Jack Johnson (boxer)

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Jack Johnson

Statistics
Real name John Arthur Johnson
Nickname Galveston Giant
Weight Heavyweight
Nationality American
Birth date March 31, 1878
Birth place Galveston, Texas
Death date June 10, 1946
Death place Raleigh, North Carolina
Style Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 113 (14 No Decisions)
Wins 79
Wins by KO 44
Losses 8
Draws 12
No contests

John Arthur Johnson (March 31, 1878June 10, 1946), better known as Jack Johnson and nicknamed the "Galveston Giant", was an American boxer and arguably the best heavyweight of his generation. He was the first black Heavyweight Champion of the World, 1908-1915. In a documentary about his life, Ken Burns said: "For more than thirteen years, Jack Johnson was the most famous, and the most notorious, African-American on Earth". Outside the ring, he is known as the inventor of a type of wrench.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Jack Johnson was born in Galveston, Texas as the third child and first son of Henry and Tina "Tiny" Johnson, former slaves and faithful Methodists, who both worked blue-collar jobs to earn enough to raise six children (the Johnsons had nine children, four of whom survived to adulthood, and an adopted son) and teach them how to read and write. Jack Johnson had five years of formal schooling.

Johnson fought his first bout, a 16-round victory, at age 15. He turned professional around 1897, fighting in private clubs, and by age 18 was earning more in one night than his father earned in an entire week.

In 1901, Joe Choynski, the small Jewish heavyweight, came to Galveston to train Jack Johnson. Choynski, an experienced boxer, knocked Johnson out in round three, and the two were arrested for "engaging in an illegal contest" and put in jail for 23 days. (Although boxing was one of the three most popular sports in America at the time, along with baseball and horse-racing, the practice was officially illegal in most states, including Texas.) Choynski began training Johnson in jail.

[edit] Professional boxing career

Johnson developed a more patient style than was customary in that day: playing defensively, waiting for a mistake, and then capitalizing on it. It was very effective, but it was criticized in the press as being cowardly and devious. ( World Heavyweight Champ "Gentleman" Jim Corbett, who was white, had used many of the same techniques and was praised by the press as "the cleverest man in boxing.")

By 1902, Johnson had won at least 27 fights against both white and black opponents. Johnson won his first title on February 3, 1903, beating "Denver" Ed Martin over 20 rounds for the "Colored Heavyweight Championship". His efforts to win the full title were thwarted as World Heavyweight Champion James J. Jeffries refused to face him. Blacks could box whites in other arenas, but the heavyweight championship was such a respected and coveted position in America that blacks were not deemed worthy to compete for it. Johnson was able to fight former champion, Bob Fitzsimmons, in July 1907 and knocked him out in two rounds.

He eventually won the World Heavyweight Title on December 26, 1908, when he fought the World Heavyweight Champion, Canadian Tommy Burns in Sydney, Australia, after following him all over the world, taunting him in the press for a match. The fight lasted fourteen rounds before being stopped by the police. The title was awarded to Johnson on a referee's decision as a T.K.O, but he had severely beaten the champion. During the fight, Johnson had mocked both Burns and his ringside crew. Every time Burns was about to go down, Johnson would hold him up again, punishing him more. The camera was stopped just as Johnson was finishing off Burns so that nobody could actually see Johnson becoming the champion.

As title holder, Johnson had to face a series of fighters billed by boxing promoters as "great white hopes", often as exhibition matches. In 1909 he beat Victor McLaglen, Frank Moran, Tony Ross, Al Kaufman, and the middleweight champion Stanley Ketchel. The fight with Ketchel was keenly fought by both men until the 12th and last round. Ketchel threw a right to Johnson's head, knocking him down; slowly regaining his feet, Johnson threw a straight to Ketchel's jaw, knocking him and several of his teeth out. His fight with "Philadelphia" Jack O'Brien was a disappointing one for Johnson: scaling 205 pounds to O'Brien's 161, he could only achieve a 6 round draw with the great middleweight.

Johnson's fighting style was very distinctive. He always began a bout cautiously, slowly building up over the rounds into a more aggressive fighter. He often fought to punish his opponent rather than knock him out, endlessly avoiding their blows and striking with swift counters. He always gave the impression of having much more to offer and, if pushed, he could punch quite powerfully.

Johnson's fight against Jeffries, 1910.
Enlarge
Johnson's fight against Jeffries, 1910.

On July 4, 1910 in front of 22,000 people at a ring built just for the occasion in downtown Reno, Nevada, he defeated James J. Jeffries, with a K.O. in the 15th round. Jeffries had not fought in 6 years and had to lose around 100 pounds to try to get back to his championship fighting weight. The "Fight of the Century" earned Johnson $115,000 and silenced critics, who had belittled Johnson's previous victory over Tommy Burns as empty, claiming Burns was a false champion since Jeffries had retired undefeated. His victory sparked race riots among his black fans and certain states banned the filming of Johnson's victories over white fighters. In 2005, the United States National Film Preservation Board deemed the fight "historically significant" and put it in the National Film Registry.

Johnson married Etta Duryea in late 1910 or early 1911. She committed suicide in September of 1911, and Johnson quickly remarried, to Lucille Cameron. Both women were white, a fact that caused considerable controversy at the time. The couple fled to France soon after their marriage.

