Wesley A. Crane
1908-1985
Wesley Crane and his two brothers, Louis and Waldo, along with Ray Turner, were members of the first Voice of Prophecy radio program quartet, the King's Heralds. Originally known as The Lone Star Four, they started singing together in 1928, when they were students at Southwestern Junior College, now Southwestern Adventist University, in Keene, Texas. Determined to stay together as a quartet when they left SWJC, they decided to become nurses so that they could still perform and live on the income nursing would provide. They traveled to St. Helena, California, where they completed the nursing program.
Their first job after graduating from St. Helena was not in nursing but as a quartet in Oakland, California. Even though it was in the midst of the Depression, the $30 a month they each earned by performing was not enough to live on. They moved south to work at the Glendale Sanitarium and Hospital, where they met H.M.J. Richards, who was serving as hospital chaplain. Their singing caught the attention of Richards, who brought them to the attention of his son, H.M.S., who was holding evangelistic meetings in Long Beach.
Once he heard them sing and saw the effect they had on the audience, the younger Richards immediately tried to obtain funding to make them a permanent part of his team. Eventually he succeeded, and when the Voice of Prophecy radio program was launched in 1937, they were renamed the King's Heralds quartet and became an important part of the program.
Wesley continued with the quartet for four years after his brothers left in 1939 to attend the College of Medical Evangelists, now Loma Linda University, to pursue medical studies. After he left the quartet in 1943, he worked at The Quiet Hour, Book and Bible Houses in California and Washington, and at the Glendale Adventist Hospital in California.
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Sources: Obituary, Review and Herald, 20 March 1986; Roy F. Cottrell, Forward in Faith, Pacific Press, 1945, 44-47; Robert E. Edwards, H.M.S. Richards, Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1998, 158, 159, 166, 194; Robert E. Edwards, Hello America! 20 Years of Victory, Voice of Prophecy, 1961, 37, 38.