Joe Louis: Difference between revisions
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==Biography== |
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===Early life and career=== |
===Early life and career=== |
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Joe Louis Barrow was born in Chambers County, Alabama, and was the son of Monroe Barrow, a sharecropper, and Lilly Reese, a homemaker. His father was committed to an asylum when Louis was just two years old, and died there two years later. His mother re-married when Joe was seven and the family moved to [[Detroit]] in 1926. In his teens he worked for an ice company; he would later credit lifting the heavy blocks of ice with helping build his arm and upper body strength. It was during this time that he first became interested in boxing. Louis donated over 100 thousand dollars to charity. Today that is equivalent to one million dollars. When Louis joined the army interest on the taxes increased. Louis lived his whole life paying back his debts to the government until his death |
Joe Louis Barrow was born in Chambers County, Alabama, and was the son of Monroe Barrow, a sharecropper, and Lilly Reese, a homemaker. His father was committed to an asylum when Louis was just two years old, and died there two years later. His mother re-married when Joe was seven and the family moved to [[Detroit]] in 1926. In his teens he worked for an ice company; he would later credit lifting the heavy blocks of ice with helping build his arm and upper body strength. It was during this time that he first became interested in boxing. Louis donated over 100 thousand dollars to charity. Today that is equivalent to one million dollars. When Louis joined the army interest on the taxes increased. Louis lived his whole life paying back his debts to the government until his death |
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Joseph Louis Barrow | |
---|---|
Born | May 13, 1914 |
Died | April 12, 1981 |
Nationality | American |
Other names | The Brown Bomber |
Statistics | |
Weight(s) | Heavyweight |
Stance | Orthodox |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 72 |
Wins | 69 |
Wins by KO | 55 |
Losses | 3 |
Draws | 0 |
No contests | 0 |
Joseph Louis Barrow (May 14 (sources differ), 1914 – April 13, 1981), better known in the boxing world as Joe Louis and nicknamed The Brown Bomber, was a native of LaFayette, Alabama who became the world heavyweight boxing champion. He held the title around 11 years and made a division-record 25 successful title defenses. At a turbulent time in history, just before World War II, he became a popular and national hero, along with Jesse Owens, for both black and white America.
In 2003, Ring Magazine rated Joe Louis No. 1 on the list of 100 greatest punchers of all time. In 2005, Louis was named the greatest heavyweight of all time by the International Boxing Research Organization [1].
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Early life and career
Joe Louis Barrow was born in Chambers County, Alabama, and was the son of Monroe Barrow, a sharecropper, and Lilly Reese, a homemaker. His father was committed to an asylum when Louis was just two years old, and died there two years later. His mother re-married when Joe was seven and the family moved to Detroit in 1926. In his teens he worked for an ice company; he would later credit lifting the heavy blocks of ice with helping build his arm and upper body strength. It was during this time that he first became interested in boxing. Louis donated over 100 thousand dollars to charity. Today that is equivalent to one million dollars. When Louis joined the army interest on the taxes increased. Louis lived his whole life paying back his debts to the government until his death
He used money given to him by his mother for violin lessons to pay for a locker at a local recreation center. His mother was not pleased but encouraged him to do his best.
Louis had a successful amateur career which he finished with winning Michigan's Golden Gloves title. He turned professional in 1934, making his debut on July 4 of that year, knocking out Jack Kracken in the first round at Chicago, Illinois. He won 12 fights that year, all in Chicago, 10 by knockout. Among his opponents in 1934 were Art Sykes and Stanley Poreda.
Joe Louis's trainer was Jack Blackburn.
Ascendance
In 1935, Louis fought 13 times, creating a sensation. He knocked out his first world champion, former world heavyweight champion Primo Carnera, in six rounds. Louis then knocked out the iron-chinned former heavyweight champion Max Baer in four rounds. Before losing to Louis, Baer had been knocked down only once, by Frankie Campbell. Louis also knocked out Paolino Uzcudun, who had never been knocked down or out before Louis KO'd him.
