John L. Sullivan

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John Lawrence Sullivan (October 15, 1858 – February 2, 1918) was an American professional boxer. Nicknamed the "Boston Strong Boy" and known as John L. among his admirers, he is recognized as the first heavyweight champion of gloved boxing, de facto reigning from 7 February 1882 to 7 September 1892. He is also generally recognized as the last heavyweight champion of bare-knuckle boxing under the London Prize Ring Rules, being a cultural icon of the late 19th century America, arguably the first boxing superstar and one of the world's highest-paid athletes of his era.

Newspapers' coverage of his career, with the latest accounts of his championship fights often appearing in the headlines, and as cover stories, gave birth to sports journalism in the United States and set the pattern internationally for covering boxing events in media, and photodocumenting the prizefights.<ref>In This Corner — John L. Sullivan with comments by Bert Sugar.</ref>

Early life

Sullivan was born on October 15, 1858, in the Roxbury<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, to Irish immigrant parents, Michael Sullivan from Abbeydorney, County Kerry and Catherine Kelly from Athlone, County Westmeath. He attended public schools in his native Boston, attending the Dwight Grammar School and performing well academically.<ref name="Tells">"The Champion Slugger: John L. Sullivan Tells the Story of His Life to a Denver Reporter," Denver Tribune, reprinted in the Chicago Inter-Ocean, Jan. 1, 1884, pg. 16.</ref>

Sullivan's parents aspired for their son to enter the priesthood as a Catholic priest.<ref name=Tells /> To this end Sullivan enrolled at Boston College circa 1875 but after only a few months he turned to playing baseball professionally, earning the substantial sum of $30 to $40 a week for his efforts.<ref name=Tells /> As Sullivan recalled in 1883:

"I threw my books aside and gave myself up to it. This is how I got into the base-ball profession, and I left school for good and all. From the base-ball business I drifted into boxing and pugilism."<ref name=Tells />

Boxing career

As a professional fighter Sullivan was nicknamed the "Boston Strong Boy". As a youth he was arrested several times for participating in bouts where the sport was outlawed. He went on exhibition tours offering people money to fight him. Sullivan won more than 450 fights in his career.

Sullivan may have sparred with black boxer James Young at Schieffelin Hall in Tombstone, Arizona, in 1882, though Sullivan later insisted that he never fought a black boxer. If this match did occur, it may have been just a brief sparring session that Sullivan did not regard seriously as a bout.<ref name="cyberboxingzonedotcom">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1883–84 Sullivan went on a coast-to-coast tour by train with five other boxers. They were scheduled to hold 195 fights in 136 different cities and towns over 238 days. To help promote the tour, Sullivan announced that he would box anyone at any time during the tour under the Queensberry Rules for $250. He knocked out eleven men during the tour.

In Sullivan's era, no formal boxing titles existed. He became a champion after defeating Paddy Ryan in Mississippi City, near Gulfport, Mississippi, on February 7, 1882. Modern authorities have retroactively labelled Ryan the "Heavyweight Champion of America", but any claim to Ryan's being a "world champion" would have been dubious; he had never contended internationally as Sullivan had.

Depending on the modern authority, Sullivan was first considered world heavyweight champion either in 1885 when he defeated Dominick McCaffrey in Ohio, in 1888 when he fought Charley Mitchell in France, or in 1889 when he knocked out Jake Kilrain in round 75 of a scheduled 80-round bout.

When the modern authorities refer to the "heavyweight championship of the world," they are likely referring to the championship belt presented to Sullivan in Boston on August 8, 1887. The belt was inscribed Presented to the Champion of Champions, John L. Sullivan, by the Citizens of the United States. Its centerpiece featured the flags of the US, Ireland, and the United Kingdom.

Charley Mitchell fight

In March of 1888, Sullivan fought Charley Mitchell, an English prize-fighter, for 39 rounds in defense of his world title.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Mitchell was from Birmingham, England and had fought Sullivan in 1883, knocking him down in the first round before the police halted the contest in the third. Their second meeting took place on March 10, 1888 on the grounds of a chateau at Chantilly, France, with the fight held in driving rain. It went on for more than two hours, and by the end of the bout, both men were unrecognizable and had suffered so much damage that neither could lift his arms up to punch. Both men couldn't continue, and the contest was considered a draw.

