Tuesday, 26 April 2016
JOHNSON, JACK
JOHNSON, JACK (1878–1946). Jack Johnson (his real name
was Arthur John, and he was also known as Lil' Arthur), the first black
to win the world heavyweight boxing championship, was born in Galveston
on March 31, 1878, of poor parents. He was the second of six children of
Henry (a former slave) and Tiny Johnson. He left school in the fifth
grade. Young Johnson began traveling in South Texas, picking up odd jobs
as a porter, barber's helper, dockworker, and general laborer. He began
his fighting career as a sparring partner and participated in so-called
battles royal, where black youths fought each other and white
spectators threw money to the winner. He started fighting in private
clubs in the Galveston area, and became a professional prizefighter in
1897. The Galveston hurricane of 1900
destroyed his family's home, and the next year he was jailed for
boxing—at that time it was illegal in Texas. He subsequently left
Galveston and did not return. Johnson began wandering the country,
fighting and gaining increasing recognition. In 1903 he won the Negro
heavyweight championship. Jim Jeffries, the reigning white heavyweight
champion, refused to cross the color line and fight him. Johnson had to
wait until 1908, when he defeated Tommy Burns in Australia, to
technically win the world heavyweight boxing championship; even then he
was not officially recognized as the champion. The actual heavyweight
championship title was bestowed on him on July 4, 1910, in Reno, Nevada,
when he defeated Jim Jeffries, who had stepped out of retirement to
become the first in a series of recruited "white hopes." Race riots
erupted after the match. After his victory, Johnson continued to fight
and also appeared in several vaudeville skits. In 1913 he fled a
contrived conviction for a violation of the Mann Act, which forbade the
transportation of white women interstate for the purpose of
prostitution. Facing a year in prison and a $1,000 fine if he remained
in the United States, Johnson toured Europe, Mexico, and Canada and
hoped for a pardon. He lost his championship to white Jess Willard in
Cuba in 1915. On July 20, 1920, he returned to the United States and was
arrested. He was jailed in Leavenworth Prison, where he was appointed
the athletic director of the penitentiary. After his release, he
returned to boxing, but his professional career was over. By 1928 he was
only taking part in exhibition fights; he managed, refereed, and
occasionally trained boxers. He also gave speeches, selling war bonds
during World War II.
Johnson was a nonconformist; as his career took off he turned to white
women, fast cars, and expensive jewels, defying an antagonistic press
and public. Known "for his arrogance, his golden smile, and his white
wives," Johnson married Etta Terry Duryea in 1911. She committed suicide
in 1912, and he married Lucille Cameron in 1913. They were divorced in
1924, and he married Irene Marie Pineau in 1925. He did not have any
children. Johnson died in an automobile crash on June 10, 1946, near
Raleigh, North Carolina. See also SPORTS.
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