Louis began 1936 by knocking out Kane in the first round. In his next fight, he was matched with former world heavyweight champion Max Schmeling. Although not fancied to cause an upset, the German had studied Louis' style intently, and believed he had found a weakness. By exploiting Louis' habit of dropping his left low after a jab, Schmeling handed Louis his first loss by knocking him out in round 12 in New York.
Max Schmeling
Max Schmeling now deserved a fight for the title, but was denied a chance to challenge the world champion.
That year Louis had four more fights, winning all of them. Among the boxers he knocked out were former Heavyweight champ Jack Sharkey and Eddie Simms, who turned and asked the referee to take a walk on the roof with him after being knocked down by Louis. The referee stopped the fight right away.
By 1937, and after a ten round decision win over a running Bob Pastor, Louis was matched with world champion James J. Braddock in Chicago for the World Heavyweight title. Louis was dropped in round one, but he got up and knocked Braddock out in round eight, winning the world heavyweight championship. He said after the fight, however, that he would not feel like a world champion until he beat one man: Schmeling. Louis retained the title three times, outpointing the Welshman, Tommy Farr, in 15 rounds in his first title defense, and knocking out Nathan Mann in three and Harry Thomas in five.
The rematch with Schmeling finally took place, on June 22, 1938. This time the fight was hyped on both sides of the Atlantic, and many fans around the world saw this fight as a symbol: Louis representing the American interests and Schmeling, who was wrongly seen as a Nazi, fighting for Germany and white supremacy. This 'Good vs Evil' perception was mistaken, as Schmeling was, at best, a hesitant poster boy for the regime. Aside from employing a Jewish manager, Joe Jacobs, he also sheltered the two sons of Jewish friends after Kristallnacht at considerable personal risk.
The fight itself ended quickly, with Louis knocking out Schmeling in the first round. Approximately 70 million Americans listened to the fight on radio. The fight was widely celebrated; "Little Bill" Gaither, the jazz guitarist, wrote his well-known song "Champ Joe Louis" the day after the fight [2], in celebration. In 2005, the radio broadcast was selected for permanent preservation in the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress.
Max Schmeling and Joe Louis remained life long friends.
During World War II
From December 1940 to March 1942, when his career was interrupted by World War II, Louis defended his title ten times, a frequency unmatched by any heavyweight champion since the end of the bareknuckle era. His nearly-monthly fights against every challenger, and his convincing wins, earned his opponents the unfair group nickname "Bum of the Month."
In all, Louis made 25 defenses of his heavyweight title from 1937 to 1949. He was a world champion for 11 years and 10 months. Louis set records for any division in number of defenses and longevity as world champion non stop, and both records still stand. His most remarkable record is that he knocked out 23 opponents in 27 title fights.
Other notable title defenses before Louis enlisted were:
- His fight versus world Light Heavyweight champion John Henry Lewis, knocked out in the first.
- His fight with Two Ton Tony Galento, who knocked Louis down in the third round with a left hook. Giving Galento a terrible beating, Louis knocked Galento out in the fourth round.
- His two fights with Chilean Arturo Godoy. In their first bout Louis won by a decision, and then Louis won the rematch by a knockout in the eighth round.
- His fight with world Light Heavyweight champion Billy Conn, the first of which is remembered as one of the greatest fights in heavyweight history. Conn, smaller than Louis, said that he planned to "hit and run," prompting Louis's famous response, "He can run, but he can't hide." After 12 rounds, Conn was ahead on points, only to be knocked out by Louis in the 13th round. In the rematch, held when the two fighters returned from World War Two, Louis won by a knockout in the eighth round.
Louis retired after two fights with Jersey Joe Walcott. In the first fight, Walcott scored two knockdowns over Louis but lost a disputed decision. In the second fight, Walcott again knocked Louis down, but the aging Louis came on to knock out Walcott in the 11th round. Obviously no longer the fighter he once had been, Louis wisely retired.
Louis served in the Army from 1942 to 1945 and spent that period traveling around Europe visiting with the fighting troops and boxing in exhibitions - and the money awarded to him during the fights he would sign over to the U.S. government to show more of his support and belief in the U.S. participation in the war. During this time, he became a national spokesman for the Army. After he came back to keep defending his title in 1946, Louis looked somewhat slower in his fights, and his best years were obviously behind him. On March 1, 1949 Louis announced his retirement from boxing.
