SOUTH HADLEY, Mass. — Jack Johnson, addicted to attention and craving a
colorful legacy, loved to chronicle his rise from a restless Texas teen
to the world’s first black heavyweight boxing champion.
Now, nearly a century after his most famous bout — the 1910 defeat of
“Great White Hope” Jim Jeffries — and decades after his death, Johnson
has more tales to tell.
His largely unknown 1911 musings to a French sports magazine, including
candid observations on racism likely never intended for American
readers, have been translated to English in their entirety for the
first time. The result, “My Life & Battles,” is a 127-page book by
and about the man considered by many to be one of history’s most
important athletes.
“To get new material and new stories from Jack Johnson is significant
not just in sports, but sociologically as a look into that whole era,”
said Bert Sugar, a boxing historian and author of dozens of books on
the sport.
Johnson’s 1908 championship and his 1910 defeat of Jeffries touched off
race riots among downtrodden black Americans who considered him a hero
and white separatist Americans who deemed him a threat.
“He really was a figure of great hatred and paranoia among many white
Americans, and when he won the 1910 fight, it was considered on all
sides to be a really monumental event,” said Mount Holyoke College
professor Christopher Rivers, who translated and published the 1911
memoirs.
Rivers, a boxing enthusiast who teaches French, first noted references
to the French articles in Geoffrey Ward’s 2004 biography, “Unforgivable
Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson.”
At Rivers’ request, Ward sent him copies of all the French language
magazine articles. Rivers translated them and blended them with
excerpts already used in Johnson’s 1914 “Mes Combats” (“My Fights”), of
which Harvard University’s Widener Library owns the only known complete
copy.
The result: Rivers was able to translate and publish the memoirs in
their entirety, a rare glimpse into the life of a legend whose
extravagant stories are his only descendants.
Johnson’s 1927 memoir, “Jack Johnson: In the Ring and Out,” touches
lightly on racism, but only in brief and restrained language.
The 1911 magazine articles, however, assess what he called the “color
line” with more frankness, likely because his audience was the more
laissez-faire French public and not the tensely divided American
populace.
While rarely sounding bitter, Johnson made it clear he did not
appreciate being painted as a dumb, brutal animal — a slur he defiantly
tossed back in the faces of his critics by indulging in the finest
tailored clothes, diamonds, cars and the best possessions his large
winnings could buy.
He also questioned the hypocrisy of white fighters who avoided
better-skilled black fighters, suggesting they were avoiding the
embarrassment of a loss by rejecting the fights under the thin cloak of
“scruples.”
“A true fighter should be able to, and want to, fight with anyone with
enough talent to aspire to the title,” he said in the memoir. “And that
means not building a wall around himself, the gate of which is strictly
forbidden to anyone likely to beat him.”
Johnson, renowned for the gusto of his storytelling, also could be
counted on to boost a tale’s entertainment value or to burnish his
legacy, according to sports historians and his biographers.
“There’s always that caution that Jack Johnson is constantly
reinventing himself on the fly, changing stories in midstream, and he
knew he could tell different stories to different audiences,” Sugar
said. “He was really one to put his finger in the pot and stir.”
Yet for all of Johnson’s amusing tales inside and outside the ring, the
reality of his life after the 1911 magazine memoirs was darker.
In 1913, he was convicted under the federal Mann Act of transporting a
white woman across state lines for immoral purposes. That woman,
Lucille Cameron, would later become his wife. He fled while his case
was on appeal and spent seven years in exile in Canada, France, Great
Britain and elsewhere in Europe.
He returned to the United States in 1920, a few years after losing a
questionable title bout in Havana, Cuba, against Jess Willard. Johnson
at various times asserted, then denied, that he had thrown the match.
Once back on American soil, Johnson was arrested to serve eight months in prison for the 1913 immorality conviction.
Many supporters and boxing historians peg the charge as trumped-up
punishment for his flouting of racial norms, notably his relationships
with white women, including Cameron and his previous wife, Etta Duryea,
who committed suicide.
Various presidents have been petitioned over the decades to pardon Johnson posthumously, but none has.
Johnson returned to the ring sporadically after his release from
prison, but with limited success. He also owned a nightclub, tried
acting and later got a job spinning tales and demonstrating jabs in an
amusement arcade.
Johnson died June 10, 1946, at age 68 in a crash in Raleigh, N.C. News
accounts at the time said he’d just sped away in his Lincoln Zephyr
from a local restaurant, enraged that they refused to serve him unless
he sat in the back.
Sugar, who was a young boy when he saw Johnson in his storytelling gig
at Hubert’s Museum and Flea Circus in New York’s Times Square, said the
newly published memoirs could introduce Johnson to a new generation and
cement the legacy the boxer wanted so much to build.
“We owe a debt to understand Jack Johnson and what he stood for, what
he came up against in that time and that place,” Sugar said. “He’s a
seminal figure in many ways and his life really does transcend just
boxing.”
(Associated Press)