Joe Louis Biography:
Joseph Louis
Barrow (May , 1914 - April 12, 1981), better
known in the boxing world as Joe Louis and nicknamed
The Brown Bomber, was a native of Lexington,
Alabama who became World Heavyweight Champion.
[The complete
fight is available in the Donations
section]
The son of a cotton picker and a homemaker,
Louis became interested in boxing after the
Barrows moved to Detroit in 1924. He went on
to win Michigan's Golden Gloves title, after
which he turned professional in 1934. Louis
made his debut on July 4 of that year, knocking
out Jack Kracken in the first round at Chicago
that night. He won 12 fights that year, all
in Chicago, 10 by knockout. Among his opponents
in '34 was Art Sykes, a good contender of that
era.
In 1935, he boxed 13
more times, and started touring the United States
and Canada. He won each of his fights, and he
began to face better opposition, beating former
world Heavyweight champions Primo Carnera and
Max Baer, and former Carnera world title challenger
Paulino Uzcudun. His last four bouts that year
were exhibitions in Canada, as one fight versus
Isodoro Castagana, supposed to take place December
29 at Havana, Cuba, was suspended.
He began 1936 knocking
out Charlie Retzlilaff in the first round. Louis'
ascent up to this point of his career has been
compared by many boxing critics to that of a
young Mike Tyson. In his next fight, however,
he was matched with former world Heavyweight
champion Max Schmeling, who was thought to be
fading when he upset Louis by a knockout in
12 at New York. The fight took place during
the beginning of World War II, and Louis was
affected by his defeat to the German, and he
immediately started asking for a rematch.
That year Louis had four
more bouts, winning all of them, and three exhibitions.
Among the boxers he defeated were former Heavyweight
champ Jack Sharkey and Eddie Simms, who turned
to the referee and asked the referee to take
a walk on the roof with him after Louis hit
him with a punch, the referee stopping the fight
right away.
1937 came by, and after
a ten round decision win over Bob Pastor, Louis
was matched with world champion James J. Braddock
in Chicago for the World Heavyweight title.
Louis was dropped in round one, but he got up
and became the world champion by knocking Braddock
out in round eight. He said after the fight,
however, that he would not feel like a world
champion until he beat one man: Schmeling. Louis
retained the title three times, outpointing
the capable Welchman Tommy Farr and knocking
out Nathan Mann in three and Harry Thomas in
five. The rematch with Schmeling finally took
place, on June 22, 1938. Tensions between the
free world and the growing threat of Nazi Germany
added racial and political elements to the fight.
Louis retained his title by a knockout in the
first round, avenging his only loss up until
that time and achieving something not too many
African-Americans of the era imagined anyone
could do: Becoming a national hero both for
the white and the black population. Louis was
black, so when he won the title, he had become
an example to his fellow black Americans.
In between serving in
the United States Army during the Second World
War, Louis kept on defending his title, totalling
25 defenses from '37 to 1949. He was a world
champion for 11 years and 10 months, after which
he left his crown vacant. He set records for
any division in number of defenses and longetivity
as world champion non stop, and both records
still stand. Apart from Schmeling, Farr, Mann
and Thomas, other notable title defenses during
that period were:
*His fight versus world Light Heavyweight champion
John Henry Lewis, knocked out in the first.
*His fight with Two Ton Tony Galento, who upset
the boxing world by knocking Louis down in round
one, but Louis got up and knocked Galento out
in the fourth.
*His two fights with Chilean Arturo Godoy, who
almost did something no other boxer from Chile
has ever done and no hispanic had done before:
become world Heavyweight champion in their first
bout, which Louis won by a close decision, and
when Louis won the rematch by a knockout in
the eight round, a riot broke loose at theMadison
Square Garden.
*His two fights with world Light Heavyweight
champion Billy Conn, who was leading Louis on
all scorecards when he tried to knock him out
in round thirteen and instead it was Louis who
ended up knocking him out in that round, and
in the rematch, Louis won by a knockout in the
eight round.
*His two fights versus future world Heavyweight
champion Jersey Joe Walcott, who would drop
Louis in round four of their first bout and
lose a close decision, then get knocked out
by Louis in the rematch in 11 rounds.
Louis joined the Army from 1942 to 1945 and
spent that whole period travelling around Europe
visiting with the fighting troops and boxing
in exhibitions. During this time, he became
a national spokesman for the Army, inviting
young men to join in and help their country
in the war. He even acted in a couple of movies,
produced by the Army to entice men to go to
the war. After he came back to keep defending
his title in 1946, Louis looked somewhat slower
in his fights, and his best years seemed to
have gone. He still managed to fend off every
challenger until he retired for the first time,
after the second Walcott bout. On March 1, 1949
Louis announced his retirement from boxing.
In 1950, he announced
a comeback and was promptly given a chance to
recover his title, but he lost a 15 round unanimous
decision to world champion Ezzard Charles, who
had won the title after Louis left it vacant.
He kept boxing, and in his next fight be beat
fringe contender Cesar Brion by a decision in
10. Seven more wins followed, including a rematch
with Brion and a decision over fellow hall of
famer Jimmy Bivins. In 1951, however, he would
box what would be his final fight: In front
of a national television audience, Louis lost
by a knockout in eight rounds to the future
world Heavyweight Champion, Rocky Marciano.
Louis did not embarrass himself that night,
but it was obvious his best years had gone by.
He retired with a record of 62 wins and 3 losses,
with 49 wins by a knockout.
Louis faced a drug problem,
a fact not too many people knew about but which
was made public by a boxing book published by
Ring Magazine, just as in Sugar Ray Robinson's
case. But later on in life, he was able to kick
his drug habit.
A few years after his
retirement, a movie about his life, The Joe
Louis Story, was filmed in Hollywood.Louis remained
a popular celebrity until his twilight years,
when he began suffering various illnesses and
ran out of money. In his later years, he got
a job welcoming tourists to the Caesar's Palace
hotel in Las Vegas, where many world boxing
champions and legends from other walks of life,
including old rival Schmeling, would visit him.
He and Schmeling became very good friends over
the years.
Joe Louis died in 1981,
and Schmeling was one of the pallbearers. He
was buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington,
Virginia. Louis' life prompted a writer to say
once that: Joe Louis is a hero to his race,
the human race.
He has a sports complex
named after him in Detroit, the Joe Louis Arena,
where the Detroit Red Wings play their NHL games.
Louis is a member of
the International Boxing Hall Of Fame.