At this point, the local gendarmerie arrived and arrested Mitchell. He was confined to jail for a few days and later fined by the local magistrate,Template:Citation needed because bare-knuckled boxing was illegal in France at the time. Swathed in bandages, Sullivan was helped to evade the law and taken across the English Channel to spend the next few weeks convalescing in Liverpool.Template:Citation needed

The Kilrain fight

File:Sullivan - Kilrain 5.jpg
The Sullivan-Kilrain fight

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The Kilrain fight is considered to be a turning point in boxing history because it was the last world title bout fought under the London Prize Ring Rules, and therefore was the last-ever bare-knuckle heavyweight title bout. It was also one of the first sporting events in the United States to receive national press coverage.

Newspapers carried extensive pre-fight coverage which included reporting on the fighters' training and speculating on where the bout would take place. The traditional center of bare-knuckle fighting was New Orleans, but the governor of Louisiana had forbidden the fight in that state. Sullivan had trained for months in Belfast, New York, under trainer William Muldoon, whose biggest problem had been keeping Sullivan from liquor. A report on Sullivan's training regimen in Belfast was written by famed reporter Nellie Bly and published in the New York World.<ref name="Bly">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Rochester reporter Arch Merrill commented that occasionally Sullivan would "escape" from his guard. In Belfast village, the cry was heard, "John L. is loose again! Send for Muldoon!" Muldoon would snatch the champ away from the bar and take him back to their training camp.Template:Citation needed

On July 4, 1889, one Kentucky newspaper stated: "The Sullivan-Kilrain prize fight which is to take place in Louisiana on next Monday is now the most talked-about event in sporting circles."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The stakes were $20,000 and a diamond world championship belt.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

On July 8, 1889, an estimated 3,000 spectators boarded special trains for the secret location, which turned out to be Richburg, a town just south of Hattiesburg, Mississippi. The fight began at 10:30, and at first it looked like Sullivan was going to lose. "The first fall and first blood were awarded to Kilrain, but the first knock-down was accomplished by Sullivan," reported one newspaper. "Kilrain failed to knock Sullivan down at all."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Sullivan vomited during the 44th round. However, the champion got his second wind and was able to turn things around for himself. After a grueling beatdown, Kilrain's manager finally threw in the towel after the 75th round.

The Governor of Mississippi offered a $1,000 reward for each fighter.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Today, a historical marker is located at the site of the fight, just off Interstate 59, and the fight is immortalized by the Sullivan-Kilrain Road which runs through the site of the event, at the corner of Richburg Road.

Later career

File:John L. Sullivan 1898.jpg
Sullivan as he appeared in 1898, late in his career

Sullivan did not defend his title for the next three years. During this period, he was a friend and supporter of Irish boxer Ike Weir, who became America's first Featherweight boxing champion in 1889. Both Weir and Sullivan were Boston natives, and Sullivan occasionally appeared at Weir's bouts.

Template:Anchor Sullivan agreed to defend his title in 1892 against challenger "Gentleman Jim" Corbett. The match was on September 7 in New Orleans.<ref name="boxing.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It began at 9 p.m. in the electrically illuminated Olympic Club in the upper Ninth Ward neighborhood now known as Bywater section. The venue filled to its 10,000-person capacity despite hefty ticket prices ranging from $5 to $15 (approximately $142 to $426 in 2020). The heavyweight contest occurred under the Marquess of Queensberry Rules, but it was neither the first title fight under those rules nor was it the first title fight using boxing gloves. Corbett was younger and faster, and his boxing technique enabled him to dodge Sullivan's crouch and rush style. In the 21st round, Corbett landed a smashing left "audible throughout the house" that put Sullivan down for good. Sullivan was counted out, and Corbett was then declared the new champion. When Sullivan was able to get back to his feet, he announced to the crowd the following: "If I had to get licked, I'm glad I was licked by an American".<ref>Corbett was King of a New Era Template:Webarchive</ref>

In 1895, Sullivan and Paddy Ryan joined the touring company of the musical The Wicklow Postman, and presented exhibition boxing matches before performances of the play.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

File:SullivanCorbettBubbleMascot.JPG
Corbett licks Sullivan.

Sullivan is considered the last bare-knuckle champion because no champion after him fought bare-knuckled. However, Sullivan had fought with gloves under the Marquess of Queensberry Rules as early as 1880, and he only fought bare-knuckled three times in his entire career (Ryan 1882, Mitchell 1888, and Kilrain 1889). His bare-knuckle image was created because his infrequent fights from 1888 up to the Corbett fight in 1892 had been bare-knucklers.

