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Joseph S. Gant (1874-1910)

Joseph Saifus Gant became the first African American, for that matter the first American to ever hold a world boxing title when he defeated Frank Erne in Fort Erie, Canada, in 1902 to take the World Lightweight Boxing Championship. Gant was born Joseph Saifus Butts on November 25, 1874, in Baltimore, Maryland. The names of his parents are unknown, he was orphaned at age four and raised by his foster mother, Maria Gant. Gant's professional boxing career began in 1891 when he was seventeen. He was a self-taught fighter, learning his craft by studying other boxers’ moves and competing in the then-popular Battle Royal contests where he and a dozen other fighters boxed blindfolded until only one contestant was left standing. These contests helped him develop strong boxing fundamentals and strategic ways to endure long bouts in the ring. His scientific approach to boxing and his famous left jab eventually earned him the title “The Old Master.” On Labor Day, 1906, in Goldfield, Nev...

Clarence Matthew Baker (December 10, 1921 – August 11, 1959)

He was an  American   comic book  artist who drew the costumed crime fighter  Phantom Lady , among many other characters. Active in the 1940's and 1950's  Golden Age of comic books , he is the first known  African-American  artist to find success in the comic-book industry. He also  penciled  an early form of  graphic novel ,  St. John Publications '  digest-sized  " picture novel "  It Rhymes with Lust  (1950). Baker was inducted into the  Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame  in 2009. Baker was born in  Forsyth County ,  North Carolina . At a young age he relocated with his family to  Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania, and after graduating high school circa 1940, moved to  Washington, D.C. . Prevented by a heart condition from being drafted into the U.S. military in  World War II  era, he began studying art at  Cooper Union , in  New York ...