Jack Dempsey may have been labeled the Manassa Mauler, but his dukes first went up in Cripple Creek District
By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.comIn January of 1928, having recently lost the heavyweight championship of the world title, the fighter know as Jack Dempsey announced his retirement because he was having “trouble” with his left eye muscle. It has been a long tough road from the mining camps of Colorado.
The Associated Press reported in April that Dempsey would not attempt a comeback a comeback – not even for $50 million dollars. “I have enough money,” he told newspapers at the time and still had his health. “I can still walk around and tell time.”
In
1931 and 1932, Dempsey did fight over 100 exposition fights but after
his poor showing against “Kingfish” Levinsky, he confirmed his decision
not to make a comeback.
William
H. Dempsey, the Manassa Mauler, was billed as “one of the toughest men
to ever come out of the West. The moniker originated from Dempsey’s
birthplace in the San Luis Valley town of Manassa, Colorado.
His
dad knocked around various Colorado mining camps, and eked out a living
in low level mining jobs for years. Barely able to scrape by, the young
Dempsey worked as a mucker in the Cripple Creek District’s Portland
Mine before he and his brother hit on a scheme in which they would go
into the local saloons and offer to whip anyone in the house for the
amount they could collect by passing the hat.
Both
he and his brother fought in the saloons under the name of Jack
Dempsey, which was borrowed from an eighteenth-century Irish brawler.
Though he appeared slight and non-threatening as a 16-year-old kid,
according to the legend, Dempsey never lost one of these bare-knuckle
brawls.
The Cyber Boxing Zone says that because of this, his record is still incomplete.
“As
a hobo from 1911 to 1916, Dempsey had many ‘fights,’ most as ‘Kid
Blackie,’ in various Colorado mining towns. His first fight was at 140
pounds during the summer of 1912, a KO of Fred Wood, the ‘Fighting
Blacksmith.’ Later that year he Kayoed his future manager, Andy Molloy;
It is possible that Dempsey had as a many as 100 unrecorded fights.”
According
to Hickok Sports, Dempsey went to New York in 1916 but met with limited
success and returned to the west after suffering broken ribs by a more
experienced fighter. Hopping freights and picking up occasional bouts to
earn money, he met Jack “Doc” Kearns who reportedly taught him to box
and matched him against a series of lesser fighters to build his
reputation.
“The
6-foot, 190-pound Dempsey met with the 6-foot 6-inch, 250-pound,
heavyweight champion Jess Willard on July 4, 1919, at Toledo, Ohio.
Dempsey won a third-round knockout. Promoter Tex Rickard immediately
began calling him ‘Jack the Giant Killer’ because Willard was known as
the ‘Pottawatomie Giant.’”
Dempsey
defended his title only six times in the next seven years and finally
lost it to Gene Tunney in a 10-round decision on September 23, 1926 in
Philadelphia.
In
the rematch in Chicago a year later, Dempsey knocked Tunney down in the
seventh round. It took Dempsey several seconds to go back to his
neutral corner (a fairly new rule prompted by actions by Dempsey in his
1922 legendary win over Luis Firpo). Tunney got to his feet at count of
nine and held on to win a 10-round decision.
It
became known famously as “The Long Count,” and Referee Dave Barry had
to suffer through derisive fans shouting from one to 14 in unison
between rounds in which he refereed – based on Dempsey’s belief that
Tunney had been down for 14 seconds, not nine.
A
1950 Associated Press poll named Dempsey “the Greatest Fighter of the
half century.” Of his available record of known fights, he logged 63
wins, seven losses, 10 draws, five no decisions, one no contest. Of his
wins, 50 were by knockouts. Dempsey died in 1983 at the ripe old age of
87.
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