Unforgivable blackness, p.62

Unforgivable Blackness, page 62

 

Unforgivable Blackness
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  “I expect to get married”: Sydney Sunday Sun, March 24, 1907.

  “This was the first”: McLean, “Next Heavyweight Champion.”

  “When he got within ten feet”: Ibid.

  “Worry your opponents”: Quoted in McCaffrey, Tommy Burns, pp. 146–47.

  “I had $700”: Prison Memoir.

  “In my fight with Fitzsimmons”: Ibid.

  “poor old Bob Fitzsimmons”: Ibid.

  “The scene after the game”: New York Times (hereafter NYT), April 25, 1907.

  “A wicked right hand”: Prison Memoir.

  “How’d you like that”: Quoted in Farr, Black Champion, p. 48.

  “I don’t see where”: Police Gazette, May 1908. “living at what they called a ‘Call House’”: Testimony of Hattie McClay, US v. Johnson, General Records of the Department of Justice, File Number 16421, Record Group 60 (hereafter DOJ File).

  “a splendid pal”: Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out, p. 76.

  “The heartaches which Mary Austin”: Ibid.

  “The affair could hardly be called”: Prison Memoir.

  “There was a dearth”: Curley, Memoirs, July 1931.

  “My advice to a young fighter”: Quoted in Kammer, “TKO in Las Vegas.”

  “Time was called”: Prison Memoir.

  “The best man won”: Unsourced clipping from a San Francisco newspaper, archives of the Antiquities of the Prize Ring.

  “I knew I had him”: Ibid.

  “Jack Johnson is a colored man”: Quoted in Fleischer, Fighting Furies, pp. 66–67.

  “He rather rubbed us”: Corri, Gloves and the Man, p. 217.

  “What do I care?”: Milwaukee Free Press, February 23, 1908.

  “Jack Johnson, Heavyweight Champion of the World”: Milwaukee Free Press, November 16, 1907.

  “If the paragraph has caused Miss Toy”: The Referee, March 18, 1908.

  “libelous to say that a white woman”: Ibid.

  “Dressed neatly in white”: Ibid.

  “MR. REID: Look at this”: Sydney Truth, March 22, 1908.

  “stripped to the buff”: Ibid.

  “MR. GANNON: The evidence”: Ibid.

  “suffused with bliss”: Ibid.

  “Pugilism was one thing”: Ibid.

  “shame him out of King Edward’s islands”: Milwaukee Free Press, February 27, 1908. “to stand on the mat”: Deghy, Noble and Manly, pp. 165–66.

  “Johnson in those days”: Bettinson and Bennison, Home of Boxing, p. 95.

  “This Johnson can beat Burns”: Ibid.

  “Johnson would sooner fight”: Ibid., p. 96.

  “quite the nerviest proposition”: Police Gazette, April 25, 1908.

  “The whole truth”: Ibid.

  “very good heavyweight”: Dartnell, Seconds Out!, p. 171.

  “by no means unintelligent”: Lynch, Knuckles and Gloves, p. 149.

  “as I’m called a grabber anyway”: Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin, March 7, 1908.

  “Johnson strolled into the … Club”: Police Gazette, June 1908.

  “Now, let me ask you”: McCaffery, Tommy Burns, p. 175.

  “bluffer”: Police Gazette, May 30, 1908.

  “It’s downright weary work”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, p. 113.

  “This match was based”: Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out, pp. 156–57.

  “it was my fight”: Prison Memoir.

  “an egg beaten up”: Quoted in Farr, Black Champion, p. 56.

  “It was just fatiguing”: Prison Memoir.

  Oxford Theater bill: Police Gazette, July 1908.

  CHAPTER FIVE: THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN SMILE

  “blend of charlatan”: Hetherington, Australians: Nine Profiles, p. 48.

  “a two-man show”: Ibid., p.49.

  “As a friendly hand”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, p.94.

  “All niggers are alike”: Ibid., p.85.

  DE BIG COON AM A-COMIN’: Ibid., p. 120.

  “Shame on the money-mad Champion!”: Quoted in Al-Tony Gilmore, Bad Nigger!, p. 27.

  “The history of the Nigger”: Lynch, Knuckles and Gloves, pp. 44–45.

  “We have a gym fixed up”: Police Gazette, November 1908.

  “I am a larger man”: The Referee, October 28, 1908.

  “the coloured man is accompanied”: Sydney Bulletin, November 5, 1908.

  “exquisite fighting engine”: Wells, Boxing Day, p. 107.

  “a desperate struggle”: Ibid., p.110.

