Boxing in the 1930s

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Boxing in the 1930s was affected by one of the biggest economic struggles in the history of the United States: the depression era. Because of the suffering American economy, many boxers were offered lower purses, causing them to decline matches, being unsatisfied with their pay. When the decade began, the world Heavyweight title had been vacant for three years. There was a world Middleweight champion, Mickey Walker, but he was more interested in pursuing fights with the best Heavyweight contenders, instead of facing his own contenders down at the Middleweight division.

The Heavyweight division, from 1930 to 1937 in particular, could be compared to the Heavyweight division of the 1980s. Six champions were crowned before Joe Louis began his legendary run as Heavyweight champion in 1937. He retired in 1949, still holding the title of World Heavyweight Champion.

Boxing began expanding into Latin America in the 1930s: Sixto Escobar became the first world champion from Puerto Rico by defeating Baby Casanova, who had also been crowned at the start of the decade. Baby Arizmendi conquered the first world title for Mexico in 1934. For his part, Kid Chocolate became the first world champion from Cuba.

Three world champions won world titles in three different divisions, a feat no single fighter had accomplished since 1903; Tony Canzoneri, Barney Ross and Henry Armstrong cemented their place in boxing history by achieving this feat; Armstrong was the first, and will be the only, world champion to reign in three divisions at the same time: modern boxing rules ban boxers from reigning in more than one division at a time.

Contents

[edit] List of Fights

[edit] 1930

  • February 10- In the decade's first world title fight, Jimmy Slattery becomes world Light-Heavyweight champion, beating Lou Scozza by decision in fifteen rounds for the vacant title, at Buffalo.
  • February 18- Jack Kid Berg becomes world Jr. Welterweight champion, knocking out Mushy Callahan in eleven rounds, London.
  • March 21- Midget Wolgast wins the vacant New York Flyweight title with a fifteen round decision over Black Bill, New York City.
  • June 11- Max Schmeling wins the undisputed World Heavyweight title, defeating NBA champion Jack Sharkey by a four round disqualification, after being hit with a damaging low blow. Schmeling became the first boxer to win the title by disqualification, and he remains as of 2004, the only one to win it that way, in New York.
  • June 25- Maxie Rosembloom wins the world Light-Heavyweight title with a fifteen round decision over Jimmy Slattery, in Buffalo.
  • July 17- Al Singer wins the world Lightweight title with a first round knockout over Sammy Mandell, setting a record for the fastest fight in that division's history, New York.
  • September 14- Tony Canzoneri wins his second world title, knocking out Al Singer (who in the process became the first world boxing champion in history to both win and lose the title by first round knockout) in the first round and breaking Singer's record for the fastest finish in a world Lightweight title fight, in New York.
  • October 4- Panama Al Brown retains the world Bantamweight title with a fifteen round decision over Eugene Huat, in Paris.
  • December 11- Bat Battalino retains the world Featherweight title with a fifteen round decision over Kid Chocolate, in New York.
  • December 26- Frankie Genaro and Midget Wolgast try to unify the world Flyweight title, but their fight results in a draw, in New York.

[edit] 1931

  • April 24- Tony Canzoneri becomes the second man to win world titles in three divisions, and the first one since Bob Fitzsimmons in the 19th century, by knocking out Jack Kid Berg in round three to win the world's Jr. Welterweight title, in Chicago.
  • May 22- Bat Battalino retains his world Featherweight title, with a ten round decision over Fidel LaBarba, in New York.
  • July 3- Max Schmeling retains the world Heavyweight title, with a fifteenth round knockout of Young Stribling, in Cleveland.
  • July 15- Kid Chocolate becomes Cuba's first world boxing champion in history, knocking out world Jr. Lightweight champion Benny Bass in seven rounds, at Philadelphia.
  • July 23- Bat Battalino retains the world Featherweight title with a ten round decision over future world champion Freddie Miller, at Cincinnati.
  • August 5- Maxie Rosembloom retains his world Light-Heavyweight title with a fifteen round decision over former world champion Jimmy Slattery, at their New York rematch.
  • September 10- Tony Canzoneri retains both his Jr. Welterweight and Lightweight world belts, with a fifteen round unanimous decision over former world champion Jack Berg, at their New York rematch.
  • October 26- Young Perez becomes the first world champion from Tunisia when he beats Frankie Genaro by knockout in round two at Paris, France, for the National Boxing Association's world Flyweight title.
  • October 27- Panama Al Brown retains his world Bantamweight title with a fifteen round decision over Eugene Huat at their rematch, which took place in Montreal, Canada.
  • November 20- Tony Canzoneri retains his world Lightweight title by a fifteen round decision over world Jr. Lightweight champion Kid Chocolate, in New York.

