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WD_043/ 2004 ( Satoshi Kinoshita )
Series: | Works on paper: Drawings | Medium: | crayon and pencil on paper | Size (inches): | 11.5 x 8.2 | Size (mm): | 297 x 210 | Catalog #: | WD_043 | Description: | Signed, date and copyright in pencil on the reverse.
Johnson, Jack:
(John Arthur Johnson), 1878–1946, American boxer, b. Galveston, Tex. Emerging from the battle royals (dehumanizing fights between blacks for the amusement of white patrons) of his youth, he defeated Tommy Burns in 1908 to become the world’s first African-American heavyweight champion. After an interracial marriage and his defeat of several white hopefuls, Johnson was convicted in 1913 under contrived circumstances for violation of a federal law. He fled to Europe and remained a champion in exile until he lost in 1915 to Jess Willard in Cuba. Upon his return to the United States, he served a year in prison.
-The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.
Copyright © 2003 Columbia University Press.
Arthur John Johnson (March 31, 1878 - June 10, 1946), better known as Jack Johnson, was arguably the best heavyweight boxer of his generation. He was the first black Heavyweight Champion of the World, 1908-1915. His record is 113 fights with 79 victories and only eight losses, 12 draws and 14 no-decisions.
He was born in Galveston, Texas and is reputed to have fought his first fight, a sixteen round victory, aged fifteen. He turned professional around 1897, fighting in private clubs. He was briefly arrested in 1900 as boxing was illegal in Texas.
He won his first title on February 3, 1903, beating 'Denver' Ed Martin over twenty rounds for the Colored Heavyweight Championship. His efforts to win the full title were thwarted as white champions refused to face him. He fought the former champion Bob Fitzsimmons in July 1907 and knocked him out in two rounds.
He eventually won the World Heavyweight Title on December 26, 1908 when he fought the World Heavyweight Champion, Canadian Tommy Burns in Sydney, Australia, after following him there. The fight lasted fourteen rounds before being stopped by the police. The title was awarded to Johnson on a referee's decision as a T.K.O.
As title holder he had to face a series of fights with "great white hopes", often as exhibition matches. In 1909 he beat Victor McLaglen, Frank Moran, Jack O'Brien, Tony Ross, Al Kaufman, and the middleweight champion Stanley Ketchel. On July 4, 1910 he defeated James J. Jeffries, a champion who had earlier turned him down, with a K.O. in the fifteenth round in front of 22,000 people, earning Johnson $115,000. His victory sparked race riots and certain states banned the filming of Johnson's victories over white fighters.
In January 1911 he married Etta Duryea. But in September Etta committed suicide. Johnson, undefeatable in the ring, came under increasing external pressure - in June 1912 he was indicted for smuggling a diamond necklace and in October he was arrested under a section of the Mann Act, initially enacted to combat prostitution but never before used in prosecution, for transporting his fiancê, a white woman named Lucille Cameron, across state lines. Despite the
looming trial he married Cameron in December 1912. He went to trial in Chicago in 1913 and on May 14 he was convicted and sentenced to a year and a day plus a fine of $1000.
In mid-June he fled the United States while free pending appeal. He continued fighting, mainly in exhibition bouts, but on April 5, 1915 the 37 year old lost his title to Jess Willard in Havana. With a crowd of 25,000 for the scheduled 45 round fight Johnson was K.O.'d in the 26th round. He fought a number of bouts in Mexico before returning to the US on July 20, 1920 and surrendering to Federal agents. He was sent to Leavenworth to serve his sentence, released on July 9, 1921.
He continued fighting, but age was catching up with him. After two losses in 1928 he participated only in exhibition bouts. He opened a night club in Harlem. He divorced Lucille Cameron in 1924 and married Irene Pineau.
He died in a car crash near Raleigh, North Carolina in 1946 and was buried in the Graceland Cemetery, in Chicago, Illinois. He was admitted to the Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954.
His fighting style was very distinctive, he always began a bout cautiously before slowly building up over the rounds into a more aggressive (and abusive) fighter. He often fought to punish his opponent rather than knock them out, endlessly avoiding their blows and striking with swift counters. He always gave the impression of having much more to offer and if pushed he could really damage an opponent.
In person he was reputedly arrogant, flamboyant and reckless. Traits that did little to endear him to many people. His marrying of white women also enraged many whites, and it has always been rumored in boxing circles that he threw away the fight with Willard after being promised a deal by American lawmen where he could return to visit his ill mother without getting arrested.
Johnson is also a member of the modern International Boxing Hall Of Fame, which was erected in 1990 at Canastota, New York.
-Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
A Tribute To Jack Johnson - Miles Davis / CD (07464470362)
Release Date: 2/25/1992
Original release year: 1970
Label: Columbia
Guest Artists: Herbie Hancock; John McLaughlin; Steve Grossman; Billy Cobham; Michael Henderson
Stereo: Stereo
Studio/Live: Studio
Pieces in Set: 1
Catalog#: 47036
Desc: Performer
-www.towerrecords.com
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