  “Citizens who have never prayed”: Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, November 15, 1908.

  “The words I am about to speak”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, pp. 128–29.

  “Johnson does not like Burns”: “Leonce,” “Colored Champion of the World.” “Looking back in memory”: Burns, “Tommy Burns.”

  “Rock Me to Sleep, Mother”: Lindsay, Comedy of Life, p. 237.

  “take your medicine” … “When Burns stared to perform”: Prison Memoir.

  “For every point I’m given”: Wells, Boxing Day, pp. 145–46.

  “I am going to win”: Unsourced newspaper clipping, December 25, 1908, Alexander Gumby Collection.

  “So you want your money first”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, pp. 153–54.

  “All the hatred”: Sydney Bulletin, December 27, 1908.

  “uncanny accuracy”: Ibid.

  “Don’t care”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, p. 155.

  “All right, Tommy”: Sydney Bulletin, December 31, 1908.

  “The world spun crazily”: Burns, “Tommy Burns.”

  “Poor little Tommy”: Broome, “Australian Reaction to Jack Johnson.”

  “Come right on!”: Wells, Boxing Day, p.58.

  “Come on and fight, nigger!”: Randy Roberts, Papa Jack, p. 64.

  “Burns got through his earlier opponents”: Prison Memoir.

  “Burns started it”: Ibid.

  “I had forgotten more”: Ibid.

  “I don’t think I can beat that nigger”: Deghy, Noble and Manly, p. 165.

  “ ‘Hit me here, Tommy,’”: London, Stories of Boxing, p. 150.

  “You punch like a woman, Tommy”: Quoted in Randy Roberts, Papa Jack, p.63.

  “I was positive he would fold up”: Burns, “Tommy Burns.”

  “They talked of [Burns’] being a man”: Prison Memoir.

  “He is a funny fellow”: Police Gazette, May 8, 1909.

  “I see him, oh yes”: Quoted in Broome, “Australian Reaction to Jack Johnson.”

  “Flash nigger!”: Ibid.

  “devilish gloating”: Ibid.

  “He said something about my wife”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, p. 175.

  “Did you get that?”: Sydney Sportsman, December 27, 1908.

  “in a voice fit to wake the dead”: Sydney Bulletin, December 27, 1908.

  “I might even have won”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, p.174.

  “The Australian nation”: Unsourced clipping from a British book, Jim Johnston Collection.

  “Burns can’t fight”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, p. 173.

  “I had attained my life’s ambition”: Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out, p. 58.

  “gloating coon”: Sydney Sportsman, December 27, 1908.

  “It was not Burns that was beaten”: Broome, “Australian Reaction to Jack Johnson.”

  “Already the insolent black’s victory”: Sydney Herald, December 31, 1908.

  “As I am a descendant of Ham”: Quoted in Wells, Boxing Day, pp. 178–79.

  “Your central Australian natives”: Ibid.

  “Personally, I took no other interest”: Baltimore American, December 27, 1908.

  “Texas Darky”: Quoted in Al-Tony Gilmore, Bad Nigger!, p. 28.

  “Is the Caucasian played out?” Detroit Free Press, January 1, 1909.

  “Well, Bre’r Johnson”: Quoted in Randy Roberts, “Heavyweight Champion Jack Johnson.”

  “Now that Mr. Johnson”: Quoted in Al-Tony Gilmore, Bad Nigger!, p.31.

  “No event in forty years”: Ibid., p.32.

  “the zenith of Negro sport”: Ibid., p.31.

  “high-living, failure”: Cleveland Journal, January 2, 1909.

  “the first cable ever sent”: Buffalo Express, December 28, 1908.

  “Burns never was the champion”: Ibid., December 27, 1908.

  “the white man has succumbed”: Chicago Tribune, December 27, 1908.

  “newspaper champion”: Buffalo Express, December 28, 1908.

  “Personally, I was for Burns”: London, Boxing Stories, pp. 142–50.

  “Armenian massacre”: Ibid.

  “They kept at me”: Quoted in Nicholson, A Man Among Men, p. 186.

  “he should get a vaudeville engagement”: Van Court, Making of Champions, p.99.

  “he said that if he made a start”: Ibid. “stepped around as spry”: Los Angeles Examiner, January 9, 1909.

  “Say, won’t you fight Johnson”: Milwaukee Free Press, January 17, 1909.

  “If I were to whip Johnson”: Ibid., March 4, 1909.

  “I want to see the championship”: Hietala, Fight of the Century, p. 34.

  “The shades of night”: Police Gazette, February 1909.

