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IN THE WIND P36 AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer Everett Brashear Passes E verett Brashear, one of the top AMA flat- track racers in the 1950s, died October 29 in Los Angeles, California. He was 93. Between 1952 and 1960, Brashear won 15 AMA flat-track nationals and dozens of regional races. He was inducted into the AMA Motor- cycle Hall of Fame in 1998. Born in Beaumont, Texas, on January 17, 1927, Brashear grew up with little interest in motorcycling. He first took up riding after he left the military in 1946, when he bought an Indian Scout and started rac- ing on the street with his friends. In 1949, Brashear was high-point rider in the novice ranks, a feat he repeated the next year as an amateur. He didn't make much of an impres- sion in 1951, his first expert season. The follow- ing year, 1952, was a different story, though. Brashear broke through with his first national win at the half-mile track in Sturgis, South Dakota. That win was the first for Brashear and the first win for Harley-Davidson's new KR model race bike. In 1953, Brashear won three nationals, two half-miles and a mile. Despite a serious racing injury in 1954, Brashear returned to competition and delivered strong performances throughout the remainder of the decade on Harley-Davidsons and BSAs. He retired from racing in 1960 and took a job for Triumph distributor Johnson Motors in California. His retirement was short-lived, however. He came back and won his final AMA national, the Sacra- mento Mile, July 17, 1960. Another bad crash in a county-fair race at the end of the year convinced Brashear to give up rac- ing again. He came back a second time and raced select events for the next four years (actually earn- ing his top finish in the Daytona 200, sixth, in 1964 on a Matchless), but had already moved on to life outside of racing. For a short time, Brashear ran a Harley-David- son dealership. Then he was a district manager for Triumph, an insurance agent, eastern sales manager for Yamaha, national sales manager for Kawasaki, head of Husqvarna distribution and, finally, a representative for aftermarket manufactur- ers. He retired to San Diego. In all, Brashear spent 47 years of his life in the motorcycle industry in one form or another. CN Everett Brashear was one of the top AMA flat-track racers in the 1950s. The AMA Hall of Famer died in Los Angeles, California. He was 93. PHOTO: AMA