On April 5, 1915 Johnson lost his title to Jess Willard, a working cowboy who did not start boxing until he was almost thirty years old. With a crowd of 25,000 at the Vedado Racetrack in Havana, Cuba, Johnson was K.O.'d in the 26th round of the scheduled 45-round fight, which was co-promoted by Roderick James "Jess" McMahon and a partner. Johnson found that he could not knock out the giant Willard, who fought as a counterpuncher, making Johnson do all the leading. Johnson began to tire after the 20th round, and was visibly hurt by heavy body punches from Willard in rounds preceding the 26th round knockout. Johnson spread rumors that he took a dive, but Willard is widely regarded as winning fairly. Willard said, "If he was going to throw the fight, I wish he'd done it sooner."

[edit] Later days

Johnson fought a number of bouts in Mexico before returning to the U.S. on July 20, 1920 and surrendering to Federal agents for allegedly violating the Mann Act against "transporting women across state lines for immoral purposes" by sending his white girlfriend, Belle Schreiber, a railroad ticket to travel from Pittsburgh to Chicago. This is generally considered an intentional misuse of the Act, which was intended to stop interstate traffic in prostitutes. He was sent to the United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth to serve his sentence of one year and was released on July 9, 1921. There have been recurring proposals to grant Johnson a posthumous Presidential pardon.

While incarcerated, he found need for a tool that would help tighten loosening fastening devices, and modified a wrench for the task. He patented these improvements on 18th April 1922, as US Patent 1,413,121.

He continued fighting, but age was catching up with him. After two losses in 1928 he participated only in exhibition bouts. He opened a night club in Harlem, which later became the Cotton Club.

His wife, Lucille Cameron, divorced him in 1924 on the grounds of infidelity. Jack Johnson then married an old friend named Ms. Irene Pineau, in 1925. She outlived him. Johnson had no children.

He died in a car crash near Raleigh, North Carolina in 1946, aged 68, and was buried next to Etta Duryea in Graceland Cemetery, in Chicago. He was inducted to the Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954.

[edit] Personal habits

Johnson was an early example of the celebrity athlete, appearing regularly in the press and later on radio and in motion pictures. He earned considerable sums endorsing various products, including patent medicines, and indulged several expensive hobbies, including automobile racing and the purchase of jewellery and furs for his wives.

Johnson flouted conventions regarding the social and economic "place" of African Americans. As a black man, he broke a powerful taboo in consorting with white women and would verbally taunt men (white and black) both inside and outside the ring. Once, when he was pulled over for a $50 speeding ticket, he gave the officer a $100 bill, telling the officer he should keep the change as he was going to make his return trip at the same speed.

Asked the secret of his staying power by a reporter who had watched a succession of women parade into, and out of, the champion's room, Johnson supposedly said, "Eat jellied eels and think distant thoughts."[1]

Johnson was also interested in opera (his favorite being Il Trovatore), history (he was an admirer of Napoleon Bonaparte, believing him to have risen from a similar origin as himself), and automobile racing.

[edit] Legacy

Johnson is also a member of the modern International Boxing Hall of Fame, which was established in 1990 at Canastota, New York.

Johnson's skill as a fighter and the money that it brought him made him unable to be ignored by the white establishment. In the short term, the boxing world reacted against this legacy. Joe Louis, later, was not able to box for the heavyweight title until he proved he could "act white", and was warned against gloating over fallen opponents or having his picture taken with a white woman. But Johnson foreshadowed, in many ways, perhaps the most famous boxer of all time, Muhammad Ali. In fact, Muhammad Ali often spoke of how he was influenced by Jack Johnson. He identified with him because he felt white America ostracized him in the same manner because of his opposition to the war in Vietnam. Muhammad Ali in his autobiography relates how he and Joe Frazier agreed that Johnson and Joe Louis were the greatest boxers of old.

Jack Johnson's story is the basis of the play and subsequent 1970 movie, The Great White Hope, starring James Earl Jones as Johnson (known as Jack Jefferson in the movie), and Jane Alexander as his love interest. In 2005 Ken Burns produced a documentary about Johnson's life, Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson, based on the nonfiction book by Geoffrey C. Ward.

[edit] Popular culture

Southern punk rock band This Bike Is A Pipe Bomb has a song about Jack Johnson. It appears on both their Three Way Tie for a Fifth CD and split seven inch with Carrie Nations. Several hip-hop artists have also reflected on Johnson's legacy, most notably in the album New Danger, by Mos Def, in which songs like "Zimzallabim" and "Blue Black Jack" are devoted to the artist's pugilistic hero. Miles Davis and Wynton Marsalis both have done soundtracks for documentaries about Jack Johnson. There are also several references to Jack Johnson, made by the main character Ron Burgundy, in the movie Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.

Miles Davis's 1970 (see 1970 in music) album "A Tribute to Jack Johnson" was inspired by Johnson. The end of the record features the actor Brock Peters (as Johnson) saying:

   
“
I'm Jack Johnson. Heavyweight champion of the world. I'm black. They never let me forget it. I'm black all right! I'll never let them forget it!
   
”

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Stump, Al. 'The rowdy reign of the Black avenger'. True: The Men's Magazine January 1963.

[edit] References

Preceded by
Tommy Burns
WBA World Heavyweight boxing champion
1908–1915
Succeeded by
Jess Willard