[edit] 1932

  • January 18- Johnny Jadick wins the world Jr. Welterweight title, defeating Tony Canzoneri by a fifteen round decision, at Philadelphia.
  • January 25- Gorilla Jones knocks out Oddone Piazza in six rounds to win the vacant world Middleweight title, at Milwaukee
  • January 28- Jackie Fields defeats Lou Brouillard by decision in ten rounds to win the world Welterweight title, at Chicago.
  • June 21- Jack Sharkey wins the world Heavyweight title, defeating Max Schmeling by a fifteen round decision, at their rematch held in New York.
  • June 11- In a controversial fight, Marcel Thil wins the world Middleweight title with an eleventh round disqualification over Gorilla Jones, in Paris, France. In front of an audience that included Amelia Earhart, Jones is disqualified for continuous low hitting and holding.
  • July 18- Johnny Jadick retains his world Jr. Welterweight title with a second ten round decision win over Tony Canzoneri, at Philadelphia.
  • October 7- Benny Leonard's last fight, as the former world Lightweight champion gets knocked out in six rounds by Jimmy McLarnin, in New York.
  • November 4- Tony Canzoneri retains his world Lightweight title with a fifteen round decision over Billy Petrolle, at New York.
  • December 9- Kid Chocolate retains his world Featherweight title with a fifteen round decision over Fidel LaBarba, in New York.

[edit] 1933

  • February 20- Battling Shaw wins the world Jr. welterweight title with a ten round decision over Johnny Jadick, New Orleans.
  • February 21- Young Corbett III wins the world Welterweight title, defeating Jackie Fields by a ten round decision, in San Francisco.
  • May 21- Tony Canzoneri recovers his world Jr. Welterweight title, with a ten round decision over Battling Shaw, in New Orleans.
  • June 23- Barney Ross beats Tony Canzoneri to claim both the world Lightweight and Jr. Welterweight titles held by Canzoneri, by a ten round decision, in Chicago.
  • June 29- Primo Carnera initiates one of boxing's most controversial reigns in the history of the Heavyweight division, knocking out world champion Jack Sharkey in six rounds at New York. It has been widely rumored since that many of Carnera's fights were fixed.
  • September 12- Barney Ross retains his world Lightweight and Jr. Weltwerweight titles with a fifteen round decision over Tony Canzoneri, at New York.
  • October 21- Paulino Uzcudun unsuccessfully tries to become the first Hispanic world Heavyweight champion, losing a fifteen round decision to Primo Carnera, in Rome, Italy.
  • December 25- Frankie Klick wins the world Jr. Lightweight title, knocking out world champion Kid Chocolate, in seven rounds, at Philadelphia.

[edit] 1934

  • March 1- Primo Carnera retains the world Heavyweight title with a fifteen round decision over world Light-Heavyweight champion Tommy Loughran, at Miami.
  • March 5- Barney Ross retains his world Lightweight title with a ten round draw over world Jr. Lightweight champion Frankie Klick, in San Francisco.
  • March 27- Barney Ross retains the world Jr. Welterweight title with a ten round decision over Bobby Pacho, in Los Angeles.
  • May 28- Barney Ross becomes the third man in boxing history to win world titles in three different divisions, defeating Jimmy McLarnin for the world Welterweight title by a fifteen round decision in New York.
  • June 14- Max Baer drops defending world Heavyweight champion Primo Carnera eleven times en route to an eleventh round knockout, winning the world Heavyweight title, at New York.
  • June 26- Sixto Escobar becomes Puerto Rico's first world champion in history, knocking out Baby Casanova in nine rounds to win the vacant National Boxing Association's Bantamweight title, in Montreal, Canada.
  • September 17- Jimmy McLarnin recovers the world Welterweight title, with a fifteen round decision over Barney Ross, in New York.
  • December 10- Barney Ross retains his world Jr. Welterweight title in a rematch against Bobby Pacho, by a twelve round decision, in Cleveland.

[edit] 1935

[edit] 1936

[edit] 1937

[edit] 1938

[edit] 1939

[edit] External links


Boxing History

Boxing in the 1920s | Boxing in the 1930s | Boxing in the 1940s | Boxing in the 1950s | Boxing in the 1960s | Boxing in the 1970s | Boxing in the 1980s | Boxing in the 1990s | Boxing in the 2000s |