Brace Beemer (December 9, 1902 – March 1, 1965) was
an American radio actor and announcer at radio
station WXYZ, Detroit, Michigan.

Born in Mount Carmel, Illinois, Beemer was six foot,
three inches tall and was an expert horse rider. He
served as the deep-voiced announcer for The Lone
Ranger soon after its first broadcast in 1933. Beemer
also appeared as the Ranger in public appearances
because station owner George Trendle felt that Earle
Graser, the actor who played the part on the radio, did
not look right for the part.

The son of WXYZ staffer Erskine Campbell recalled:

Brace Beemer was voice of Lone Ranger as early as
1938 because my father, Erskine Campbell, worked for
him at WXYZ in Detroit that year, as a continuity writer
and a sound-effects man, also ran a farm Beemer
owned outside nearby Pontiac, Michigan. My sister
and I, pupils in a one-room elementary schoolhouse
outside Pontiac, often visited our father and "Uncle"
Brace while they did the show.
In 1941, Graser was killed in a car accident, and
Beemer took over as the voice of The Lone Ranger
from 1941 to the last new episode on September 3,
1954. During the 13 years that Beemer played the title
character, he was required by contract to restrict his
radio acting to that one role until the program left the
air.

The experienced and popular Western film actor,
Clayton Moore, was chosen to take over the role for
the television series. Although Beemer had the right
voice and had made many public appearances as the
Ranger, he had no experience as a film actor, as he
preferred live action to television. However, Beemer's
voice as the character was so familiar that Moore
imitated his sound in the earliest TV episodes.

Beemer also portrayed "Sergeant William Preston" of
the Yukon on Challenge of the Yukon, for a brief time
after the Lone Ranger series ended. He died in 1965
and was buried in Troy, Michigan. At the time of his
death, he was using his famous "Lone Ranger" voice
on automobile commercials running on radio stations.
THE RADIO LONE RANGER
BRACE BEEMER
LOOKING OVER ONE OF HIS TWO COLT 45 PISTOLS
ON TOUR WITH THE RADIO LONE RANGER IN THE 1930S
FOR A TRIP BACK INTO THE PAST FOR THE
RADIO "LONE RANGER" CLICK BELOW,
"HI-YO-SILVER AWAY !!!
====================
THE LONE RANGER
RIDES AGAIN !
BELOW,A VERY YOUNG "SONNY BOY, CHILIBILL" READY
TO RIDE WITH "BRACE BEEMER THE RADIO LONE RANGER"
IN THE PHOENIX, ARIZONA RODEO PARADE
IN THE MID. 1930s !!!
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