I once again turned to the Conjuring Arts Research Center’s
“Ask Alexander” database
seeking information on this escapologist and I wasn’t disappointed. There wasn’t a lot of biography on Brauer but enough to fill in some holes.
seeking information on this escapologist and I wasn’t disappointed. There wasn’t a lot of biography on Brauer but enough to fill in some holes.
Brauer appeared on the cover of the Nov. 15, 1917 The Magic World, published in
Philadelphia by J.E. Pierce. His bio written by editor Charles J. Hagen, shows
that Brauer was born Sept. 27, 1888, in Richmond, Virginia. He started
performing magic at age 15 in local clubs and society engagements, and then
branched out into Vaudeville. Never at a loss for hyperbole, he began his
career as a “Card Wizard.”
Eventually his interests turned to the Challenge Handcuff
Act featuring escapes from handcuffs, mailbags, strait jackets, packing cases
and pillories. His escape from a giant milk can was unique. A committee from
the audience first tied him up in a cloth bag before he was immersed and locked
inside the can. He was reported to have made several jail escapes in the
Virginia area but no specifics were provided.
Brauer had what must have been an extensive collection of
restraints as it was noted he had nearly every kind of handcuff made. In fact,
in The Sphinx, during 1914-15, Brauer
ran advertisements offering relic handcuffs and leg irons for sale or trade.
His address at the time was 923 E. Marshall St., Richmond, Virginia. He often
contributed tricks and effects to The
Magic World including his method of doing the Challenge Packing Case
Escape.
The fact that he was featured laden with handcuffs and leg
irons on the cover of The Magic World
is no surprise to those who knew J.E. Pierce, the owner of the publication. He
was an avid escapologist himself and had featured himself on the April 15, 1917
cover.
It should also be noted that Pierce was the founder of the Society of
Professional Magicians, an early magic club in Philadelphia founded in March
1912. In a June 1913 Sphinx issue,
Pierce reports on the sixteenth monthly meeting of the club and describes
different magic tricks done by members. He reported, “Brother Brauer presented
a few handcuff tricks and rope stunts, which were very clever.”
Magic and escapes must not have been enough for young Brauer
as census data for 1910 have him working as a clerk for a railroad company in
Richmond. A membership list of I.B.M. members for 1926 (Brauer’s was #574), show
him as a “car assistant” on the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad. Likewise,
Richmond City Directories for 1917-27 have him similarly employed with his home
being 115 S. Pine St. By 1927 he had moved to 304 Cleveland Ave. Apt. 1.
The two remaining mysteries about Brauer are, when did he
die and why did he have nine other people in his household in 1910 besides his
mother, father, two sisters and two brothers? Did his parents run a boarding
house? Who knows, and for that matter,
who cares? Suffice to say that Harold Brauer’s star as a handcuff king shone
brightly for a while and then faded into history, until some 90 years later, a
collector of magician’s throwing cards decided unlock some of his secrets.
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