Jack Dempsey, the Manassas Mauler, rose from hobo to one of the most popular Heavy Weight Champions of all time. |
How
big a deal was the second Dempsey-Tunney Heavyweight Championship fight that was held
at Chicago’s Soldier Field on
September 22, 1927? Big. Huge. Gargantuan. Oh there had been fights with greater attendance—120,000 squeezed into Philadelphia’s Sesquicentennial Stadium
364 days earlier on September 23, 1926 to see Jack Dempsey defend his title against top contender Gene Tunney, his first title bout in three years. Tunney
had stunned the nation by handily whooping the popular champ on
points. Interest in the re-match was astronomical. Only 104,000 bodies could squeeze into
Soldier Field—but they shelled out $2,658,660, about $22 million in today’s
dollars, the first $2 million gate
in entertainment history and a record that would stand for 50 years.
The fight attracted celebrities of all stripes, politicians, millionaire businessmen, and many of the best known writers in America.
Fight promoter Tex Rickard boasted
to a reporter before the bout with only a little hyperbole, “Kid, if the earth cam’se up and the sky came down and
wiped out my first 10 rows, it would be the end of everything. Because I’ve got
in those 10 rows all the world’s wealth, all the world’s big men, all the
world’s brains and production talent. Just in them 10 rows, kid. And you and me
never seed (sic) nothing like it.” In big cities around the country crowds gathered on streets to
see round by round summaries of the
action posted, just as they gathered
for the results of World Series games.
Despite losing his belt decisively
the year before, the draw as
Dempsey, the famous Manassa Mauler, a
brawling former hobo from out West who
had become the People’s Champion.
Jack Dempsey was born in Manassa, Colorado on June 24, 1895, his
father was a down-on-his-luck sometime miner
and laborer who bounced from town to town, and job to job or job hunt around Colorado,
West Virginia, and finally Utah.
The whole family sometimes rode
the rails and jungled up at hobo
camps. When he was about 5 his mother converted to Mormonism and cajoled her
husband to join her. Jack was baptized at age 8, the age of consent
in the faith. The connection to the Latter Day Saints brought the family to
Salt Lake.
By the time he was a teenager Dempsey was helping to support his family by entering saloons and announcing, “I
can’t sing, I can’t dance, but I can lick anyone in the house.” He was already
a powerful puncher and could take a pummeling, too. He made a living from the bets on the bar
brawls he almost always won and was soon fighting in amateur matches, then as a low grade pro on the club and smoker circuit. His early record is hard to keep track of
because he boxed under his own name and as Kid
Blackie.
From 1914 to early ’17 Dempsey
fought 36 times under his own name mostly in Utah, Colorado, and Nevada, but
with a trip to New York in 1916 as
he gained a reputation. His record was 30 wins—most by knock-outs—six draws or no decisions,
and just two losses.
With the outbreak of World War I, Dempsey got a good job in
a California ship yard making real money without having to rely on
his fists for the first time in his life.
He would later be taunted as a draft
dodger for not entering the Army.
In fact, as we shall see, this was an issue in his fights with Tunney
ten years later. Dempsey had actually tried to enlist but was rejected because of injuries associated
with boxing. Whether or not he need
to box for the money, he loved the game and fought several times in California
on the weekend including some bouts against
nationally ranked fighters like Willie Mehan.
By 1918 he was well enough known to tour and fight about every two weeks in
Racine, Wisconsin; Buffalo, New York;
Milwaukee; St. Paul; Denver; Joplin, Missouri; Atlanta; Harrison, New Jersey;
Dayton, Ohio; back to San Francisco for a rematch with Mehan
(his only loss in this stretch; Reno;
New Orleans; multiple times in Philadelphia
and other Pennsylvania cities; New Haven.
It was a brutal, grueling
schedule, but after the loss to Mehan, he had ten straight victories all but one by a knock out. The boxing world was abuzz about the brawler from the west and Dempsey had earned his shot at the reigning champ.
Dempsey connects with the much larger champ Jess Willard in his upset win of the Heavy Weight Championship. |
Jess
Willard, the Pottawatomi Giant, had been the final Great White Hope and the man who finally defeated the first
Black Champ, Jack Johnson. He had held the title for four years, but
had defended the title only once back in 1916 preferring to rake in purses from non-title bouts and
appearance fees for exhibition bouts.
He towered over Dempsey and outweighed him by almost 40
pounds. He was and remains the biggest fighter to hold the heavy weight belt.
