Barrow, Joe Louis
Born in Alabama, Louis moved to Detroit as a child and began boxing at the Brewster Recreation Center. In his first amateur bout, Louis was knocked down seven times. But he improved rapidly. He captured the 1934 National AAU light heavyweight crown and turned pro later that year.
Louis won his first 27 fights, 23 by knockout, beating the likes of former heavyweight champions Primo Carnera and Max Baer and contenders Paolino Uzcudun and Natie Brown. But in his 28th fight, Louis met defeat. He faced another former heavyweight champ, Max Schmeling at Yankee Stadium, and was knocked out in the 12th round.
Louis rebounded from the defeat and won seven straight bouts -- including victories over Jack Sharkey and Bob Pastor -- to earn a shot at the heavyweight title. Louis faced champion James J. Braddock on June 22, 1937 in Chicago's Comiskey Park. Although he was dropped early in the bout, Louis rose from the canvas to score an eighth-round knockout. He became the first African American to win the heavyweight title since Jack Johnson in 1908.
Louis possessed an excellent jab and power in both hands. His right cross was as devastating as his left hook. His punches were so compact that some in the media claimed a Joe Louis punch need only to travel six inches to render an opponent unconscious.
After winning the crown, Louis began piling up defenses. He dispatched contender after contender with such ease that his opponents were said to make up "The Bum of the Month Club." Along with Louis' success came tremendous popularity. He was widely respected by Americans of all color. He won the title a decade before Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier and later would put his career on hold to serve in the U.S. Army during World War II. Reporter Jimmy Cannon once wrote that, "Louis was a credit to his race ... the human race."
While Louis generated countless highlights, he is widely remembered most for his 1938 rematch with Schmeling. The boxing public admired Louis for risking his crown against a man who, just two years earlier, had knocked him out. But because Schmeling was from Germany, the bout took on a broader meaning. The media inaccurately portrayed Schmeling as a Nazi and painted Louis as a symbol for the rest of the free world. The rematch, also at Yankee Stadium, was over fast as Louis scored a devastating first-round knockout.
In another one of his most memorable bouts, Louis took on light heavyweight champion Billy Conn on June 18, 1941 at the Polo Grounds in New York. Conn, a masterful boxer, was ahead on the scorecards after 12 rounds. But miraculously, Louis scored a 13th-round knockout to save his title. After the war, during which Conn served in the Navy, they met again and Louis scored an eighth-round knockout.
In 1947, Louis was dropped twice by Jersey Joe Walcott but managed to hang onto the title by a controversial split decision. The end was nearing for the great champion and shortly after he knocked Walcott out in a rematch, he announced his retirement.
In 1950, at the age of 36, Louis returned to the ring to challenge heavyweight champion Ezzard Charles but lost a 15-round decision. He fought nine more times over the next year, beating the likes of Lee Savold and Jimmy Bivins but announced his permanent retirement when Rocky Marciano knocked him out on October 26, 1951.
-From the International Boxing Hall of Fame website.
In 1994, the bronzed boxing glove that Louis used to defeat Max Schmeling was donated to the city of Detroit by the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Dubbed "The Glove That Floored Nazi Germany," it was enshrined in a plexiglass case at the city's Cobo Center, a monument to its wielder's enduring legacy.
Joseph Louis Jr. (b.5/28/1947)
Related Records

Film, Motion Picture
2002.022.001Archive

Print, Photographic
2003.004.133Photo

Print, Photographic
2006.060.001Photo

Print, Photographic
2007.040.002Photo

Print, Photographic
2007.040.004Photo

Print, Photographic
2007.040.005Photo

Print, Photographic
2007.040.006Photo

Print, Photographic
2007.040.007Photo

Print, Photographic
2007.040.010Photo

Advertisement
2007.040.011Archive

Glove, Boxing
2012.004.021Object

Print, Photographic
2012.044.260Photo

Print, Photographic
2012.044.261Photo

Print, Photographic
2012.044.262Photo

Print, Photographic
2012.044.263Photo

Print, Photographic
2012.044.264Photo

Print, Photographic
2012.044.265Photo

Print, Photographic
2012.044.266Photo

Print, Photographic
2012.044.269Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.273Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.300Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.301Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.302Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.303Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.304Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.305Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.306Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.307Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.308Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.309Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.310Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.311Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.312Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.313Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.314Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.315Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.316Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.317Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.318Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.319Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.320Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.321Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.322Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.323Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.324Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.325Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.326Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.327Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.328Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.329Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.330Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.331Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.332Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.333Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.334Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.335Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.336Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.337Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.338Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.339Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.340Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.341Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.342Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.343Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.344Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.345Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.346Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.347Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.348Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.349Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.350Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.351Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.352Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.353Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.354Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.355Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.356Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.357Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.358Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.359Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.360Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.361Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.362Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.363Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.364Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.365Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.366Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.367Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.368Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.369Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.370Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.371Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.372Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.373Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.374Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.375Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.376Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.377Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.378Photo

Negative, Film
2012.044.379Photo