Sullivan retired to Abington, Massachusetts, but appeared in several exhibitions over the next 12 years, including a three-rounder against Tom Sharkey and a final two-rounder against Jim McCormick in 1905 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He continued his various careers outside boxing, such as being a stage actor, speaker, celebrity baseball umpire, sports reporter, and bar owner. In his later years, Sullivan also gave up his lifelong addiction to alcohol and became a prohibition lecturer.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Death

The effects of prize fighting along with his being overweight and unhealthy after a long life of overindulging in food and alcohol took its toll on the boxer. Like most boxers of the time, he did not live a very long life. Sullivan died at age 59 at his home in Abington, Massachusetts, supposedly from heart disease.<ref name=blog/> At the time of his death, Sullivan had a young boy named Willie Kelly in his custody. The priest of Sullivan's church had brought Kelly, an orphan, to the front of the parish and encouraged anyone with the means to care for the boy to do so.<ref name=blog>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Sullivan is buried in the Old Calvary Cemetery in Roslindale, a neighborhood of Boston. He died with 10 dollars in his pocket (equivalent to almost $180 in 2018). According to the county where Sullivan died he had an estate worth $3,675.

Legacy

Sullivan was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1990, as a member of the hall's original class.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He had a record of 47 wins, 1 loss and 2 draws, with 38 wins by knockout, though many sources disagree on his exact record.

The barn where Sullivan trained still stands in the small town of Belfast, New York, and is now the Bare Knuckle Boxing Hall of Fame.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1888 the sculptor Cyrus Dallin who was early in his career created a plaster sculpture of Sullivan in a boxing stance in his fighting attire.

Sullivan and Corbett's landmark 1892 fight is depicted in the 1942 Warner Brothers biopic Gentleman Jim, a fictionalized account of their relationship. Ward Bond portrayed Sullivan alternately as a fiery peacock of a heavyweight champion and, after his title loss, as a sweet, sentimental good sport. Sixteen years later, actor Roy Jenson played Sullivan in the 1958 episode, "The Gambler and the Lady", of the syndicated television anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews. In the story line, Sullivan in his tour of local communities across the country fights an exposition match against Buck Jarrico (Hal Baylor). When the prize money designated to refurbish the school goes missing, both the teacher, Ruth Stewart (Kathleen Case), and the gambler, Brad Forrester (Mark Dana), are falsely accused based on appearances.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Unreliable source

On their 2017 album Life Is Good, the band Flogging Molly made reference to Sullivan on the track 'The Hand of John L. Sullivan'.