  Johnson’s visit to Jackson’s grave: Noted in Broome, “Australian Reaction to Jack Johnson.”

  CHAPTER SIX: THE CHAMPION

  “I’ve got no kick coming”: Associated Press, March 10, 1909.

  “I am willing to meet”: Ibid.

  “eyes sparkled”: NYT, March 10, 1909.

  “the former Nellie O’Brien”: Associated Press, March 10, 1909.

  “a different man”: NYT, March 10, 1909.

  “I found Johnson the most charming opponent”: McLaglen, Express to Hollywood, p. 151.

  “The negroes in charge”: Chicago Tribune, March 14, 1909.

  “It is reported that Jack Johnson”: Nashville Globe, March 12, 1909.

  “in a small Nevada town”: Chicago Tribune, March 16, 1909.

  “There was nothing secret”: Ibid.

  “I can lick Jim Jeffries”: Milwaukee Free Press, March 16, 1909.

  “I beat Sam easy before”: Police Gazette, April 10, 1909.

  “Being a champion”: Bettinson and Bennison, Home of Boxing, p. 98.

  NO ONE ENTERS THESE PORTALS: Bradford, Born with the Blues, p. 171.

  “There were no preliminaries”: Variety, April 3, 1909.

  “the absolutely proper and dignified thing”: Emmett Jay Scott to J. Frank Wheaton, March 23, 1909. Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress.

  “Minna and Ada Everleigh are to pleasure”: Quoted in Washburn, Come into My Parlor, p.28.

  “inexperienced girls or young widows”: Ibid., p. 46.

  “Be polite”: Ibid., p.24.

  “The Everleigh Club is not for the rough element”: Ibid.

  “ten cents was a big meal”: In August of 1910, George Little got into a legal dispute with Jack Johnson and prepared a lengthy document offering his version of events. Several collectors have typed copies of it; mine (hereafter called George Little “Confession”) was supplied to me by Benjamin Hawes.

  “the sporting life”: Belle Schreiber testimony, DOJ File.

  “a little over”: Ibid.

  “out of affection”: Ibid.

  “Men and boys”: NYT, April 22, 1909.

  “I’m faking and four-flushing”: Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin, August 24, 1909.

  “as fat as a Jap wrestler”: San Francisco Examiner, October 16, 1909.

  “Assembled were men”: Prison Memoir.

  “As a two-handed spender”: Police Gazette, June 1909.

  “My mind is constantly”: Jack Johnson testimony, DOJ File.

  “very much painted”: Agent W. P. Schmid report of interview with Frederick C. Gale, March 13, 1913, DOJ File.

  “It’s getting so they just take me”: NYT, August 7, 1909.

  “ ‘If’ and ‘suppose’”: Quoted in Randy Roberts, Papa Jack, p.81.

  “In all these appearances”: Barton, My Lifetime in Sports, p. 41.

  “Someone asked Jeff”: Chicago American, August 5, 1909.

  “How did you ever get the title?” Police Gazette, August 11, 1909.

  “There was skill on both sides”: Chicago American, August 12, 1909.

  “the men of his race”: Baltimore Afro-American, August 21, 1909.

  “Kaufmann had no more chance”: Prison Memoir.

  “Bring him along”: LAT, September 20, 1909.

  “It wouldn’t be a bad idea”: Police Gazette, October 2, 1909.

  “With the waning of the day”: Quoted in Randy Roberts, Papa Jack, p.80.

  “Naturally, there was a state of warfare”: Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out, p. 77.

  lithographed postcard: DOJ File.

  “a dim sense of property rights”: John Lardner, “Yesterday’s Graziano.”

  “I was a tough kid”: Fleischer, Michigan Assassin, p. 7.

  “He had the soul of a bouncer”: Quoted in John Lardner, “Yesterday’s Graziano.”

  “I hit ‘em so hard”: Ibid.

  “The sonofabitch!”: John Burke, Rogue’s Progress, p. 133.

  “He was a savage”: McCallum, Encyclopedia of World Boxing Champions, p.128.

  “Why he’s just a little fella”: NYT, March 10, 1909.

  “rusher,” “reach and range”: San Francisco Examiner, October 10, 1909.

  “There is a great difference”: Jack Johnson, “How Ketchel Tried to Double Cross Me.”

  “Let’s be practical, Jack”: Ibid.

  “make the pictures snappy”: Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out, p.195.

  “deck hands, picked exclusively”: Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin, October 18, 1909.

  “At the police station”: Ibid., October 21, 1909.

  “Jack Johnson is running wild”: San Francisco Examiner, October 18, 1909.