1950s
In 1950, he was harassed by the I.R.S. (it is reported the IRS took away not only the $600 his mother left to him after her death, but also his children's trust funds), he announced a comeback and he lost a 15 round unanimous decision to world champion Ezzard Charles, who had won the vacant title after Louis retired. Overweight and much slower than he had been in his prime, Louis kept boxing, but at a level far below that of his championship days. In 1951, Louis lost by a knockout in eight rounds to the future world Heavyweight Champion, Rocky Marciano. He retired with a record of 69 wins and 3 losses, with an amazing 55 of those wins coming by knockout.
Louis became a professional wrestler in 1956 but quit in 1957 due to injuries suffered during a match.
Retirement and later life
A few years after his retirement, a movie about his life, The Joe Louis Story, was filmed in Hollywood. The role of Joe Louis was played by fighter Coley Wallace. Louis remained a popular celebrity in his twilight years. Because of Louis's increasing poverty due to heavy taxes, old army buddy Ash Resnick gave him a job welcoming tourists to the Caesar's Palace hotel in Las Vegas, where Ash was an executive, just so Louis could make ends meet.
Louis's health began to deteriorate, and he had two operations which long-time friend Frank Sinatra paid for. Sinatra flew Louis to Houston to have Michael DeBakey perform surgery. Later Louis suffered a stroke, and a year later his heart finally failed him.
Joe Louis died of a heart attack in 1981. He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia with full military honors. His funeral was paid for by former competitor Max Schmeling. His life and his achievements prompted famed New York sportswriter Jimmy Cannon to write "Joe Louis is a credit to his race - the human race."
Filmography
- The Phynx, 1970
- The Fight Never Ends, 1949
- Johnny at the Fair, 1947
- Joe Palooka, Champ, 1946
- This Is the Army, 1943
- Spirit of Youth, 1938
- Max Schmeling siegt über Joe Louis, 1936
Commemoration
Louis was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest award given by the U.S. legislative branch, in 1982. Congress stated that he "did so much to bolster the spirit of the American people during one of the most crucial times in American history and which have endured throughout the years as a symbol of strength for the nation." He has a sports complex named after him in Detroit, the Joe Louis Arena, where the Detroit Red Wings play their NHL games. A memorial to Louis was dedicated in Detroit (at Jefferson Avenue & Woodward) on October 16, 1986. The sculpture, commissioned by Time, Inc. and executed by Robert Graham, is a 24-foot long arm with a fisted hand suspended by a 24-foot high pyramidal framework. It represents the power of his punch both inside and outside the ring. Joe Louis is buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
A street near Madison Square garden is named after Joe Louis.
Trivia
- During a 1944 promotional tour of Liverpool, England, Louis (as a publicity stunt) actually signed for Liverpool Football Club as a player. As of today the records still state that he was on the books and is classed as having been a Liverpool player.
- It was Louis who coined two of boxing's most famous quotes: "He can run, but he can't hide" and "Everyone has a plan until they've been hit."
See also
References and Notes
- ^ International Boxing Research Organization (March, 2005). "All Time Rankings". Retrieved October 14, 2006.
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External links
- Louis' TAX issues
- Joe Louis' career boxing record
- Joe Louis biography International Boxing Hall of Fame
- The Brown Bomber -- The man behind The Fist" Jenny Nolan in The Detroit News
- Remembering Joe Louis
- Joe Louis' Gravesite
- Solid boxing Joe's bio and Profile
- The Fight of the Century NPR special on the selection of the radio broadcast to the National Recording Registry
- 1914 births
- 1981 deaths
- African American boxers
- American boxers
- American military personnel of World War II
- Burials at Arlington National Cemetery
- Congressional Gold Medal recipients
- Deaths from cardiovascular disease
- Heavyweights
- People from Alabama
- United States Army soldiers
- World Heavyweight Champions
- WBA Champions
- Detroit culture