Louis’s
father, a sharecropper, was committed to a state mental hospital when
Louis was about two years old. After his mother remarried, the family,
which included eight children, moved to Detroit,
Michigan, where Louis took up amateur boxing. He won the U.S. Amateur
Athletic Union 175-pound championship in 1934 and also was a Golden Gloves
titleholder; of 54 amateur fights, Louis won 50 and lost 4. His first
professional fight took place on July 4, 1934, and within 12 months he
had knocked out Primo Carnera, the first of six previous or subsequent heavyweight champions who would become his victims; the others were Max Baer, Jack Sharkey, Braddock, the German champion Max Schmeling, and Jersey Joe Walcott.
Louis sustained his first professional loss in 1936 at the hands of
Schmeling. In 1938, after having beaten Braddock and taken the title,
Louis met Schmeling in a rematch that the American media portrayed as a
battle between Nazism and democracy (though Schmeling himself was not a
Nazi). Louis’s dramatic knockout victory in the first round made him a
national hero. He was perhaps the first black American
to be widely admired by whites, a fact attributable not only to his
extraordinary pugilistic skills but also to his sportsmanlike behaviour
in the ring (he did not gloat over his white opponents), his perceived
humility and soft-spoken demeanour, and his discretion in his private
life.
Louis was at his peak in the period 1939–42. From December
1940 through June 1941 he defended the championship seven times. After
enlisting in the U.S. Army in 1942, he served in a segregated unit with Jackie Robinson,
who later became the first African American to play major league
baseball. Louis did not see combat but fought in 96 exhibition matches
before some two million troops; he also donated more than $100,000 to
Army and Navy relief funds. After the war he was less active, and in
1949 he retired as the undefeated champion long enough to allow Ezzard Charles to earn recognition as his successor.
Although
Louis earned nearly $5 million as a fighter, he spent or gave away
nearly all of it. When the Internal Revenue Service demanded more than
$1 million in back taxes and penalties, he was forced to return to the
ring to pay off his debts. He fought Charles for the championship on
September 27, 1950, but lost a 15-round decision. In his last fight of
consequence, against future champion Rocky Marciano
on October 26, 1951, he was knocked out in eight rounds. From 1934 to
1951, Louis had 71 bouts, winning 68, 54 by knockouts. A Hollywood movie
about his life, The Joe Louis Story, was made in 1953.
After
his second retirement Louis continued to be plagued by money problems,
and he was briefly forced to work as a professional wrestler. Later he
became a greeter for Caesar’s Palace, a resort and casino in Las Vegas,
Nevada. Upon his death in 1981 he was buried in Arlington National
Cemetery; one of the pallbearers at his funeral was Schmeling. Louis was
inducted to the Ring Magazine Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954 and the
International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1990. He was posthumously awarded
the Congressional Gold Medal in 1982.
Tuesday 12 April 2016
Joe Louis American boxer
09:35
Ezzard Charles, Golden Gloves, Jack Sharkey, Jackie Robinson, Jersey Joe Walcott, Max Baer, Max Schmeling, Rocky Marciano
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