Middle School after him. A recurring theme in Rogers" songs and stories are the characters and places in the fictional Oklawaha County, Florida though his earlier works referenced characters of the same names residing in non-fictional Winter Park, Florida and Habersham County, Georgia.
Through years of on-stage apprenticeship, Rogers refined and edited his one-man show into a single story line - a continuum he titled, Oklawaha County Laissez-Faire.
During the years since Rogers" death, his agent and business manager, Charles Steadham, acquired the intellectual property rights to Rogers" work and founded in Gainesville, Florida to present this material. Steadham has remastered and re-released most of Rogers" songs and stories, making them available through the website of the not-for-profit Gamble Rogers Memorial Foundation, Incorporated.