  “With Johnson’s decisive decision”: Boxing, October 23, 1909.

  “Even those who have an absurdly exaggerated horror”: NYT, November 1, 1909.

  CHAPTER SEVEN: THE GREATEST COLORED MAN THAT EVER LIVED

  “He swings through the door”: Harper’s Weekly, December 20, 1909.

  “I’ll tell you what I’ll do”: Cleveland Advocate, March 8, 1910.

  “Say, if the ‘Smoke’ goes out the window”: Ibid.

  “we didn’t want to eat snowballs”: George Little “Confession.”

  “theatrical connections”: Jack Johnson, In the Ring and Out, p.78.

  “Famed on Long Island”: New York World, September 13, 1912.

  “Somehow, crude, uneducated guy”: Samuels, Magnificent Rube, p. 113.

  “That’s all right”: NYT, December 2, 1909.

  “I was born and raised in the South”: Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin, March 21, 1909. “I was much inclined”: Quoted in Farr, Black Champion, p. 78.

  “the most eminent black man”: Frederick G. Bonfils to Booker T. Washington, April 25, 1910, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress.

  “I’ve got … money enough to live on”: Chicago Tribune, March 25, 1909.

  “It is no exaggeration”: Streible, Fight Pictures, p. 149.

  “Jack, I’m grateful to you”: Curley, Memoirs, February 1932.

  “Jim, please, for our sakes”: Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin, April 5, 1910.

  “how to whip the nigger”: Ibid.

  “the black bluff”: Ibid., March 23, 1910.

  “smash the coconut”: Ibid., April 5, 1910.

  “was there the slightest reference”: Curley, Memoirs, February 1932.

  “There’s an article in there”: Ibid.

  “not to make mention”: Barney Gerard to Raymond E. Horn, March 11, 1913, DOJ File.

  “It was notorious”: New York World, September 13, 1912.

  “Mrs. Duryea began to be seen”: Ibid.

  “a highly educated woman”: Heller, In This Corner, p. 42.

  “Jack Johnson was one of the two”: Milwaukee Evening Wisconsin, December 27, 1909.

  “He wanted me to have it”: Belle Schreiber trial testimony, April 1913, DOJ File.

  “girl friend from Brooklyn”: Barney Gerard to Raymond E. Horn, March 11, 1913, DOJ File.

  “hit the first man”: Milwaukee Free Press, January 3, 1910.

  “We were not on good terms”: Belle Schreiber testimony, April 1913, DOJ File.

  “They didn’t want me”: Quoted in Farr, Black Champion, p. 170.

  “Don’t pull that stuff on me”: Philadelphia Evening Telegraph, January 20, 1910.

  “Honest to heaven, Mister”: NYT, January 20, 1910.

  “came and got me out of there”: Belle Schreiber testimony, April 1913, DOJ File.

  “seeing my life in danger”: Barney Gerard to Raymond E. Horn, March 11, 1913, DOJ File.

  “deckhands, wharf wallopers”: Police Gazette, April 16, 1910.

  “Johnson has become reckless”: Baltimore American, February 27, 1910.

  “No one ever heard of Peter Jackson”: Indianapolis Freeman, March 15, 1910.

  “Stand back, Mr. White Officer”: Quoted in Farr, Black Champion, p.81.

  “He growls and snarls and grumbles”: Randy Roberts, Papa Jack, p.92.

  “I dislike Johnson”: Chicago Tribune, June 19, 1910.

  LOOKS AS FORMIDABLE: Baltimore American, May 15, 1920.

  “in condition; that he is fast”: Police Gazette, June 1910.

  “regain his judgment”: Chicago Tribune, May 2, 1910.

  “When I sent my card up”: John H. Washington, Jr., to Emmett Jay Scott, May 24, 1910, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress.

  “I told Little that if anyone went”: LAT, May 30, 1910.

  “These talks, into which Little”: Ibid.

  “Don’t you see, Jack?” Los Angeles Examiner, July 8, 1910.

  “See here, George”: Ibid.

  “No stolen chicken ever passes”: Quoted in Farr, Black Champion, p. 104.

  “I can’t box anymore today”: Baltimore American, June 26, 1910.

  “The clergy are preaching THE FIGHT”: Boxing, June 18, 1910.

  “This Jeffries-Johnson fight”: Quoted in Randy Roberts, “Heavyweight Champion Jack Johnson.”

  “Stop the Fight”: NYT, June 6, 1910.

  “this fight can be regarded”: Chicago Tribune, May 4, 1910.

  “Though he was frequently interrupted”: San Francisco Examiner, June 4, 1910.

 

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