But with a devastating attack and flurries
of punches to the head, Dempsey knocked
the champ down 5 times in the first
round, battering his face into a swollen mess. Although there were no more knock downs,
Dempsey dominated the next two
rounds. Willard could not answer the bell at the beginning of
round four. Dempsey was World Champ. The power
of Dempsey’s punches was so terrific, charges of doctored gloves, bandage wraps covered in plaster of Paris, or even that he was clutching an iron spike in
one glove were bandied about. All charges
were disproved by witnesses who saw
Dempsey’ hands unwrapped and by fight
film showing him pushing Willard
away in clenches with his glove
open. Willard himself said:
Dempsey is a remarkable hitter. It was the first time that I
had ever been knocked off my feet. I have sent many birds home in the same
bruised condition that I am in, and now I know how they felt. I sincerely wish
Dempsey all the luck possible and hope that he garnishes all the riches that
comes with the championship. I have had my fling with the title. I was champion
for four years and I assure you that they’ll never have to give a benefit for
me. I have invested the money I have made.
The brawler defended
his title five times over the next few years beginning against Billy Miski 14months later. Ray
Brennan at Madison Square Garden gave
the champ his toughest fight going
15 rounds before being KOed on body
punches. His fight with French Champion and World War I hero Georges Carpentier at Boyle’s Thirty Acres in Jersey City resulted in the first million dollar gate and the Frenchman
hitting the canvas in the fourth round. The fast on his feet Tommy Gibbons went 15 rounds in a fight
at remote Shelby, Montana. Dempsey won on a decision. The Champ said, “Nailing him was like trying
to thread a needle in a high wind.” The defense against another giant, Argentine Luis Fripo had to be held at
the Polo Grounds, home of the New York Giants to accommodate the
crowd. The 1923 bout was not a close
fight. Dempsey had Fripo down multiple
times. But Fripo could take a punch and
came back to land a lucky one against
Dempsey which sent him sailing
through the ropes onto the ring side
press table. The Champ got back in
the ring and nailed Fripo in the
second round. Probably the most famous sports painting of all time
was by George Bellows showing
Dempsey landing on that table.
The most famous boxing painting, maybe the most famous sports painting of all time--Fripo knocks Dempsey through the ropes. Copies hung over hundreds of bars. |
After the Fripo fight Dempsey took an extended break from defending his title. He took time off to marry actress Estelle Taylor
and appeared with her in a short run
Broadway production called The
Big Fight. He also had a nasty break up with his longtime
manager Jack “Doc” Kearns that
resulted in a bitter, expensive, and time consuming law suit. Mostly Dempsey was just enjoying the fruits of being Champ and one of the most famous and
popular men in America.
But as time dragged
on criticism mounted for his failure to defend the Title. The main reason seemed to be that the top
contender, Harry Willis was Black.
After first winning the Belt at a time when the wounds to the White American psyche
from the dominance of Jack Johnson was still fresh, Dempsey had told a reporter
that he would not allow a Negro to
fight him for the championship. Now he
publicly claimed to be willing to
face Willis. And it may be true. Promoters and venues fearing race riots were not
eager to take the risk.
Enter a new rising contender, Gene Tunney.
Tunney was born on May 27, 1897 to Irish immigrant parents in New York City. He was big and exceptionally fast for his
size and established himself as an amateur and club fighter as a highly skilled
ring man. He is known to have lost only
two fights. He enlisted in the Marine Corps and fought in France where he also became American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) Champion.
After the War he became a lumberjack in Ontario for
a while, seeking solitude and recovery from what was likely combat caused post-traumatic stress syndrome before turning pro. Then he quickly moved up through the ranks beating top boxers including Carpentier
and Gibbons. By 1926 he was a popular
fighter tagged the Fighting Marine and
a reasonable White alternative top
contender. A bout with Dempsey was
inevitable.
Promoter Tex Rickard wanted
to stage the bout in Chicago. But
Dempsey got word the Al Capone was a
big fan and was ready to bet big money on the fight. Dempsey was still stung by those early charges that his Title win against Willard
might have been rigged in some way
and knew that gambling and fight fixing were eating
away at public support. He insisted
the fight not be held in the Windy
City. Instead the two fighters met
in Philadelphia.
Gene Tunney became Dempsey's nemesis and then life long friend. |
This time public
sentiment had swung to Tunney both because of Dempsey’s long lay-off and
because charges that he was a draft dodger were resurrected and compared to the
challenger’s status as a war hero and veteran.