Professional boxing record

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Template:Abbr Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
51 Template:No2Loss 47–1–2 Template:Small James J. Corbett KO 21, Template:Small Sep 7, 1892 Template:Small Template:Small
50 Template:Yes2Win 47–0–2 Template:Small Jake Kilrain KO 75 (?) Jul 8, 1889 Template:Small Template:Small
49 Template:DrawDraw 46–0–2 Template:Small Charley Mitchell PTS 39 Mar 10, 1888 Template:Small Template:Small
48 Template:Yes2Win 46–0–1 Template:Small William Samuells TKO 3 (3) Jan 5, 1888 Template:Small
47 Template:DrawDraw 45–0–1 Template:Small Patsy Cardiff PTS 6 Jan 18, 1887 Template:Small
46 Template:Yes2Win 45–0 Template:Small Paddy Ryan KO 3 (?) Nov 13, 1886 Template:Small
45 Template:Yes2Win 44–0 Template:Small Frank Herald TD 2 (?) Sep 18, 1886 Template:Small Template:Small
44 Template:Yes2Win 43–0 Template:Small Dominick McCaffrey PTS 7 (6) Aug 29, 1885 Template:Small Template:Small
43 Template:Yes2Win 42–0 Template:Small Jack Burke PTS 5 Jun 13, 1885 Template:Small
42 Template:Abbr 41–0 Template:Small Paddy Ryan NC 1 (4) Jan 19, 1885 Template:Small
41 Template:Yes2Win 41–0 Alf Greenfield Template:Abbr 4 Jan 12, 1885 Template:Small
40 Template:Yes2Win 40–0 Alf Greenfield Template:Abbr 2 (?) Nov 18, 1884 Template:Small
39 Template:Yes2Win 39–0 John Laflin KO 4 (?) Nov 10, 1884 Template:Small
38 Template:Yes2Win 38–0 Enos Phillips KO 4 (?)0 May 2, 1884 Template:Small
37 Template:Yes2Win 37–0 William Fleming KO 1 (4) May 1, 1884 Template:Small
36 Template:Yes2Win 36–0 Dan Henry KO 1 (4) Apr 29, 1884 Template:Small
35 Template:Yes2Win 35–0 Al Marx KO 1 (4), Template:Small Apr 10, 1884 Template:Small
34 Template:Yes2Win 34–0 George M Robinson DQ 4 (4) Mar 6, 1884 Template:Small
33 Template:Yes2Win 33–0 Boiquet KO 1 (?) Feb 1884 Template:Small
32 Template:Yes2Win 32–0 James Lang KO 1 (4) Feb 6, 1884 Template:Small
31 Template:Yes2Win 31–0 Sylvester Le Gouriff KO 1 (4) Feb 1, 1884 Template:Small
30 Template:Yes2Win 30–0 Fred Robinson KO 2 (?) Jan 12, 1884 Template:Small
29 Template:Yes2Win 29–0 Jeff Tomkins KO 1 (?) Jan 1884 Template:Small
28 Template:Yes2Win 28–0 Mike Sheehan TKO 1 (?) Dec 4, 1883 Template:Small
27 Template:Yes2Win 27–0 Morris Hefey KO 1 (?) Nov 26, 1883 Template:Small
26 Template:Yes2Win 26–0 Jim Miles TKO 1 (?) Nov 3, 1883 Template:Small
25 Template:Yes2Win 25–0 James McCoy TKO 1 (?) Oct 17, 1883 Template:Small
24 Template:Yes2Win 24–0 Herbert Slade TKO 3 (4) Aug 6, 1883 Template:Small
23 Template:Yes2Win 23–0 Charley Mitchell TKO 3 (?) May 14, 1883 Template:Small
22 Template:Yes2Win 22–0 Harry Gilman KO 3 (?) Jan 25, 1883 Template:Small
21 Template:Yes2Win 21–0 P J Rentzler TKO 1 (4) Nov 17, 1882 Template:Small
20 Template:Yes2Win 20–0 Charley O'Donnell KO 1 (?) Oct 30, 1882 Template:Small
19 Template:Yes2Win 19–0 S P Stockton KO 2 (?) Oct 16, 1882 Template:Small
18 Template:Yes2Win 18–0 Henry Higgins TKO 3 (4) Sep 23, 1882 Template:Small
17 Template:Yes2Win 17–0 Joe Collins PTS 4 Jul 17, 1882 Template:Small
16 Template:Yes2Win 16–0 Jimmy Elliott KO 3 (?) Jul 4, 1882 Template:Small
15 Template:Yes2Win 15–0 John McDermont TKO 3 (?) Apr 20, 1882 Template:Small
14 Template:Yes2Win 14–0 Paddy Ryan RTD 9 (?) Feb 7, 1882 Template:Small Template:Small
13 Template:Yes2Win 13–0 Jack Burns KO 1 (4) Sep 3, 1881 Template:Small
12 Template:Yes2Win 12–0 Captain James Dalton KO 4 (4) Aug 13, 1881 Template:Small
11 Template:Yes2Win 12–0 Dan McCarty KO 1 (?) Jul 21, 1881 Template:Small
10 Template:Yes2Win 10–0 Fred Crossley KO 1 (4) Jul 11, 1881 Template:Small
9 Template:Yes2Win 9–0 John Flood KO 8 (?) May 16, 1881 Template:Small
8 Template:Yes2Win 8–0 Steve Taylor TKO 2 (4) Mar 31, 1881 Template:Small
7 Template:Yes2Win 7–0 Professor John Donaldson Template:Abbr 10 (?) Dec 24, 1880 Template:Small Template:Small
6 Template:Yes2Win 6–0 George Rooke KO 3 (?) Jun 28, 1879 Template:Small
5 Template:Yes2Win 5–0 John A. Hogan PTS 4 1879 Template:Small
4 Template:Yes2Win 4–0 Tommy Chandler PTS 4 1879 Template:Small
3 Template:Yes2Win 3–0 Dan Dwyer Template:Abbr 3 (?) Jun 28, 1879 Template:Small
2 Template:Yes2Win 2–0 Johnny Cocky Woods KO 5 (?) Mar 14, 1879 Template:Small
1 Template:Yes2Win 1–0 Jack Curley Template:Abbr ? (?), Template:Small Mar 13, 1879 Template:Small Template:Small

Screen portrayals

Footnotes

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Further reading

  • Isenberg, Michael T. John L. Sullivan and His America (University of Illinois Press, 1994.)
  • Pollack, Adam J. John L. Sullivan: The Career of the First Gloved Heavyweight Champion (McFarland, 2015)
  • Reel, Guy. "Richard Fox, John L. Sullivan, and the rise of modern American prize fighting." Journalism History 27.2 (2001): 73+
  • Sullivan, John L. Article in The Washington Post, 30 July 1905. "'Your hands are too big; you'll never make a boxer,' was one of the bits of discouragement passed to me when I was beginning to attract notice as a puncher. That was the popular notion at that time, because Sayers, Heenan, Yankee Sullivan, and some other good men who had made their tally and passed up had small hands."

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