Birth Name: Joe Barrow
Birth:
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May 13, 1914
Lafayette Chambers County Alabama, USA |
Death:
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Apr. 12, 1981
Paradise Clark County Nevada, USA |
Widely considered one of the greatest and most beloved boxers
in the sport's history, Joseph Louis Barrow was born May 13, 1914 in the
cotton-field country near Lafayette, Alabama. The son of a sharecropper, and
the great-grandson of a slave, he was eighth child of Munn and Lilly Barrow.
Louis's family life
was shaped by financial struggle. The Louis kids slept three to a bed and
Louis' father was committed to a state hospital when he was just two years
old.
Louis had little
schooling and as a teen took on odd jobs in order to help out his mother and
siblings. The family eventually relocated to Detroit where Louis found work
as a laborer at the River Rouge Plant of the Ford Motor Company.
For a time Louis set
his sights on a career in cabinet making. He briefly attended the Bronson
Vocational School for training and in his off-time took violin lessons.
But it was while at school that a friend recommended he try boxing.
While not an
immediate success—he debuted as a lightweight and was knocked down three times
in his first fight—he showed promise. By 1934 he held the national Amateur
Athletic Union light-heavyweight title and finished his amateur career with
an astonishing 43 knockout victories in 54 matches.
In the year 1935, he
defeated former Heavyweight Champion, Primo Carnera. Carnera was viewed as
Benito Mussolini's emissary. Louis represented Blacks who identified with
'little' Ethiopia, in its struggles against the bullying Italian aggressor.
Louis bruised his
opponents with a crushing left jab and hook. By the end of 1935 the young
fighter was showing that his amateur success was no fluke. He fought 14 bouts
that year, earning nearly $370,000 in prize money.
On June 19, 1936
Louis suffered his first professional defeat, a 12th round knockout to Max
Schmeling, a German fighter and former heavyweight champion who'd earned the
adoring praise of Adolph Hitler.
The defeat stung
Louis, but it was offset by the chance to fight Jim Braddock on June 22, 1937
for the heavyweight crown. The Brown Bomber, as he came to be known, knocked
out the defending champ in the eighth round setting the stage for a
12-year-run as the heavyweight king. In their return match in 1938, Louis
destroyed Schmeling, as Hitler and his Nazis rose to power. Louis provided
some assurance that America's best could defeat the best that Germany had to
offer. He became a sports icon for blacks and whites alike across
America.
Part of it could be
chalked up to the sheer fact that fans loved a winner. Of Louis' 25 title
defenses, only three went the full 15 rounds. But in winning, Louis also
showed himself to be a gracious, even generous victor. Louis, who enlisted
with the army in 1942, threw his support behind the country's war effort, and
went so far as to twice donate his purse money to military relief funds.
The world
heavyweight boxing champion from June 22, 1937, until March 1, 1949, Joe
Louis held the title longer than anyone else in history
He officially
retired on March 1, 1949. A short-lived comeback, owed more in part because
he was broke, soon followed. But Louis failed to capture his earlier magic.
On October 26, 1951 he called it quits for good after Rocky Marciano knocked
him out in the eighth round at Madison Square Garden.
The years after his
retirement from the ring proved uneven for Louis. He was still a revered
American figure, but money was a constant issue for him. In an effort to find
some footing he tried out a number of careers. He wrestled and partnered with
a rival in setting up a chain of interracial food shops.
In 1970 his wife
Martha committed Louis to a psychiatric hospital in Colorado because of his
cocaine addiction and paranoia. He was later confined to a wheelchair
following surgery to correct an aortic aneurism.
When he passed away
from a heart attack on April 12, 1981, Louis, who married four times in his
life and had two children, was working as an "official greeter" at
Caesars Palace.
Louis was inducted
to the Ring Magazine Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954 and the International Boxing
Hall of Fame in 1990. In 1982 he was posthumously awarded the Congressional
Gold Medal.
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