Many boxing experts thought Dempsey would be rusty and thought that Tunney was a technically more proficient fighter.
It turned out that those experts were right. Tunney out fought Dempsey for 10 rounds and
won a unanimous decision. It was Dempsey’s graciousness in defeat and a
widely reported quip to his wife,
“Honey, I forgot to duck,” that help him win
back the admiration of the fans.
After contemplating
retirement, Dempsey came back to win a bout with another top contender, Jack Sharkey at Yankee Stadium in 1927 for the right to face Tunney again.
As the challenger, Dempsey could not keep the fight out of Chicago. And as he feared, Capone bragged about
putting down $50,000 of his own money on him.
The public followed, betting heavily on the challenger.
As champ Tunney got sports first million dollar pay day, while Dempsey was guaranteed about half of that. During negotiations
on the terms of the bout, someone from Dempsey’s camp insisted on using the new, but optional, rule that required fighters to retreat to a neutral corner after
a knock down before a count could begin. It is a mystery why Dempsey’s people would
make such a request since their fighter’s aggressive
style including standing over prone
opponents ready to slam them as they
struggled to their feet. This was highly effective, and a deterrent to a groggy fighter even
considering getting back up. They also
agreed to a larger than standard ring,
an advantage to the mobile Tunney and a disadvantage to Dempsey who liked to pin his opponents in a corner and
pummel them with a flurry of blows.
Once again Tunney dominated the
fight. He was well ahead on points in the seventh round when Dempsey recovered and unleashed a torrent of
hits sending Tunney to the canvas. For what seemed
like several seconds, Dempsey loomed over Tunney as the referee tried to push him away and told him to retreat to a neutral corner. It was as if he forgot or never knew the rule. The count did not begin until Dempsey finally
did. On the count of nine, Tunney got up and closed on Dempsey. The round
ended but in the next round he dropped Dempsey for a count on one—but the
referee began that count before Tunney reached the corner. The Champ outscored Dempsey through the final
two rounds and won a unanimous decision.
Tunney is down but the ref won't start the count until Dempsey goes to his corner. At the end of the famous Long Count, Tunney got to his feet and pummeled Dempsey. |
The fight became celebrated
in boxing lore for the Long Count. Just how much extra time Tunney had to
recover was controversial. The official time keeper had the total time
Tunney was down as 14 seconds. In a
film of the fight a clock was
superimposed that recorded Tunney’s time on the floor as 13 seconds, from the
moment he fell until he got up. But most
of the public never saw that film until
years later when the ban on interstate
transportation of boxing films was lifted. But at the time the public imagined a much longer break for Tunney and sympathy swung to Dempsey who some
thought was robbed.
Neither of
the fighters saw it that way. After the fight, Dempsey lifted Tunney’s arm and said, “You were best. You fought a
smart fight, kid.” Tunney later said that he had picked up the referee’s count at two, and could have gotten up at
any point after that, but waited until nine for obvious tactical reasons. Dempsey said, “I have no reason not to believe
him. Gene’s a great guy.”
Dempsey may have lost the fight, but he emerged as a beloved hero.
Tunney defended his title just once and then retired undefeated in 1928 at the
request of his wife, wealthy socialite,
Mary “Polly” Lauder. He and Dempsey became great friends and were close
through the rest of their lives. The
couple had several children including Democratic
Senator John V. Tunney of California. He died at age 81 on November 7, 1978 in Greenwich Hospital in Connecticut.
Dempsey enjoyed a
long retirement and became the proprietor
of a popular New York night club. He
made several films, usually playing himself including Big
City with James Cagney and
appeared on several top radio programs. He fronted
several charities, including one to raise
money for his friend Joe Lewis when
he was down on his luck.
During World War II he
finally put the old draft resister canard behind him by enlisting in the Coast Guard
and rising to the rank of Lt.
Commander. Although he spent much of
his time selling War Bonds and
making moral boosting visits to the
troops, Dempsey also instructed
sailors in self-defense and saw sea duty and action aboard the attack
transport USS Arthur Middleton) for the invasion of Okinawa.
Lt. Commander Jack Dempsey of the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II. |
In 1977 he wrote an autobiography
Dempsey
in collaboration with his daughter Barbara Lynn.
On May 31, 1983, Dempsey died of heart failure in New York City at age 87 with his second
wife Deanna at his side. His last
words were “Don’t worry honey; I’m too mean to die.”
Almost
Jack, almost.
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